IT Spending as a Percentage of Revenue
Limitations of this table: Size of companies varies in each industry Changes in revenues and IT spending from year to year only surveyed companies that are fairly large Industry determines how much a company will spend on IT more information content – more spending on IT IT spending as a percentage → ratio depending on the direction of revenue vs. IT spending (% can be based on increase/decrease of revenue, not IT spending) The Beautiful Hypothesis IT spending can be used to either reduce costs (expenses) or add value to a product in order to increase sales (Revenue)…either way this makes a profit This hypothesis, summarized in the above Figure, indicates that when IT spending is `processed' (goes through the black box) within the firm, it leads to higher profits either through higher revenue or lower cost.
The Productivity Paradox There is no identifiable association between expenditures on IT and profitability Beautiful hypothesis is not true
Interpretation: Spending lots of money on IT does not necessarily mean that the return on equity will also increase This provides support to the Productivity Paradox which states that IT spending and Profitability have no correlation Causality – The relationship between cause and affect Return on Investment (ROI) = (Gains) – (Investments) / (Investments) The