Organizational learning in high-technology purchase situations: The antecedents and consequences of the participation of external IT consultants |
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Authors: | Philip L. Dawes [Author Vitae] Don Y. Lee [Author Vitae] David Midgley [Author Vitae] |
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Affiliation: | a Wolverhampton Business School, University of Wolverhampton, Compton Road West, Wolverhampton, WV3 9DX, United Kingdom b Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China c INSEAD, Bd de Constance, 77305 Fontainebleau Cedex, France |
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Abstract: | Typically, research on organizational learning has been conceptual in nature. In a departure from this tradition, we develop and test a structural model of organizational learning in the context of the purchasing of an expensive and complex product in the information technology (IT) area. The key focus of our research is the participation of external IT consultants and our model links seven explanatory constructs that are consistent with the process school of thought in organizational learning. More specifically, two organizational variables-formalization, strategic importance-and two individual-level variables-stakeholding, prior experience-are viewed as antecedents of consultant participation. In contrast, we view internal search effort, external search effort, and organizational learning as consequences of consultant participation. As predicted, all four antecedent variables affected consultant participation. Moreover, we found that, while consultant participation had a positive impact on internal search effort and organizational learning, its impact on external information search effort was negative. |
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Keywords: | IT consultants Organizational learning Structural modelling Syntactic information search |
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