| Article ID: | iaor19951194 |
| Country: | United Kingdom |
| Volume: | 3 |
| Issue: | 4 |
| Start Page Number: | 292 |
| End Page Number: | 302 |
| Publication Date: | Oct 1994 |
| Journal: | European Journal of Information Systems |
| Authors: | Chau P.Y.C. |
| Keywords: | small businesses |
It has been argued that small businesses can improve their organizational performance and increase their competitiveness with computer-based information systems. Nevertheless, very little research has been conducted on the issue of how a software package is selected and what factors affect the decision. This study attempts to fill this gap. A descriptive research model is developed and tested using date collected from a questionnaire survey of 68 small manufacturing businesses. The main findings are: (1) software characteristics, vendor’s capability and opinions/advice given by other concerned parties are important factors considered by the owners/managers of small businesses in the choice of packaged software; (2) owners/managers who have a relatively higher level of computer/IS literacy tend to emphasise more factors with a technical nature; (3) those who have more experience in using/purchasing packaged software tend to give more weight to the importance of the capability of the vendor, both technical and non-technical; and (4) owners tend to look at the technical factors more seriously while managers tend to emphasise more non-technical factors such as price and popularity of the software package when making the software selection decision.