Decision Sciences Journal
Volume 28, Number 4
Fall 1997
An Empirical Investigation into Factors Relating to the Adoption of
Executive Information Systems: An Analysis of EIS for Collaboration and
Decision Support
Arun Rai
Department of Decision Sciences, College of Business Administration, Georgia
State University, Atlanta, GA 30303, email: arunrai@gsu.edu
Deepinder S. Bajwa
Department of Management, School of Business & Economics, Fayetteville
State University, Fayetteville, NC 28301, email: bajwa@mis1.uncfsu.edu
ABSTRACT
This study focuses on the organizational adoption of Executive Information
Systems (EIS). A distinction is made between two related, complementary
EIS capabilitiesEIS for collaboration support (EISc) and EIS for decision
support (EISd). EISc is relatively standardized and replicable, while EISd
has to be developed in situ given the specific characteristics of the user
and task. The adoption process is conceptualized as an initial transition
from a state of nonadoption to adoption (adoption status) and subsequent
internal propagation of the technology (adoption level). Data collected
from a national survey are used to test hypotheses between identified contextual
variables and the adoption status and adoption level of EISc and EISd. Adopters
and nonadopters of both EISc and EISd do not differ in their organization
size, suggesting that the traditional paradigm of EIS as a technology
for large firms is no longer true. Environmental uncertainty is found
to promote the transition from a state of nonadoption to adoption of both
EISc and EISd while continuing to catalyze the internal propagation of EISd.
While no differences are observed in IS department size between adopters
and nonadopters of EISc, our results suggest that larger IS departments
provide the resource base to explore the less standardized of the two capabilities,
EISd. IS support is also found to be critical for the subsequent internal
propagation of EISd. Furthermore, the adoption level of both EISc and EISd
are found to be promoted by top management support. Implications of these
results are discussed for the organizational adoption of EIS.
Subject Areas: Adoption of Innovations, Collaboration Support,
Decision Support, and Executive Information Systems. |