| March
2004 Abstracts
MISQ
Abstracts
Order
an Article
MISQ Home
MISQ
Roadmap
MISQ
Archivist
MISQ
Discovery
|
Business Competence of
Information Technology
Professionals: Conceptual Development and Influence on
IT-Business Partnerships
Geneviève
Bassellier and Izak Benbasat
Volume 28, Number 4
Abstract
This research aims at
improving our understanding of the concept of the business competence
of information technology professionals and at exploring the
contribution of this
competence to the development of partnerships between IT professionals
and their business clients. Business competence focuses on the areas of
knowledge that are not
specifically IT-related. At a broad level, it
comprises the organization-specific knowledge and the interpersonal and
management knowledge possessed by IT professionals. Each of these
categories is in turn inclusive of more specific areas of knowledge.
Organizational overview, organizational unit, organizational
responsibility, and IT-business integration form the
organization-specific knowledge, while interpersonal communication,
leadership, and knowledge networking form the interpersonal and
management knowledge. Such competence is hypothesized to be
instrumental in increasing the intentions of IT professionals to
develop and strengthen the relationship with their clients.
The first step in the study was to develop a scale to measure business
competence of IT professionals. The scale was validated and then used
to test the model that relates competence to intentions to form
IT-business partnerships. The results support the suggested
structure for
business competence and indicate that business competence significantly
influences the intentions of IT professionals to develop partnerships
with
their business clients.
Keywords: Business competence, business knowledge,
IT professionals, measurement
|