Use of cloud computing services in micro and small enterprises: a fit perspective

Micro and Small Enterprises (MSEs) require the right Organizational Information and Communication Technology Infrastructure (OICTI) to provide them with the essential functionalities to support their business processes. In order to have the right OICTI, MSEs are expected to make huge investments in...

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Main Author: Patrick Wamuyu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SciKA 2017-01-01
Series:International Journal of Information Systems and Project Management
Subjects:
Online Access: http://www.sciencesphere.org/ijispm/archive/ijispm-050204.pdf
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spelling doaj-c3b729e1a1074123bd8c07cc8c935dbe2020-11-25T01:30:55ZengSciKAInternational Journal of Information Systems and Project Management2182-77962182-77882017-01-010502598110.12821/ijispm05020421827788Use of cloud computing services in micro and small enterprises: a fit perspectivePatrick Wamuyu01234 United States International University-Africa Micro and Small Enterprises (MSEs) require the right Organizational Information and Communication Technology Infrastructure (OICTI) to provide them with the essential functionalities to support their business processes. In order to have the right OICTI, MSEs are expected to make huge investments in financial and human resources, to purchase, deploy and maintain Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs). Cloud Computing Services (CCS) avail OICTI, for a fraction of the resources required to own private ICT infrastructure. The purpose of this study was to assess the fit between the MSE’s OICTI needs and the information processing capabilities of CCS and how this fit influences CCS adoption in the Kenyan MSEs. The research was quantitative in nature, in which, a theory-based model grounded on the task technology fit, organization information processing and technology-organization-environment theories was developed and validated. Study findings suggest strong correlations between MSEs’ tasks and CCS and between MSEs’ information processing needs and CCS information processing capabilities. Other factors identified as influencing CCS procurement are affordability and the relationship between the CCS providers and the MSEs. The study contributes to the academic literature on technology adoption in MSEs by showing that there exists a multidimensional fit between CCS and MSEs’ OICTI requirements. http://www.sciencesphere.org/ijispm/archive/ijispm-050204.pdf cloud computingMSEsICT acquisitionorganizational information and communication technology infrastructure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Wamuyu
spellingShingle Patrick Wamuyu
Use of cloud computing services in micro and small enterprises: a fit perspective
International Journal of Information Systems and Project Management
cloud computing
MSEs
ICT acquisition
organizational information and communication technology infrastructure
author_facet Patrick Wamuyu
author_sort Patrick Wamuyu
title Use of cloud computing services in micro and small enterprises: a fit perspective
title_short Use of cloud computing services in micro and small enterprises: a fit perspective
title_full Use of cloud computing services in micro and small enterprises: a fit perspective
title_fullStr Use of cloud computing services in micro and small enterprises: a fit perspective
title_full_unstemmed Use of cloud computing services in micro and small enterprises: a fit perspective
title_sort use of cloud computing services in micro and small enterprises: a fit perspective
publisher SciKA
series International Journal of Information Systems and Project Management
issn 2182-7796
2182-7788
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Micro and Small Enterprises (MSEs) require the right Organizational Information and Communication Technology Infrastructure (OICTI) to provide them with the essential functionalities to support their business processes. In order to have the right OICTI, MSEs are expected to make huge investments in financial and human resources, to purchase, deploy and maintain Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs). Cloud Computing Services (CCS) avail OICTI, for a fraction of the resources required to own private ICT infrastructure. The purpose of this study was to assess the fit between the MSE’s OICTI needs and the information processing capabilities of CCS and how this fit influences CCS adoption in the Kenyan MSEs. The research was quantitative in nature, in which, a theory-based model grounded on the task technology fit, organization information processing and technology-organization-environment theories was developed and validated. Study findings suggest strong correlations between MSEs’ tasks and CCS and between MSEs’ information processing needs and CCS information processing capabilities. Other factors identified as influencing CCS procurement are affordability and the relationship between the CCS providers and the MSEs. The study contributes to the academic literature on technology adoption in MSEs by showing that there exists a multidimensional fit between CCS and MSEs’ OICTI requirements.
topic cloud computing
MSEs
ICT acquisition
organizational information and communication technology infrastructure
url http://www.sciencesphere.org/ijispm/archive/ijispm-050204.pdf
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