Total Quality Management In Information Systems Development: Key Constructs And
Relationships
Journal of Management Information Systems, Winter 1999/ 2000, Vol. 16 Issue 3, p119, 37p
Ravichandran, T.
The availability of high-quality software is critical for the
effective use of information technology in organizations. Research in software quality has focused largely on the technical aspects of quality improvement, while limited attention has been paid to the organizational and sociobehavioral
aspects of quality management. This study represents one effort at addressing this void in the information systems literature. The quality and systems development literatures are synthesized to develop eleven quality management constructs
and two quality performance constructs. Scales for these constructs are empirically validated using data collected from a national survey of IS organizations. A LISREL framework is used to test the reliability and validity of the thirteen
constructs. The results provide support for the reliability and validity of the constructs. A cluster analysis of the data was conducted to examine patterns of association between quality management practices and quality performance. The
results suggest that higher levels of institutionalization of all quality management practices are associated with higher levels of quality performance. Our results also suggest that key factors that differentiated high- and low-quality
performing IS units include senior management leadership, mechanisms to promote learning and the management infrastructure of the IS unit. Future research efforts directed at causally interrelating the quality management practices should
lead to the development of a theory of quality management in systems development. Keywords: information systems management, software quality, systems development, total quality management theory.
ISE Categories: System Reliability