The effects of IT infrastructure transformation on organizational structure and capability in the cloud computing era: Beyond IT productivity paradox: A case study in an Indonesian telecommunication company

Author(s):  
Rizal Akbar ◽  
Rajesri Govindaraju ◽  
Kadarsah Suryadi

The chapter discusses economics of informing or infoeconomics, which refers to costs and benefits of informing agents and to their contribution to organizational performance. Controversies questioning contributions of IT/IS to productivity (IT productivity paradox) and to competitiveness (IT commodification argument) are discussed. Several methods of assessing costs and benefits of informing agents are proposed. Assessing benefits from IT/IS, data, and knowledge is challenging since their impact is usually not immediately visible. The challenges have become more pressing with the data analytics and big data trends. Several research cases are used to demonstrate relationships between IVO aspects and infoeconomics. It is argued that a business process management model and balanced scorecard methodology are reliable guides for study and management of infoeconomics. The implications of big data and cloud computing on infoeconomics are discussed throughout the chapter.


2012 ◽  
Vol 366 (24) ◽  
pp. 2243-2245 ◽  
Author(s):  
Spencer S. Jones ◽  
Paul S. Heaton ◽  
Robert S. Rudin ◽  
Eric C. Schneider

1996 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 279-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leslie Willcocks ◽  
Stephanie Lester

Author(s):  
Mahmood Hajli ◽  
Julian M. Sims ◽  
Valisher Ibragimov

Purpose – Since the 1970s productivity growth in most economies slowed, while information and communication technology expenditures increased: the “information technology (IT) productivity paradox.” Some researchers reported an end to the paradox, but this is most likely due to IT industry growth approaching the Year 2000 phenomenon. The purpose of this paper is to update IT productivity paradox research. Design/methodology/approach – For comparability this research replicates methods employed by previous studies but employs a two-level approach: first macroeconomic indicators; second labor and multi-factor productivity. Findings – Findings suggest IT investment has high positive correlation with gross domestic product growth, but not labor or multi-factor productivity. This ambiguity suggests the paradox is still poorly understood. Research limitations/implications – The findings are not conclusive; the authors cannot confirm or reject the existence of the productivity paradox. The global recession and banking crisis makes it prudent to wait until recovery before analyzing data from that period. Practical implications – Lack of convincing evidence supporting positive effects from IT investment suggests some firms benefit from IT investment, but not others, and that IT investment has questionable returns. Social implications – Firm level studies might find IT investment benefits some firms, but lack of convincing macroeconomic level evidence of positive effects of IT investment suggests the paradox still exists. Originality/value – This research updates the IT productivity paradox demonstrating the phenomenon is still poorly understood and thus worthy of further study, questioning the benefits of IT investment for industry and national economies.


1998 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guy Fitzgerald

Evaluation of IS/IT investments is a notoriously difficult area. Some doubt that IT investments are ever really productive; others point to mismeasurement as a major reason for such a conclusion and for the so-called IT ‘productivity paradox’. The paper reviews traditional approaches to IS/IT evaluation, and discusses their limitations. An eight-stage, multidimensional approach is then put forward to address those limitations.


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