IS

Smith, Michael Alan

Topic Weight Topic Terms
0.241 outsourcing transaction cost partnership information economics relationships outsource large-scale contracts specificity perspective decisions long-term develop
0.137 costs cost switching reduce transaction increase benefits time economic production transactions savings reduction impact services
0.131 firms firm financial services firm's size examine new based result level including results industry important
0.114 characteristics experience systems study prior effective complexity deal reveals influenced companies type analyze having basis

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Mitra, Sabyasachi 1 Narasimhan, Sridhar 1
information systems governance 1 information systems outsourcing 1 information technology outsourcing 1

Articles (1)

Information Systems Outsourcing: A Study of Pre-Event Firm Characteristics. (Journal of Management Information Systems, 1998)
Authors: Abstract:
    Researchers in information systems (IS) propose several reasons why firms outsource their IS, including reducing costs, generating cash, focusing on core competencies, and gaining access to technical expertise. The authors examine support for these assertions by comparing the financial characteristics of firms that enter into large-scale IS outsourcing agreements with those of other firms in their respective industries prior to outsourcing. A year-by-year comparison around the time of outsourcing indicates that firms that outsource their IS have significantly lower overhead costs, lower cash reserves, and higher debt before the outsourcing event. Analysis of changes in financial characteristics reveals an increase in long-term debt and financial leverage and declining growth rates prior to the outsourcing event. The authors argue that firms enter into large-scale IS outsourcing agreements primarily to reduce costs and to generate cash. Consequently, they are more likely to outsource when they have lower cash reserves, higher debt, or declining growth. The management objectives stated in the annual reports of these companies at the time of outsourcing corroborate their major findings.