Toward a Deeper Understanding of System Usage
in Organizations: A Multilevel Perspective
Andrew Burton-Jones and Michael J.
Gallivan
Abstract
The objective of this paper is to contribute towards a deeper
understanding of system usage in organizations by examining its
multilevel nature. Past research on system usage has suffered from a
levels bias, with researchers studying system usage at single levels
of analysis only, e.g., the individual, group, or organizational
level. Although single-level research can be useful, we suggest that
studying organizations one level at a time will ultimately lead to
an unnatural, incomplete, and very disjointed view of how
information systems are used in practice. To redress this situation,
we draw on recent advances in multilevel theory to present system
usage as a multilevel construct and provide an illustration for what
it takes for IS researchers to study it as such. The multilevel
perspective advanced in this article offers rich opportunities for
theoretical and empirical insights and suggests a new foundation for
in-depth research on the nature of system usage, its emergence and
change, and its antecedents and consequences.
Keywords: System usage,
multilevel, construct, configuration, IT impact, longitudinal