Decision Sciences Journal
Volume 28, Number 4
Fall 1997
Group Support Systems, Power, and
Influence in an Organization: A Field Study
Susan Rebstock Williams
Department of Management, College of Business Administration, Georgia Southern
University, Statesboro, GA 30460-8152, email: rebstock@gasou.edu
Rick L. Wilson
Department of Management, College of Business Administration, Oklahoma State
University, Stillwater, OK 74078, email: rlwilsn@okway.okstate.edu
ABSTRACT
Emerging group technologies are attracting attention from researchers
and practitioners for the benefits they potentially offer in terms of communications,
productivity, and decision-making capabilities within an organization. To
date, research in this area has focused on process or outcome variables,
substantively ignoring organizational context issues. This paper reports
on a field study that investigated users perceptions of the impact
of group support systems on power and influence within the organization.
The study was conducted within a division of a major U.S. software company
specializing in the development of business software tools for desktop PCs.
Fifteen purposively selected managers and nonmanagers, spanning diverse
functional areas, were extensively interviewed for this study. Evidence
gathered suggested that group support systems are perceived to exert an
equalizing force on power and influence by (1) increasing participation
in the decision-making process, (2) improving access to information, (3)
improving access to persons, (4) reducing the power distance
to key individuals, and (5) providing increased opportunities to influence
the opinions of others. These results provide a basis for future studies
that will attempt to clarify the relationships between organizational context
and group technology usage.
Subject Areas: Group Support Systems, Organizational Structure,
and Qualitative Research. |