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Measuring dimensions of perceived e-business risks

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Abstract.

The risks to e-business from breaches of security and privacy are well known. However, research has given very little attention to other important e-business risks. Using a socio-technical approach, in this study we survey a diverse sample of almost 200 participants to rate their perception of 16 e-business risks, compiled from the research and practitioner literature. Strategic risks, organizational risks and e-business policy risks emerged as the three underlying dimensions of e-business risk. In terms of the socio-technical model, strategic risks focus on the actor-structure component, and policy risks focus on the task-structure component. Organizational risks cover a wide spectrum of socio-technical components such as technology, actor-technology, technology structure and task-actor. The main contribution of this study is a multi dimensional scale of e-business risk perception. Practitioners can benefit by focusing their risk management efforts on the three dimensions of e-business risk, which are easier to manage than a long checklist of unrelated risks. Researchers benefit from a raised awareness on the importance of strategic and organizational risk factors in addition to policy risk factors for e-business risk management. A model that incorporates the three dimensions of e-business risks and shows theoretically based relationships with control mechanisms, trust, perceived uncertainty and profitability is proposed for testing in future research.

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Acknowledgments.

The author would like to thank David E. Griggs and Robert W. Simmons, who as graduate students assisted with the data collection. Thanks to the reviewers and Professors Peter Bryant and Elizabeth Cooperman for their suggestions on how to improve the paper.

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Correspondence to Judy E. Scott.

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Scott, J. Measuring dimensions of perceived e-business risks. ISeB 2, 31–55 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10257-003-0026-y

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10257-003-0026-y

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