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Dive into the research topics where Anandhi Bharadwaj is active.

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Featured researches published by Anandhi Bharadwaj.


Management Information Systems Quarterly | 2000

A resource-based perspective on information technology capability and firm performance: an empirical investigation

Anandhi Bharadwaj

The resource-based view of the firm attributes superior financial performance to organizational resources and capabilities. This paper develops the concept of IT as an organizational capability and empirically examines the association between IT capability and firm performance. Firm specific IT resources are classified as IT infrastructure, human IT resources, and IT-enabled intangibles. A matched-sample comparison group methodology and publicly available ratings are used to assess IT capability and firm performance. Results indicate that firms with high IT capability tend to outperform a control sample of firms on a variety of profit and cost-based performance measures.


Management Information Systems Quarterly | 2003

Shaping agility through digital options: reconceptualizing the role of information technology in contemporary firms

Vallabh Sambamurthy; Anandhi Bharadwaj; Varun Grover

Agility is vital to the innovation and competitive performance of firms in contemporary business environments. Firms are increasingly relying on information technologies, including process, knowledge, and communication technologies, to enhance their agility. The purpose of this paper is to broaden understanding about the strategic role of IT by examining the nomological network of influences through which IT impacts firm performance. By drawing upon recent thinking in the strategy, entrepreneurship, and IT management literatures, this paper uses a multitheoretic lens to argue that information technology investments and capabilities influence firm performance through three significant organizational capabilities (agility, digital options, and entrepreneurial alertness) and strategic processes (capability-building, entrepreneurial action, and coevolutionary adaptation). We also propose that these dynamic capabilities and strategic processes impact the ability of firms to launch many and varied competitive actions and that, in turn, these competitive actions are a significant antecedent of firm performance. Through our theorizing, we draw attention to a significant and reframed role of IT as a digital options generator in contemporary firms.


European Journal of Information Systems | 2006

Enterprise agility and the enabling role of information technology

Eric Overby; Anandhi Bharadwaj; Vallabh Sambamurthy

In turbulent environments, enterprise agility, that is, the ability of firms to sense environmental change and respond readily, is an important determinant of firm success. We define and deconstruct enterprise agility, delineate enterprise agility from similar concepts in the business research literature, explore the underlying capabilities that support enterprise agility, explicate the enabling role of information technology (IT) and digital options, and propose a method for measuring enterprise agility. The concepts in this paper are offered as foundational building blocks for the overall research program on enterprise agility and the enabling role of IT.


Management Information Systems Quarterly | 2013

Digital business strategy: toward a next generation of insights

Anandhi Bharadwaj; Omar A. El Sawy; Paul A. Pavlou; N. Venkatraman

Over the last three decades, the prevailing view of information technology strategy has been that it is a functional-level strategy that must be aligned with the firms chosen business strategy. Even within this so-called alignment view, business strategy directed IT strategy. During the last decade, the business infrastructure has become digital with increased interconnections among products, processes, and services. Across many firms spanning different industries and sectors, digital technologies (viewed as combinations of information, computing, communication, and connectivity technologies) are fundamentally transforming business strategies, business processes, firm capabilities, products and services, and key interfirm relationships in extended business networks. Accordingly, we argue that the time is right to rethink the role of IT strategy, from that of a functional-level strategy--aligned but essentially always subordinate to business strategy--to one that reflects a fusion between IT strategy and business strategy. This fusion is herein termed digital business strategy. We identify four key themes to guide our thinking on digital business strategy and help provide a framework to define the next generation of insights. The four themes are (1) the scope of digital business strategy, (2) the scale of digital business strategy, (3) the speed of digital business strategy, and (4) the sources of business value creation and capture in digital business strategy. After elaborating on each of these four themes, we discuss the success metrics and potential performance implications from pursuing a digital business strategy. We also show how the papers in the special issue shed light on digital strategies and offer directions to advance insights and shape future research.


Information Systems Research | 2007

The Performance Effects of Complementarities Between Information Systems, Marketing, Manufacturing, and Supply Chain Processes

Sundar Bharadwaj; Anandhi Bharadwaj; Elliot Bendoly

Manufacturing firms are increasingly using advanced enterprise-level information systems to coordinate and synchronize externally oriented functions such as marketing and supply chain and internally oriented activities such as manufacturing. In this paper, we present a model of manufacturing performance that simultaneously considers the effects of a firms integrated IS capability in conjunction with interfunctional and interorganizational coordination mechanisms. Consistent with the complementarity perspective, we view this specific form of IS capability as enhancing manufacturings coordination with marketing and supply chain functions to drive manufacturing performance. Additionally, the theoretical model presented here introduces manufacturing-IS coordination, a form of coordination not considered in past research, as a key antecedent to integrated IS capability. The research thus provides a comprehensive framework for examining manufacturing performance in contexts that have been transformed by the use of advanced information systems. The theoretical model is tested using primary data collected from manufacturing firms and matched with objective manufacturing performance data from secondary sources. Results show that a firms integrated IS capability, as well as the complementary effects of IS capability with manufacturing, marketing, and supply chain processes, are significant predictors of manufacturing performance. These findings are robust to concerns of endogeneity, unobserved heterogeneity, and alternative model specification.


Information Systems Research | 2009

An Empirical Analysis of Contract Structures in IT Outsourcing

Yuanyuan Chen; Anandhi Bharadwaj

Outsourcing of information technology (IT) services has received much attention in the information systems (IS) literature. However, considerably less attention has been paid to actual contract structures used in IT outsourcing (ITO). Examining contract structures yields important insights into how the contracting parties structure the governance provisions and the factors or transaction risks that influence them. Based on insights from prior literature, from practicing legal experts, and through in-depth content analysis of actual contracts, we develop a comprehensive coding scheme to capture contract provisions across four major dimensions: monitoring, dispute resolution, property rights protection, and contingency provisions. We then develop an empirical data set describing the contract structures across these distinct dimensions, using a sample of 112 ITO contracts from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) database from 1993 to 2003. Drawing on transaction cost, agency, and relational exchange theories, we hypothesize the effects of transaction and relational characteristics on the specific contractual provisions, as well as on overall contract extensiveness. Furthermore, we examine how these associations vary under conditions of fixed price and time and materials pricing structures. The results provide good support for the main hypotheses of the study and yield interesting insights about contractual governance of ITO arrangements.


Journal of Strategic Information Systems | 2009

Effects of information technology failures on the market value of firms

Anandhi Bharadwaj; Mark Keil; Magnus Mähring

IT failures abound but little is known about the financial impact that these failures have on a firms market value. Using the resource-based view of the firm and event study methodology, this study analyzes how firms are penalized by the market when they experience unforeseen operating or implementation-related IT failures. Our sample consists of 213 newspaper reports of IT failures by publicly traded firms, which occurred during a 10-year period. The findings show that IT failures result in a 2% average cumulative abnormal drop in stock prices over a 2-day event window. The results also reveal that the market responds more negatively to implementation failures affecting new systems than to operating failures involving current systems. Further, the study demonstrates that more severe IT failures result in a greater decline in firm value and that firms with a history of IT failures suffer a greater negative impact. The implications of these findings for research and practice are discussed.


Management Information Systems Quarterly | 2013

Visions and voices on emerging challenges in digital business strategy

Anandhi Bharadwaj; Omar A. El Sawy; Paul A. Pavlou; N. Venkatraman

This section is a collection of shorter “Issue and Opinions” pieces that address some of the critical challenges around the evolution of digital business strategy. These voices and visions are from thought leaders who, in addition to their scholarship, have a keen sense of practice. They outline 27 through their opinion pieces a series of issues that will need attention from both research and practice. These issues have been identified through their observation of practice with the 30 eye of a scholar. They provide fertile opportunities for scholars in information systems, strategic management, and organizational theory.


Annals of Operations Research | 1992

Model management systems: a survey

Anandhi Bharadwaj; Joobin Choobineh; Amber W. Lo; Bala Shetty

This paper provides a survey of model management literature within the mathematical modeling domain. The first part of the survey is a review and a summary of the literature. After giving some basic definitions of modeling, modeling life cycle, and model management, two representative algebraic modeling languages followed by three approaches to modeling are introduced. These approaches are database, graph-based, and knowledge-based. The discussion is followed by a review of two specialized model management systems. The second part of the survey is a categorization of various modeling systems based on the modeling functions they provide and some of their features. These functions include life cycle support and model base administration. The degree of model independence provided by model management systems and the implemented environment systems is also summarized. The last part of the paper provides directions for future research.


IFIP International Working Conference on Business Agility and Information Technology Diffusion | 2005

A Framework for Enterprise Agility and the Enabling Role of Digital Options

Eric Overby; Anandhi Bharadwaj; Vallabh Sambamurthy

In turbulent environments, enterprise agility (i. e., the ability for firms to sense environmental change and respond appropriately) is an important determinant of firm success. We present a framework for enterprise agility, identify the underlying capabilities that support enterprise agility, and explicate the enabling role of information technology and digital options.

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Omar A. El Sawy

University of Southern California

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Ajay S. Vinze

Arizona State University

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Yuanyuan Chen

National University of Singapore

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