Variables affecting information technology end-user satisfaction: a meta-analysis of the empirical literature
✍ Scribed by MO ADAM MAHMOOD; JANICE M. BURN; LEOPOLDO A. GEMOETS; CARMEN JACQUEZ
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 222 KB
- Volume
- 52
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1071-5819
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✦ Synopsis
The level of end-user satisfaction with information technology (IT) has widely been accepted as an indicator of IT success. The present research synthesizes and validates the construct of IT end-user satisfaction using a meta-analysis. It accomplishes this by analysing the empirical results of 45 end-user satisfaction studies published between 1986 and 1998 and by focusing on relationships between end-user satisfaction and nine variables: perceived usefulness, ease of use, user expectations, user experience, user skills, user involvement in system development, organizational support, perceived attitude of top management toward the project and user attitude toward information systems (IS) in widely divergent settings. The present analysis found positive support for the in#uence of all nine variables on end-user IT satisfaction but to varying degrees. The most signi"cant relationships were found to be user involvement in systems development, perceived usefulness, user experience, organizational support and user attitude toward the IS. This has implications for IS analysis and design as well as user training and the development of training support packages.
2000 Academic Press