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Understanding the Service Component
of Application
Service Provision: An Empirical Analysis of Satisfaction
with ASP Services
Anjana Susarla, Anitesh
Barua, and Andrew B.
Whinston
Volume 27, Issue 1
Abstract
In spite of the promise and potential of improving the way
organizations
develop, operate and maintain information technology (IT) applications,
application service providers (ASPs) have fared poorly in terms of
attracting
a large client base. Anecdotal evidence in the business press
points
to limited satisfaction among users of ASP, which calls for an
assessment
of determinants of satisfaction with ASP. In this paper, we draw
upon the consumer satisfaction paradigm widely employed in marketing
literature
to analyze post-usage satisfaction with ASP services. We develop
a conceptual model of satisfaction with ASP and empirically test the
predictions
using data from 256 firms using ASP services. Expectations about
ASP service have a significant influence on the performance evaluation
of ASPs, and experience-based norms have only limited significance in
explaining
satisfaction with ASP. We also find empirical support for the influence
of performance and disconfirmation on the satisfaction with ASP.
Implications
for both ASPs and organizations adopting ASP services are discussed.
Keywords:
Management Information Systems, satisfaction, expectation
disconfirmation
theory, empirical research, path analysis, causal models, applications
software
ISRL Categories:
HA02, AI0104, AI0104, AI0609, AI0701
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