Author List: Xue, Yajiong; Liang, Huigang; Boulton, William R.;
MIS Quarterly, 2008, Volume 32, Issue 1, Page 67-96.
This study identifies governance patterns for information technology investment decision processes and explores the impact of organizations' investment characteristics, external environment, and internal context on the shaping of those patterns. By identifying the lead actors of the initiation, development, and approval stages in IT governance, the patterns of 57 IT investment decisions at 6 hospitals are analyzed. The results reveal seven IT governance archetypes: (1) top management monarchy, (2) top management-IT duopoly, (3) IT monarchy, (4) administration monarchy, (5) administration-IT duopoly, (6) professional monarchy, and (7) professional-IT duopoly. Each archetype is analyzed by taking into account four specific factors: IT investment level, external influence, organizational centralization, and IT function power. This study makes several contributions to IT governance theory and practice. First, IT governance is reframed to include pre-decision stages, highlighting the importance of participants other than the final decision maker. Second, the variation of IT governance archetypes suggests that even when top management approval is required, the IT department may not play a key role in the IT investment decision process. Third, governance of the pre-decision initiation and development stages is found to be jointly affected by several contextual factors, suggesting that the allocation of final decision rights is only a part of IT governance. While decision rights may be allocated by the organization a priori, the actual patterns of IT governance are contingent on contextual factors. It is important to understand how IT governance archetypes are shaped because they may affect desired outcomes of IT investments.
Keywords: IT investment; decision-making process; IT governance; centralization; IT function power; external environment; investment characteristics; monarchy; duopoly
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#76 0.161 governance relational mechanisms bpo rights process coordination outsourcing contractual arrangements technology benefits view informal business formal exchange hybrid complementarity flexibility
#224 0.113 complexity task environments e-business environment factors technology characteristics literature affect influence role important relationship model organizational contingent actual map dimension
#198 0.099 factors success information critical management implementation study factor successful systems support quality variables related results key model csf importance determinants
#241 0.092 information stage stages venture policies ewom paper crowdfunding second influence revelation funding cost important investigation ventures session studied electronic multiple
#271 0.090 technology investments investment information firm firms profitability value performance impact data higher evidence diversification industry payoff return findings decisions greater
#252 0.086 management practices technology information organizations organizational steering role fashion effective survey companies firms set planning focus committees executives managing committee
#58 0.061 internal external audit auditing results sources closure auditors study control bridging appears integrity manager effectiveness auditor controls facilitating boundaries potential