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Business-to-business integration in the Taiwanese information technology industry from a perspective of business network /

With the coming of the digital era, global competition has resulted in every industry expanding their requirements in supply chain integration and enterprise resource planning. When all kinds of industries seek to manage the supply chain and establish cooperative partnerships, trying to exploit cooperation to acquire more competencies in the market, the importance of information system integration for interfirm activities also increases with time. In fact, an interorganisational information system for business-to-business integration (B2Bi) is not a creation by technical input only but involves other factors. Particularly, it has larger system scope and numbers of system stakeholders than any other organisational information systems. In the management literature, a supply chain is often not a linear type of interfirm structure but is considered to be made up of the network formation. Business network studies actually have in common with B2Bi adoption theories that are based on their research models and determinants, such as the firms' resources, social legitimacy, and associated power. However, there appears to be only a few investigations of B2Bi adoption from the business network aspects in the extent literature and especially within the context of Taiwanese Information Technology (IT) Industries. This thesis can be seen as an attempt to enrich the previous findings of the technology acceptance model (TAM) in a B2B environment. Formulated in another way, it tries to test, apply and extend the adoption model to the use of computer-based information systems in integrating supply chain as the focus. Given the knowledge niches in the literature, the research question canvassed in the thesis is: How does the business network environment affect the information systems adoption for business-to-business integration? / In order to find out the answer to this proposed question, a combination of observation and survey methodologies for the final analysis by structural equation modelling (SEM) is used. The first stage is to go into the heartland of the Taiwanese IT industry as an IS lecturer working adjacent to the Hsin Chu Science Park. This strategy has helped me to approach many industrial practitioners easily and has subsequently assisted with publishing the preliminary findings in conference proceedings and journal articles. These early works have thus become the basis for refining and confirming my theoretical framework. The second stage involves statistical analysis to measure the hypotheses of the research model, which makes this thesis a piece of work drawing on both theory building and testing. / The path analyses indicate the answers of three issues raised from the research framework. The results confirm the associations between a firm's existing system support readiness and the network determinants outside organisational boundaries. Further, it identifies the interrelationships among these factors, and it seems that some of them mediate the enterprises' behaviour on investments to increase current information systems for B2Bi purposes. With the empirical data of Taiwanese IT industries, this thesis discusses the research model in terms of its applicability, limitation, and future researches. Moreover, factors such as perceived benefits and network governance are covered so as to enhance the current knowledge on supply chain integration and B2Bi implementation. / Thesis (PhDBusinessandManagement)--University of South Australia, 2004.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ADTP/267539
CreatorsWang, Yu Chung William.
Source SetsAustraliasian Digital Theses Program
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Rightscopyright under review

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