Measurement of Information System Use: Preliminary Considerations

Michael J. Cuellar, Ephraim R. McLean, Roy D. Johnson

Research output: Contribution to book or proceedingChapter

Abstract

The concept of system use has suffered from a "too simplistic definition" (DeLone and McLean [9], p. 16). This paper reviews various attempts at conceptualization and measurement of system use and then proposes a re-conceptualization of it as "the level of incorporation of an information system within a user's processes." We then go on to develop the concept of a Functional Interface Point and four dimensions of system usage: automation level, the proportion of the business process encoded by the information system; extent, the proportion of the FIPs used by the business process; frequency, the rate at which FIPs are used by the participants in the process; and thoroughness, the level of use of information/functionality provided by the system at an FIP. The article concludes with a discussion of some implications of this re-conceptualization and areas for follow on research.
Original languageAmerican English
Title of host publicationProceedings of the 2006 ACM SIGMIS CPR Conference on Computer Personnel Research
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 13 2006

Keywords

  • Information system use
  • Measurement
  • Preliminary considerations

DC Disciplines

  • Management Information Systems

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