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Performance Effects of Information
Technology Synergies in Multibusiness Firms
Hüseyin Tanriverdi
Volume 30, Issue 1
Abstract
Unlike
technologies that are applicable in a few specific industries,
information technologies have a wide range of applicability across
almost all industries. The fundamental principles of good IT management
are also applicable in many industries. Thus, firms whose business
units operate in different industries have an opportunity to exploit
cross-unit IT synergies by applying their IT resources and management
processes across multiple units. This study examines sources of
cross-unit IT synergy and the conditions under which cross-unit IT
synergies improve the performance of multibusiness firms. Building on
the resource-based view (RBV) of diversification and the economic
theory of complementarities, the study identifies the relatedness and
complementarity of IT resources as two major sources of cross-unit IT
synergy. It argues that IT relatedness—the use of common IT
infrastructure technologies and common IT management processes across
business units—creates sub-additive cost synergies, whereas
complementarities among IT infrastructure technologies and IT
management processes create super-additive value synergies. In a sample
of 356 multibusiness Fortune1000 firms, the study finds that
sub-additive cost synergies arising from the use of related IT
resources or management processes do not have any effects on corporate
performance, whereas the super-additive value synergies arising from
the use of a complementary set of IT resources and management processes
have significant effects on corporate performance. The diversification
level of the firm moderates the relationship between IT synergies and
corporate performance. As the diversification level increases, the
performance effects of IT synergies remain positive, but they become
weaker. The IT governance mode of the firm (centralized, decentralized,
hybrid) does not make a difference in the performance effects of IT
synergies.
Keywords: Corporate performance, multibusiness firm,
synergy, relatedness, complementarity, diversification, it governance,
coordination, survey, second-order construct
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