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Key information technology and management issues 2010–11: an international study

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Journal of Information Technology

Abstract

The importance of the impact of IT for organizations around the world, especially in light of the global financial crisis, has amplified the need to provide a better understanding of the specific geographic similarities and differences of IT managerial and technical trends. Going beyond identifying these influential factors is also the need to understand the considerations for addressing them, in light of recognizing the respective local characteristics, especially when operating in a globally linked environment. By comparing and contrasting different geographies, this paper presents important local and international factors (e.g., management concerns, influential technologies, budgets/spending, organizational considerations) necessary to prepare IT leaders for the challenges that await them. The research is based on data from four geographic regions (United States, Europe, Asia, and Latin America). The same questionnaire (although translated for the respective respondents), based on the lead authors of the well-respected and long-running Society for Information Management survey, was applied across geographies. This paper presents the major findings based on survey responses from 472 organizations (172 US, 142 European, 103 Asian, and 55 Latin) in mid-2010. The top five management concerns were: (1) business productivity and cost reduction; (2) IT and business alignment; (3) business agility and speed to market; (4) business process re-engineering; and (5) IT reliability and efficiency. The five most influential technologies were business intelligence, cloud computing, enterprise resource planning, Software as a Service/Platform as a Service, and collaborative tools.

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Acknowledgements

The authors express their appreciation to Herman van Bolhuis and Barry Derksen (bITa Center) for their support in obtaining the European data and Martin Santana (ESAN) and Guillermo Rodriquez (UNAM) for their support in obtaining the Latin American data.

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Correspondence to Jerry Luftman.

Appendix

Appendix

Survey methods

The SIM survey has been conducted since 1980. Surveys prior to 2000 focused just on the top management concerns. Since 2003, the survey has been extended to pursue more specific insights regarding the key IT issues of the day. A significant strength of this research is in its ability to identify important trends by comparing survey data from previous years. Beginning in 2008 the survey has been extended to IT executives from around the globe.

The 2010 survey was similar to previous ones in methodology and process. The questions were based on previous surveys, with questions modified based on previous results and suggestions from respondents and researchers (academic and industry). In addition, some questions were updated and new questions were added based on (1) lists from other similar research, (2) input from Board members from sponsoring organizations, and (3) the lead author's experience.

SIM members represent the US respondents, while CIO net members represent the European respondents. The Asian results were facilitated by Hossein S. Zadeh (co-author), and those of Latin America were facilitated by Martin Santana (ESAN) and Guillermo Rodriquez (UNAM). Senior IT executives were invited to take the online survey. The key US findings were initially presented during the 2010 SIM annual conference (SIMposium) in Atlanta, GA in late September 2010, and global findings have been presented throughout the fourth quarter and first quarter of 2011.

The US findings and initial international findings have been published in the fourth quarter issue of MISQE. The purpose of the JIT paper is to provide important international insights.

The authors anticipate extending the reach of this important research to a more complete set of countries and geographies, and invite leading researchers with a strong network of IT executives to contact us.

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Luftman, J., Zadeh, H. Key information technology and management issues 2010–11: an international study. J Inf Technol 26, 193–204 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1057/jit.2011.3

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