Author List: Aral, Sinan; Brynjolfsson, Erik; Alstyne, Marshall Van;
Information Systems Research, 2012, Volume 23, Issue 3, Page 849-867.
We econometrically evaluate information worker productivity at a midsize executive recruiting firm and assess whether the knowledge that workers accessed through their electronic communication networks enabled them to multitask more productively. We estimate dynamic panel data models of multitasking, knowledge networks, and productivity using several types of micro-level data: (a) direct observation of more than 125,000 email messages over a period of 10 months; (b) detailed accounting data on individuals' project output and team membership for more than 1,300 projects spanning five years; and (c) survey and interview data about the same workers' IT skills, IT use, and information sharing. We find that (1) more multitasking is associated with more project output, but diminishing marginal returns, and (2) recruiters whose network contacts have heterogeneous knowledge-an even distribution of expertise over many project types-are less productive on average but more productive when juggling diverse multitasking portfolios. These results show how multitasking affects productivity and how knowledge networks, enabled by IT, can improve worker performance. The methods developed can be replicated in other settings, opening new frontiers for research on social networks and IT value.
Keywords: dynamic panel data; information worker; IT; multitasking; productivity; social networks; system GMM
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List of Topics

#148 0.362 productivity information technology data production investment output investments impact returns using labor value research results evidence spillovers industries analysis gains
#0 0.158 information types different type sources analysis develop used behavior specific conditions consider improve using alternative understanding data available main target
#249 0.149 network networks social analysis ties structure p2p exchange externalities individual impact peer-to-peer structural growth centrality participants sharing economic ownership embeddedness
#245 0.082 knowledge sharing contribution practice electronic expertise individuals repositories management technical repository knowledge-sharing shared contributors novelty features peripheral share benefit seekers
#135 0.064 project projects development management isd results process team developed managers teams software stakeholders successful complex develop contingencies problems greater planning
#226 0.051 models linear heterogeneity path nonlinear forecasting unobserved alternative modeling methods different dependence paths efficient distribution probabilities demonstrate observed heterogeneous probability