IS

Campbell, Damon E

Topic Weight Topic Terms
0.201 use support information effective behaviors work usage examine extent users expertise uses longitudinal focus routine
0.163 innovation innovations innovative organizing technological vision disruptive crowdsourcing path implemented explain base opportunities study diversity
0.143 capabilities capability firm firms performance resources business information technology firm's resource-based competitive it-enabled view study

Focal Researcher     Coauthors of Focal Researcher (1st degree)     Coauthors of Coauthors (2nd degree)

Note: click on a node to go to a researcher's profile page. Drag a node to reallocate. Number on the edge is the number of co-authorships.

Roberts, Nicholas 1 Vijayasarathy, Leo R 1
business analytics 1 decision support systems 1 dynamic managerial capability 1 idea set 1
innovative use of IS 1 IS use 1 IT business value 1 sensing ability 1

Articles (1)

Using Information Systems to Sense Opportunities for Innovation: Integrating Postadoptive Use Behaviors with the Dynamic Managerial Capability Perspective (Journal of Management Information Systems, 2016)
Authors: Abstract:
    Fast-paced environmental changes require that managers quickly sense opportunities for organizational innovation. Information systems (IS) that support business intelligence and analytics help managers access and analyze data from various sources, thereby providing insight into potential opportunities. Building on the dynamic managerial capability perspective, we investigate the extent to which two managerial IS use behaviorsÑroutine use and innovative useÑinfluence a manager's volume and diversity of ideas for organizational innovation. We also examine the moderating role of three organization-level entrepreneurial orientation characteristicsÑautonomy, innovativeness, and risk taking. We test our research model with survey data collected from 248 managers. Our results show that routine IS use is not related to volume or diversity of ideas for organizational innovation. However, innovative IS use is positively related to idea volume and idea diversity. Furthermore, organizational autonomy and innovativeness positively moderate the aforementioned innovative use/idea relationships. Our study contributes to the literature by linking postadoptive IS use behaviors to managerial sensing ability, an important dynamic managerial capability. We also further the understanding of how organizational factors such as entrepreneurial orientation play a key role in determining whether, when, and how managers use IS to develop ideas for organizational innovation. > >