DocumentCode
1047486
Title
The Effect of IT Failure Impact and Personal Morality on IT Project Reporting Behavior
Author
Park, ChongWoo ; Keil, Mark ; Kim, Jong Woo
Author_Institution
Sch. of Sci. & Technol., Georgia Gwinnett Coll., Lawrenceville, GA
Volume
56
Issue
1
fYear
2009
Firstpage
45
Lastpage
60
Abstract
An individual´s reluctance to report the actual status of a troubled project has recently received research attention as an important contributor to project failure. While there are a variety of factors influencing the reluctance to report, prior information systems research has focused on only situational factors such as risk, information asymmetry, and time pressure involved in the given situation. In this paper, we examine the effects of both situational and personal factors on an individual´s reporting behavior within the rubric of the basic whistle-blowing model adapted from Dozier and Miceli . Specifically, we identify perceived impact of information technology (IT) failure as a situational factor and personal morality and willingness to communicate as personal factors, and investigate their effects on the assessments and decisions that individuals make about reporting the IT project´s status. Based on the results of a controlled laboratory experiment, we found that perceived impact of IT failure directly affects an individual´s assessment of whether a troubled project´s status ought to be reported, exerting an indirect influence on willingness to report bad news, and that personal morality directly affects all three steps in the basic whistle-blowing model, as hypothesized. Willingness to communicate, however, was found not to affect an individual´s willingness to report bad news. The implications of these findings and directions for future research are discussed.
Keywords
DP management; human factors; project management; IT failure impact; IT project management; IT project reporting behavior; IT project status; bad news reporting; information technology; personal morality; whistle-blowing model; Blindness; Computer bugs; Embedded software; Ethics; Information systems; Information technology; Laboratories; Medical services; Project management; Surgery; Bad news reporting; IT project management; ethics; impact of information technology (IT) failure; morality; scope of impact; type of impact; whistle-blowing; willingness to communicate;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Engineering Management, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9391
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TEM.2008.2009794
Filename
4729601
Link To Document