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2002 Abstracts
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Measuring Information System
Service Quality: SERVQUAL
from the Other Side
James J. Jiang, Gary Klein, and Christopher L. Carr
Abstract
There has been much debate as of late over the use of the SERVQUAL instrument
to measure Information Systems service quality. Detractors
argue that the difference score leads to unreliable measures and that the
dimensionality and validity is erratic. Proponents argue for the diagnostic
power of the gap between expectations and perceived delivery while demonstrating
some empirical stability and reliability. To extend the discussion
requires the examination of the instrument from the viewpoint of the information
system professional. Importantly, a large variety of samples must
view the instrument and measures in the same light for the instrument to
have applicability. Likewise, analysis of differences between users
and providers requires that both populations have similar structural views
of the instrument. Empirical evidence collected from information
system professionals demonstrated a structure similar to previously published
studies with adequate reliability, convergent validity, and discriminant
validity. The structure is the same as is found for a gap between
users and IS professionals
Keywords:
Service quality, measurement, SERVQUAL, user expectations
ISRL Categories:
AI04, EI0206.03, GB02, GB07
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