"Productivity growth comes from new technologies and new ways of doing business," said Erik Brynjolfsson, MIT Sloan School of Management professor, who, as co-director of MIT's Center for E-business, led the study. While the study found a slight correlation between IT investments and productivity, spending levels were of little importance. "It was how they used technology. It was what they were doing with it. And it was their corporate culture, their attitudes towards a whole set of information-related decisions," Brynjolfsson said.
The study found that these actions are complementary. In fact, when companies take only some of these steps, such as providing workers with more information but not empowering them to act on it, productivity can take a hit, Brynjolfsson said.
The study was based on data gathered from 1,167 large companies in 41 industries. The research included data about companies' revenue, market value, and IT expenditures, combined with the results of surveys of company CIOs and human-resource managers, conducted in 1995-1996 and earlier this year, about organizational practices. The study is part of a five-year, $5 million project at MIT.
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