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Determinants of intention to participate in corporate BYOD-Programs: The case of digital natives
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Determinants of intention to participate in corporate BYOD-Programs: The case of digital natives

A. Weeger, X. Wang, H. Gewald, M. Raisinghani, O. Sanchez, G. Grant and S. Pittayachawan
Information Systems Frontiers, Vol.22, pp.203-209
2018
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Abstract

Corporations continue to see a growing demand for Bring-Your-Own-Device (BYOD) programs which allow employees to use their own computing devices for business purposes. This study analyses the demand of digital natives for such programs when entering the workforce and how they perceive the benefits and risk associated with BYOD. A theoretical model building on net valence considerations, technology adoption theories and perceived risk theory is proposed and tested. International students from five countries in their final year and with relevant work experience were surveyed. The results show that the intention to enroll in a BYOD program is primarily a function of perceived benefits while risks are widely ignored. Only safety and performance risks proved to contribute significantly to the overall perceived risk. The knowledge acquired from this study is particularly beneficial to IT executives as a guide to deciding whether and how to set up or adjust corporate BYOD initiatives.

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Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
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4 Electrical Engineering, Electronics & Computer Science
4.187 Security Systems
4.187.1592 Cyber Defense
Web Of Science research areas
Computer Science, Information Systems
Computer Science, Theory & Methods
ESI research areas
Computer Science
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