2005
DOI: 10.1287/isre.1050.0057
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IT Human Resource Management Configurations and IT Turnover: Theoretical Synthesis and Empirical Analysis

Abstract: Increasingly, scholars and practitioners acknowledge that information technology (IT) human capital is a strategic resource and that its effective management represents a significant organizational capability. We use configurational theory to examine organizational practices related to the management of IT human capital. In contrast to much prior work in IT human resource management (HRM) that is focused at the individual level, our inquiry is focused at the organizational level of analysis. Building on strate… Show more

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Cited by 134 publications
(102 citation statements)
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References 32 publications
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“…Ferratt (2005) suggested that a task focused orientation of a human resource, focuses particularly on increasing a worker's short-term performance, and generates a higher level of turnover than configuration that focuses on the worker. When a worker's role changes after implementing information technology (Wiblen et al, 2010), she/he could be dissatisfied or even leave the job.…”
Section: Perceived Usefulnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ferratt (2005) suggested that a task focused orientation of a human resource, focuses particularly on increasing a worker's short-term performance, and generates a higher level of turnover than configuration that focuses on the worker. When a worker's role changes after implementing information technology (Wiblen et al, 2010), she/he could be dissatisfied or even leave the job.…”
Section: Perceived Usefulnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among high-skill workers, IT professionals who create the IT infrastructure to support critical business processes of firms (Ang and Slaughter 2000, Bartol and Aspray 2006, Ferratt et al 2005, Harter and Slaughter 2003, Josefek and Kauffman 2003) are particularly susceptible to the forces of globalization. Arguably, because many ITrelated jobs also involve high information intensity and often few requirements for physical presence, these jobs are amenable to global disaggregation and can be performed remotely or offshore (Apte and Mason 1995).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In IS research, a wide body of academic and practitioner literature provides support for the effect of IT professionals' managerial competencies (e.g., those that can be acquired through an MBA) on career prospects. IT professionals with business knowledge play an important role in shaping the information infrastructure of a firm to help firms become agile and differentiate among their competition (Ferratt et al 2005, Josefek and Kauffman 2003, Ray et al 2005, Sambamurthy et al 2003, Smaltz et al 2006. Bharadwaj (2000) argues that managerial competencies are important in coordinating the multifaceted activities associated with successful implementation of IT systems and for the integration of IT and business planning.…”
Section: Malementioning
confidence: 99%