Author List: Chang, Young Bong; Gurbaxani, Vijay;
MIS Quarterly, 2012, Volume 36, Issue 4, Page 1043-1063.
Firms are increasingly sourcing internal information systems functions from external service providers. However, there is limited empirical evidence of the economic impact of this delivery option and, more specifically, of the productivity gains accruing to firms that have outsourced. Moreover, there is little evidence of the role and contributions of the individual mechanisms by which service providers create value for client firms. We are particularly interested in whether client firms benefit from the accumulated knowledge held by information technology (IT) service firms. In this paper, we examine the impact of IT outsourcing on the productivity of firms that choose this mode of services delivery focusing, on the role of IT-related knowledge. Since firms self-select into their optimal sourcing mode, we use a variety of econometric techniques including propensity scorebased matching and switching regression to control for potential bias arising from endogenously determined sourcing modes. We demonstrate that IT outsourcing does lead to productivity gains for firms that select this mode of service delivery. Our results also suggest that IT-related knowledge held by IT services vendors enables these productivity gains, the magnitude of which is moderated by a firm's IT intensity. Moreover, the value of outsourcing to a client firm increases with its propensity for outsourcing, which in turn depends on firm-specific attributes including efficiency level, financial leverage, and variability in business conditions. Our analyses also show that firms that outsource have been able to achieve additional productivity gains from contracting out compared with their counterfactuals.
Keywords: IT outsourcing; knowledge transfer; productivity
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#47 0.197 outsourcing vendor client sourcing vendors clients relationship firms production mechanisms duration mode outsourced vendor's effort activities in-house managing technology domestic
#148 0.180 productivity information technology data production investment output investments impact returns using labor value research results evidence spillovers industries analysis gains
#168 0.140 firms firm financial services firm's size examine new based result level including results industry important account does suggests characterize limited
#211 0.125 service services delivery quality providers technology information customer business provider asp e-service role variability science propose logic companies especially customers
#262 0.091 impact data effect set propensity potential unique increase matching use selection score results self-selection heterogeneity evidence measure associated estimate leads
#127 0.073 systems information research theory implications practice discussed findings field paper practitioners role general important key grounded researchers domain new identified
#144 0.064 knowledge transfer management technology creation organizational process tacit research study organization processes work organizations implications practice explicit models consultants transfers