literature review
5 months left
reviewed an article from acm:
PRACTICE MAKES USE: USING INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES BEFORE IMPLEMENTATION AND THE EFFECT ON ACCEPTANCE BY END USERS
User acceptance of technology
Top down management support
Provide training,
Communication with users,
Allow users to contribute and participate in decision making
Ensure that users do not feel threatened by job insecurity when introducing IT. Do this by training them
Davis (1989; Davis, Bagozzi, and Warshaw, 1989)
examined perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness
and its relationship to acceptance of information
technologies. Perceived ease of use was defined as the
degree to which a prospective user expects the technology
to be free of effort.
Perceived usefulness was a
prospective user’s perception that a specific technology will
enhance his or her job performance. Perceived usefulness
focuses on the payback to the end user for using the
information technology and is anticipated to relate directly
to end users’ expectations about the information
technology (Kleintop, 1993a).
Perceived usefulness was not a significant predictor of
actual use when entered in Block 2 of the hierarchical
regression anal yses shown in Table S. This is not
consistent with Davis, et al. (1989) who found that
perceived usefulness was predictive of system usage.
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