Strategies for End-User Computing: An Integrative Framework

Abstract
This paper develops a framework consisting of five core strategies or organizational postures vis-à-vis end-user computing (euc). Following a description of each of the strategies, the authors employed a two-step process to represent (1) how to effectively implement a particular euc strategy, and (2) when to adopt a particular euc strategy. The first step, based on some field observations, resulted in a descriptive profiling of the euc strategies via the management attributes of policy setting and planning, support, and control. The second step produced a prescriptive timing with respect to the phases of euc strategy evolution. The integrative framework that resulted from this two-step process was based on the premise that euc technology adoption follows a learning curve phenomenon. In essence, such a framework should serve as a tool, useful to the practitioner in coping with the dynamic environment surrounding the management of end-user computing.

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