Information Technology Implementation in SMEs:
A Comparison of Indonesia and Malaysia
Dublin Core
Title
Information Technology Implementation in SMEs:
A Comparison of Indonesia and Malaysia
A Comparison of Indonesia and Malaysia
Subject
Sustainable Competitive Advantage, IT Adoption, Perceived Simplicity, Compatibility, Performance
Description
Objective: The purpose of this study is to compare SMEs in Indonesia and Malaysia regarding the implementation of information technology, especially on the sustainable competitive advantage factors, IT adoption, perceived simplicity, green technology capability, and performance.
Design/Methods/Approach: Survey data are collected from 269 SME leaders and managers SMEs in Indonesia and 241 respondents in Malaysia. The sampling model is purposive sampling while analysis involved a non-parametric test (Mann-Whitney U-test).
Findings: The results show that there are significant differences for the variables SCA, SMEs performance expectation, and IT adoption. There are no significant differences between Indonesian and Malaysian SMEs for the variables of perceived simplicity and green technology capability.
Originality: The paper contributes to the growing research on information technology implementation by using factors within Sustainable Competitive Advantage, IT adoption, perceived simplicity, green technology capability, and performance. Practical/Policy implication: This finding can encourage SMEs in Indonesia and Malaysia to work together to develop important variables to improve the implementation of information technology to increase competitiveness.
Keywords: Sustainable Competitive Advantage, IT Adoption, Perceived Simplicity, Compatibility, Performance
Design/Methods/Approach: Survey data are collected from 269 SME leaders and managers SMEs in Indonesia and 241 respondents in Malaysia. The sampling model is purposive sampling while analysis involved a non-parametric test (Mann-Whitney U-test).
Findings: The results show that there are significant differences for the variables SCA, SMEs performance expectation, and IT adoption. There are no significant differences between Indonesian and Malaysian SMEs for the variables of perceived simplicity and green technology capability.
Originality: The paper contributes to the growing research on information technology implementation by using factors within Sustainable Competitive Advantage, IT adoption, perceived simplicity, green technology capability, and performance. Practical/Policy implication: This finding can encourage SMEs in Indonesia and Malaysia to work together to develop important variables to improve the implementation of information technology to increase competitiveness.
Keywords: Sustainable Competitive Advantage, IT Adoption, Perceived Simplicity, Compatibility, Performance
Creator
*Budhi Cahyono1 Lutfi Nurcholis1 Marno Nugroho1
Source
https://e-journal.unair.ac.id/jmtt
Date
March 26, 2022
Contributor
PERI IRAWAN
Format
PDF
Language
ENGLISH
Type
TEXT
Files
Collection
Citation
*Budhi Cahyono1 Lutfi Nurcholis1 Marno Nugroho1, “Information Technology Implementation in SMEs:
A Comparison of Indonesia and Malaysia,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed March 12, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/5366.
A Comparison of Indonesia and Malaysia,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed March 12, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/5366.