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Predicting Different Conceptualizations of
System Use: The Competing Roles of Behavioral Intention,
Facilitating Conditions, and Behavioral Expectation
Viswanath Venkatesh, Susan A. Brown,
Likoebe M. Maruping, and Hillol Bala
Abstract
Employees’ underutilization of new information systems undermines
organizations’ efforts to gain benefits from such systems. The two
main predictors of individual-level system use in prior
research—behavioral intention and facilitating conditions—have
limitations that we discuss. We introduce behavioral expectation as
a predictor that addresses some of the key limitations and provides
a better understanding of system use. System use is examined in
terms of three key conceptualizations—duration, frequency, and
intensity. We develop a model that employs behavioral intention,
facilitating conditions, and behavioral expectation as predictors of
the three conceptualizations of system use. We argue that each of
these three determinants play different roles in predicting each of
the three conceptualizations of system use. We test the proposed
model in the context of a longitudinal field study of 321 users of a
new information system. The model explains 65 percent, 60 percent,
and 60 percent of the variance in duration, frequency, and intensity
of system use respectively. We offer theoretical and practical
implications for our findings.
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