Abstract | The checklists included in well-known IT governance frameworks may be a good fit for large organizations that face regulatory pressure and a need for large-scale coordination but may be less appropriate for smaller organizations. Core IT governance principles embedded in the structure of CobiT, ITIL, and ISO2000 can be expressed as a set of IT governance norms including business alignment, a risk/control perspective, systematic measurement, accountability, and continuous improvement. In this study, we model IT effectiveness and willingness to comply with best practices as effects of adopting these norms. We propose a set of survey items tailored to help assess the constructs in this model then partially validate them using principal components analysis. Survey responses (n=86) reveal a significant connection between evidence of norm adoption in organizations and IT success. This norms-based paradigm may be useful in bringing some of the benefits of IT governance to the smaller organizations that are thought to drive economic growth and employment.
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