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Information Technology and the
Performance of the Customer Service Process: A Resource-Based
Analysis
Gautam Ray, Waleed A.
Muhanna, and Jay B. Barney
Volume 29, Number 4 -- December 2005
Abstract
Delivering
quality customer service has emerged as a strategic imperative, one
that is increasingly tied to a firm’s information technology resources
and capabilities. This paper presents an empirical study that examines
the extent to which IT impacts customer service. More
specifically, this study investigates the differential effects of
various IT resources and capabilities on the performance of the
customer service process across firms that compete in the North
American life and health insurance industry. The paper builds on
(1) information systems work that suggests that the effects of IT are
best documented at the level of processes within a firm, (2)
information systems work that suggests that the performance effects of
IT are likely to be contingent in nature, and (3) developments in the
resource-based view which describes the kinds of IT resources and
capabilities that are likely to enable a process in one firm to
outperform the same process in competing firms. The findings suggest
that tacit, socially complex, firm-specific resources explain variation
in process performance across firms and that IT resources and
capabilities without these attributes do not. Of particular interest to
IS scholars, it is found that shared knowledge between IT and customer
service units—an important driver of how IT is implemented and used in
the customer service process—is a key IT capability that affects
customer service process performance and moderates the impacts of
explicit IT resources such as the generic information technologies used
in the process and IT spending, which—consistent with resource-based
predictions—were not found to be directly and positively associated
with relative process performance. The implications of the findings for
research and practice are discussed.
Keywords: IT
resources and capabilities, shared knowledge, resource-based theory,
business processes, process performance, business value of IT
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