KOR

e-Article

The Impact of Organizational Social Web Site Usage on Work Performance: A Multilevel Structural Interaction Perspective
Document Type
Conference
Source
2012 45th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences System Science (HICSS), 2012 45th Hawaii International Conference on. :4011-4020 Jan, 2012
Subject
Computing and Processing
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Collaboration
Knowledge engineering
Organizations
Web sites
Social network services
Iris recognition
Social Software
Web 2.0
Multilevel Model
Performance
Organizational Learning
Exploitation
Exploration
Technology Use
Language
ISSN
1530-1605
Abstract
Recent research endeavors have shown that knowledge sharing improves not only organizational idea development and innovation, but also work performance. In that matter, IS researchers have mostly focused on macro level analyses. We address this by developing a multilevel model for investigating the impact of organizational social web site (SWS) usage on individual and team performance. Our paper addresses this gap by drawing on existing guidelines for multilevel theorizing. We propose that team SWS usage impacts individual and team performance through its improved structural collaboration capabilities. Organizational learning, social capital, and network theories serve as the theoretical basis. Ultimately, we present a multilevel model as the foundation for future empirical research. Our research's contribution lies in the theoretical derivation of a multilevel model.