Databases Reference
In-Depth Information
TABLE 9.1
IGF Dimensions and Factors Description
People: Refers to people within the organization and the people who relate to it
FACTOR
DESCRIPTION
REFERENCE
Context
Context is an element of the information
environment, which incorporates all the
factors affecting how an organization deals
with information.
Davenport and
Prusak (1998)
Culture
Organization culture is thought to shape values
and norms, is learned and transmitted between
individuals and teams through social learning,
role modeling, and observation, and, as a result,
assists organization members in dealing with
external pressures that threaten organizational
survival and/or internal integration.
Kondra and
Hurst (2009)
Ethics
When we talk about morality and ethics within
government, public, and private sector
organizations, we are referring to the behavior
and collective outcome of actions taken by the
managers and staff.
McManus
(2004b)
Technology: Refers to the set of technological mechanisms or artifacts that support the
IG strategy
FACTOR
DESCRIPTION
REFERENCE
Consumerization
he term consumerization first gained popularity
in 2001 when it was used by Douglas Neal and
John Taylor as a description for how information
technology innovation was emerging in
consumer-based technology, with the expectation
it would eventually migrate into the enterprise.
Clevenger
(2011)
Mobility
Mobile ICT provides workers the means to access
and utilize work-critical data and information
wherever and whenever they need it. However,
these benefits represent only the tip of the
iceberg. Enterprise mobility solutions have
the potential to fundamentally transform
organizations, supply chains, and markets.
Basole (2008)
Systems (IS)
The combination of hardware, software, data, and
communication formed the core of information
systems. As each of these dimensions developed
and integrated, the concept, design, and
capability of information systems underwent
massive changes.
Mukherji (2002)
 
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