IS

Joglekar, Supreet

Topic Weight Topic Terms
0.218 business digital strategy value transformation economy technologies paper creation digitization strategies environment focus net-enabled services
0.146 capabilities capability firm firms performance resources business information technology firm's resource-based competitive it-enabled view study
0.143 model research data results study using theoretical influence findings theory support implications test collected tested
0.141 service services delivery quality providers technology information customer business provider asp e-service role variability science
0.111 customer customers crm relationship study loyalty marketing management profitability service offer retention it-enabled web-based interactions

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Setia, Pankaj 1 Venkatesh, Viswanath 1
business value of IT 1 customer orientation 1 customer response 1 Customer service 1
information quality 1

Articles (1)

LEVERAGING DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES: HOW INFORMATION QUALITY LEADS TO LOCALIZED CAPABILITIES AND CUSTOMER SERVICE PERFORMANCE. (MIS Quarterly, 2013)
Authors: Abstract:
    With the growing recognition of the customer's role in service creation and delivery, there is an increased impetus on building customer-centric organizations. Digital technologies play a key role in such organizations. Prior research studying digital business strategies has largely focused on building production-side competencies and there has been little focus on customer-side digital business strategies to leverage these technologies. We propose a theory to understand the effectiveness of a customer-side digital business strategy focused on localized dynamics-here, a firm's customer service units (CSUs). Specifically, we use a capabilities perspective to propose digital design as an antecedent to two customer service capabilities-namely, customer orientation capability and customer response capability-across a firm's CSUs. These two capabilities will help a firm to locally sense and respond to customer needs, respectively. Information quality from the digital design of the CSU is proposed as the antecedent to the two capabilities. Proposed capability-building dynamics are tested using data collected from multiple respondents across 170 branches of a large bank. Findings suggest that the impacts of information quality in capability-building are contingent on the local process characteristics. We offer implications for a firm's customer-side digital business strategy and present new areas for future examination of such strategies.