Zhu, K., and K. Kraemer, 2002, ��E-Commerce Metrics for Net-Enhanced Organizations: Assessing the Value of E-Commerce to Firm Performance in the Manufacturing Sector,�� Information Systems Research, 2002, Vol. 13, No. 3, pp. 275-295.
E-Commerce Metrics for
Net-Enhanced Organizations: Assessing the Value of E-Commerce to Firm
Performance in the Manufacturing Sector
Kevin Zhu and Kenneth Kraemer
Abstract
In
this study we developed a set of constructs to measure e-commerce capability in
Internet-enhanced organizations. The e-commerce capability metrics consist of
four dimensions - information, transaction, customization, and supplier
connection. These measures were empirically validated for reliability, content
and construct validity. Then we examined the nomological validity of these
e-commerce metrics in terms of their relationships to firm performance, with
data from 260 manufacturing companies divided into high IT-intensity and low
IT-intensity sectors. Grounded in the dynamic capabilities perspective and the
resource-based theory of the firm, a series of hypotheses were developed. After
controlling for variations of industry effects and firm size, our empirical
analysis found a significant relationship between e-commerce capability and
some measures of firm performance (e.g., inventory turnover), indicating that
the proposed metrics have demonstrated value for capturing e-commerce effects.
However, our analysis showed that e-commerce tends to be associated with increased
cost of goods sold for traditional manufacturing companies, but an opposite
relationship for technology companies. This result seems to highlight the role
of resource complementarity for the business value of e-commerce �C
traditional companies need enhanced alignment between e-commerce capability and
their existing IT infrastructure in order to reap the benefits of e-commerce.
Key words:
Electronic
commerce, IT intensity, e-commerce metrics, measurement, validation, firm
performance, Net-enhanced organizations