ABSTRACT: This study examines the influence of organizational controls related to knowledge management and resource development on assimilation (i.e., strategic integration and use) of business intelligence (BI) systems. BI systems use analytics and performance management concepts to leverage enterprise system databases and provide core management control system (MCS) capability. Our results indicate that organizational absorptive capacity (i.e., the ability to gather, absorb, and strategically leverage new external information) is critical to establishing appropriate technology infrastructure and to assimilating BI systems for organizational benefit. Further, findings show that while top management plays a significant role in effective deployment of BI systems, their impact is indirect and a function of operational managers’ absorptive capacity. In particular, this indirect effect suggests that leveraging BI systems is driven from the bottom up as opposed to the top down. This differentiates BI from other isolated strategic MCS innovations that have traditionally been viewed as top-management driven.
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1 January 2011
Research Article|
January 01 2011
The Role of Organizational Absorptive Capacity in Strategic Use of Business Intelligence to Support Integrated Management Control Systems
Mohamed Z. Elbashir;
Mohamed Z. Elbashir
The Australian National University
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Philip A. Collier;
Philip A. Collier
The University of Melbourne
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Steve G. Sutton
Steve G. Sutton
University of Central Florida
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Online ISSN: 1558-7967
Print ISSN: 0001-4826
American Accounting Association
2011
The Accounting Review (2011) 86 (1): 155–184.
Citation
Mohamed Z. Elbashir, Philip A. Collier, Steve G. Sutton; The Role of Organizational Absorptive Capacity in Strategic Use of Business Intelligence to Support Integrated Management Control Systems. The Accounting Review 1 January 2011; 86 (1): 155–184. https://doi.org/10.2308/accr.00000010
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