Abstract:
This study aimed to explore: 1) the influence of organizational categories containing organizational type and size, and 2) the influence of system requirements toward information technology (IT) project success. The IT project success consisted of scope, time, cost, and respondents satisfaction. The samples were 400 IT employees including chief information officers, program managers, and IT project managers from different types of organizations. A questionnaire was used to collect data and the method of convenience sampling was applied in the study. Statistics used to analyze data were descriptive statistics (frequency, percentage, mean, and standard deviation) and inferential statistics (One-way ANOVA, Least Significant Difference, and Multiple Linear Regression) at the significance level of 0.05.
The results showed that more than 200 employees came from the private sectors. The system requirements were in a high level of importance in all aspects including requirement elicitation, requirement definition, requirement analysis, requirement modeling, requirement validation, and requirement management. The IT project success was at the medium level of importance in all aspects.
The hypothesis testing results indicated that the organizational categories in the aspect of organizational type affected IT project success in each and every aspect. The government agencies, information technology business, and system requirements in the aspect of requirement elicitation and requirement validation influenced an overview of the IT project success.