Author List: McMurtrey, Mark E.; Grover, Varun; Teng, James T. C.; Lightner, Nancy J.;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 2002, Volume 19, Issue 2, Page 273-302.
This study investigates the job satisfaction of information technology (IT) professionals in an environment where computer aided software engineering (CASE) tools are used. Although the recent downturn in the economy might have temporarily eased the IT labor shortage, issues of recruitment and retention of qualified personnel are key to the success of IS development projects. This study presents a model of the combination of CASE tool usage and job satisfaction as related to internal career orientation. Two hypotheses based on this model were tested using empirical evidence collected through a survey method. The first examines whether the career orientation of IS personnel influences their job satisfaction. The second incorporates the impact of CASE tool usage on this relationship. The results indicate that in a CASE tool environment, personnel with a predominant technical career orientation have more job satisfaction than those with a predominant managerial orientation. However, there is a significant and positive synergy between the sophistication of the CASE tool used and managerial competence orientation leading to higher job satisfaction. These findings indicate that combating the IT personnel shortage through task automation may also increase worker satisfaction, thereby decreasing turnover. Careful selection of the CASE tool for use may result in this win-win situation.
Keywords: career orientation; CASE; information systems development; information technology workers; job satisfaction
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#276 0.294 satisfaction information systems study characteristics data results using user related field survey empirical quality hypotheses important success various indicate tested
#261 0.255 software development maintenance case productivity application tools systems function tool engineering projects effort code developed applications analysis estimation methodology methods
#109 0.248 career human professionals job turnover orientations careers capital study resource personnel advancement configurations employees mobility jobs management individuals pay non-it
#148 0.093 productivity information technology data production investment output investments impact returns using labor value research results evidence spillovers industries analysis gains
#191 0.052 model models process analysis paper management support used environment decision provides based develop use using help literature mathematical presented formulation