Author List: Clemons, Eric K.; Gu, Bin;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 2003, Volume 20, Issue 2, Page 11/1/1948.
Executives need to master different mechanisms for analyzing their firms' investment opportunities in uncertain, difficult times. Rapidly changing business conditions require firms to move quickly, with total commitment and the rapid deployment of capital, resources, and management attention, often in several directions at the same time. However, high levels of strategic uncertainty and environmental risk, combined with limits on available funding, require firms to limit their commitment. In brief, we require high levels of strategic commitment to numerous projects, while simultaneously preserving our flexibility and withholding commitment. Whereas achieving both is clearly impossible, techniques exist that enable executives (1) to identify and to delimit their range of investment alternatives that must be considered, and to do so rapidly and reliably, (2) to divide investments into discrete stages that can be implemented sequentially, (3) to determine which chunks can safely and profitably be developed as strategic options, with value that can be captured when subsequent stage investments are made later; and (4) to quantify and to estimate the value of these strategic options with a significant degree of accuracy, so that selections can be made from a portfolio of investment alternatives. This paper also avoids restrictions of common option valuation models by providing a technique that is general enough to be used when the data required by common models are not available or the assumptions are not satisfied.
Keywords: Information technology investments; OPTION VALUATION; strategic investments; strategic options
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#267 0.172 options real investment option investments model valuation technology value analysis uncertainty portfolio models using context intuitive managerial regret uncertain case
#246 0.128 strategic benefits economic benefit potential systems technology long-term applications competitive company suggest additional companies industry operating costs difficult substantial total
#154 0.125 memory support organizations information organizational requirements different complex require development provides resources organization paper transactive depth process outside difficult breadth
#227 0.125 commitment need practitioners studies potential role consider difficult models result importance influence researchers established conduct investigated establishing appear clearly determining
#271 0.124 technology investments investment information firm firms profitability value performance impact data higher evidence diversification industry payoff return findings decisions greater
#26 0.112 business large organizations using work changing rapidly make today's available designed need increasingly recent manage years activity important allow achieve