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Dan Krauss for The New York Times
John Seely Brown, former director of the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, credits technology with allowing better and faster communication in the workplace, improving productivity.

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NEW ECONOMY

Technology and Worker Efficiency

By STEVE LOHR

Published: February 2, 2004

HOW much does information technology really contribute to economic productivity and corporate competitiveness? It has been a matter of debate for years. Efforts to measure technology's contribution tend to follow Sherlock Holmes's maxim on deductive sleuthing: When you have excluded the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.

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That kind of reasoning has given technology a large share of the credit for the American economy's strong - and sometimes puzzling - productivity gains for the last several years. The gains cannot be explained any other way, it is said, so they must be the result of companies getting an increase in productivity from all that computer hardware and software they bought.

Yet this technology-by-default explanation is not very intellectually satisfying. Nor does it provide much of a guide to government officials or corporate executives as they make decisions on economic policy or business investments. There is something to the business adage that you can't manage what you can't measure.

Economists, business school professors and Federal Reserve researchers have been puzzling over the technology conundrum for some time. And today, the Information Work Productivity Council, an industry group, is sponsoring a gathering in New York of business executives, consultants and academics to discuss current research, case studies and future trends. The council says it is independent, but it is hardly disinterested since its supporters are major technology companies including Accenture, Cisco Systems, Hewlett-Packard, Intel, Microsoft, SAP and Xerox.

What is intriguing about much of the research marked for citation and discussion at the forum is how modest a role technology itself plays in the productivity gains studied. The wise use of technology, researchers say, is one ingredient in the recipe for improving the productivity of information workers, who now represent up to 70 percent of the American labor force, or 100 million workers, from customer service people in call centers to scientists in research labs.

The main focus of recent study has been on what researchers call "organization capital." This asset includes a company's work practices and routines, its storehouse of corporate knowledge in computer databases and in people's heads, and even culture and values as they guide how a company operates.

In a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper, Baruch Lev, a professor at New York University, and Suresh Radhakrishnan, a professor at the University of Texas at Dallas, studied 250 companies and assessed the contribution from organization capital. In the paper, "The Measurement of Firm-Specific Organization Capital," published last year, the professors found that investments in organizational capital accounted, on average, for 71 percent of sales growth.

"How information gets communicated and coordinated in a company can drive organization capital," Mr. Radhakrishnan said, "so it is enhanced by information technology."

Much of organization capital is expressed in terms of work practices - how things are done in a company. When blended with technology investments, certain work practices yield the biggest gains, said Erik Brynjolfsson, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The companies that perform best, he said, use teams more often than their rivals. They decentralize work that requires local knowledge and interpersonal skills like product design, sales and on-the-fly adjustments on the factory floor, and they centralize and computerize work that is easily quantified, like accounts payable systems and obtaining the lowest airline fares for routine travel.

Investments in technology alone, Mr. Brynjolfsson said, bring little or no benefit. But he says that technology and organization capital are complements, reinforcing each other when used wisely together. "When you put organization capital into the model, it goes a long way to explaining the productivity surge we've seen," Mr. Brynjolfsson said. "It's not so much of a mystery."

The observation that it is learning how to use a technology - more than the technology itself - that brings economic gains is not surprising. That is the historical pattern, economists note. The electric motor, for example, was introduced in the 1880's but did not generate discernible productivity gains until the 1920's, when businesses reorganized work around the industrial production line, the efficiency breakthrough of its day.


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