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Journal ArticleDOI

Strategic alignment: leveraging information technology for transforming organizations

TLDR
A model for conceptualizing and directing the emerging area of strategic management of information technology is developed in terms of four fundamental domains of strategic choice: business strategy, information technology strategy, organlzational infrastructure and processes, and information technology Infrastuvture and processes--each with its own underlying dimenslons.
Abstract
It is cleaaar that eventhough information technology (I/T) has evolved form its traditional orientation of administrative support toward a more strategic role within an organization, there is still a glaring lack of fundamental frameworks within which to understand the potential of I/T for tomorrow's organizations. In this paper, we develop a model for conceptualizing and directing the emerging area of strategic management of information technology. This model, termed the Strategic Allgnment Model, is defined in terms of four fundamental domains of strategic choice: business strategy, information technology strategy, organlzational infrastructure and processes, and information technology Infrastuvture and processes--each with its own underlying dimenslons. We illustrate the power of this model in terms of two fundamental characteristics fo strategic management: strategic fit (the interrelationships between external and internal components) and functional Integration (integration between business and functional domains). More specifically, we derive foru perspectives for gulding management practice in this Important area.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Design science in information systems research

TL;DR: The objective is to describe the performance of design-science research in Information Systems via a concise conceptual framework and clear guidelines for understanding, executing, and evaluating the research.
Journal ArticleDOI

A resource-based perspective on information technology capability and firm performance: an empirical investigation

TL;DR: The concept of IT as an organizational capability is developed and empirically examining the association between IT capability and firm performance indicates that firms with high IT capability tend to outperform a control sample of firms on a variety of profit and cost-based performance measures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clarifying Business Models: Origins, Present, and Future of the Concept

TL;DR: The paper identifies the terminology or ontology used to describe a business model, and compares this terminology with previous work, and the general usages, roles and potential of the concept are outlined.
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Review: the resource-based view and information systems research: review, extension, and suggestions for future research

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore and critically evaluate use of the resource-based view of the firm (RBV) by information systems researchers and suggest extensions to make the RBV more useful for empirical IS research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Digital business strategy: toward a next generation of insights

TL;DR: The time is right to rethink the role of IT strategy, from that of a functional-level strategy--aligned but essentially always subordinate to business strategy--to one that reflects a fusion between IT strategy and business strategy, herein termed digital business strategy.
References
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Book

On the Measurement of Business Performance in Strategy Research: A Comparison of Approaches

TL;DR: A two-dimensional classificatory scheme highlighting ten different approaches to the measurement of business performance in strategy research is developed in this article, where the first dimension concerns the use of financial versus broader operational criteria, while the second dimension focuses on two alternate data sources (primary versus secondary).
Journal ArticleDOI

A framework for information systems architecture

TL;DR: Information systems architecture is defined by creating a descriptive framework from disciplines quite independent of information systems, then by analogy specifies information systems architecture based upon the neutral, objective framework.
Journal Article

Chief executives define their own data needs.

TL;DR: The author argues that the CSF method, implemented through a series of two to three interview sessions, helps top management define its own current information needs and should be seriously considered by top management as an important tool in assessing data needs.
Book

In the Age of the Smart Machine: The Future of Work and Power

TL;DR: A noted Harvard social scientist documents the pitfalls and promises of computerized technology in business life as discussed by the authors, concluding that "computerized technology can be used for both good and bad things".
Journal ArticleDOI

Information technology and organizational change: causal structure in theory and research

TL;DR: In this paper, three dimensions of causal structure are considered-causal agency, logical structure, and level of analysis-theorists' assumptions about the nature and direction of causal influence.
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