Article ID: | iaor19932320 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 8 |
Issue: | 3 |
Start Page Number: | 7 |
End Page Number: | 26 |
Publication Date: | Dec 1991 |
Journal: | Journal of Management Information Systems |
Authors: | Poole Marshall Scott, Desanctis Gerardine, Lewis Howard, Desharnais George |
Keywords: | financial |
Quality improvement programs are regarded by many businesses as mechanisms for improving organizational competitiveness in the face of tightening budgets and more global market structures. Recently developed computer-supported group problem-solving tools, or Group Decision Support Systems (GDSSs), offer the potential to reduce the effort involved in applying quality improvement methods by providing automated means to enter, record, and operate on ideas generated by team members during face-to-face meetings. To explore how GDSSs might be used by quality teams, the Internal Revenue Service and the University of Minnesota conducted a multiyear study of GDSS use in small-group meetings. This paper presents some initial findings on the extent and types of uses of the technology made by teams based on the first seven months of the present study. This preliminary analysis is presented within the framework of adaptive structuration theory and considers the relationship among inputs, processes, and outputs of group interaction as a GDSS is used.