TY - GEN
T1 - Measurement of intellectual capital using information and communications technology
AU - Gardini, Gumercindo Bartra
AU - Pastrana Diaz, Nérida Del Carmen
AU - Tostes Vieira, Marta Lucía
AU - Motta Villa García, Claudia Patricia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© IAMOT 2019.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - In this millennium, thanks to globalization and the development of information and communication technologies (ICT), it has become evident that knowledge is the new source of creation of value and wealth (Drucker, 1999), and emerges as a new factor of competitiveness intellectual capital (Brooking, 1997-a) (Lenart-Gansiniec, 2016) (Alama, 2010). These intangible assets, which represent the intellectual capital, need to be identified, measured and evaluated to manage them, using appropriate tools (Bueno, Rodríguez & Salvador, 2003). Because the development of new information technologies determines a large part of our future (Harari, 2018), ICTs emerge as a support tool to measure intellectual capital. The objective of this work is to measure intellectual capital through four factors: human capital (Farias, 2011), structural capital (Edvinsson & y Malone, 1999), relational capital (Capello & Faggian, 2005) and social capital (Coleman, 1988) (Durston, 2000) (Baro, 2012). The study has focused on the career of Telecommunications Engineering at the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru (PUCP), and its main contribution is to become a reference guide for managing intellectual capital in other university careers (Fazlagic, 2005) (Bueno, 2004). The methodology used in the research, part of a fieldwork based on interviews, applied to professors and academic authorities of the career of Telecommunications Engineering of the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru (PUCP), in which the levels were defined (competitive advantage, differentiating level, stable level and critical level). The four pillars of intellectual capital were weighted and each one of the items was valued through a survey. The sample consisted of fifteen teachers who presented research in the period 2012-2017. The information collected was processed through an application software CI-FII (Pastrana, 2015), to measure intellectual capital. The results indicate that the measurement of intellectual capital in the career of Telecommunications Engineering of the PUCP, reached a percentage valuation of 78.65%, placing it in a competitive advantage position, the Human Capital contributes 22.60%, the Relational Capital 20.30%, Structural Capital 19.55% and Social Capital 16.20%. The use of CI-FII software allowed the measurement of intellectual capital, becoming the technological support necessary to manage intellectual capital in the career of Telecommunications Engineering. In this way, the application software becomes a management tool for decision making. Finally, the evaluation of intellectual capital was an important contribution to the career of Telecommunications Engineering since each of the factors that generate value and inducers of success have been identified and measured, the results of which will allow us to propose strategies to achieve competitive positioning in a globalized world like the current one.
AB - In this millennium, thanks to globalization and the development of information and communication technologies (ICT), it has become evident that knowledge is the new source of creation of value and wealth (Drucker, 1999), and emerges as a new factor of competitiveness intellectual capital (Brooking, 1997-a) (Lenart-Gansiniec, 2016) (Alama, 2010). These intangible assets, which represent the intellectual capital, need to be identified, measured and evaluated to manage them, using appropriate tools (Bueno, Rodríguez & Salvador, 2003). Because the development of new information technologies determines a large part of our future (Harari, 2018), ICTs emerge as a support tool to measure intellectual capital. The objective of this work is to measure intellectual capital through four factors: human capital (Farias, 2011), structural capital (Edvinsson & y Malone, 1999), relational capital (Capello & Faggian, 2005) and social capital (Coleman, 1988) (Durston, 2000) (Baro, 2012). The study has focused on the career of Telecommunications Engineering at the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru (PUCP), and its main contribution is to become a reference guide for managing intellectual capital in other university careers (Fazlagic, 2005) (Bueno, 2004). The methodology used in the research, part of a fieldwork based on interviews, applied to professors and academic authorities of the career of Telecommunications Engineering of the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru (PUCP), in which the levels were defined (competitive advantage, differentiating level, stable level and critical level). The four pillars of intellectual capital were weighted and each one of the items was valued through a survey. The sample consisted of fifteen teachers who presented research in the period 2012-2017. The information collected was processed through an application software CI-FII (Pastrana, 2015), to measure intellectual capital. The results indicate that the measurement of intellectual capital in the career of Telecommunications Engineering of the PUCP, reached a percentage valuation of 78.65%, placing it in a competitive advantage position, the Human Capital contributes 22.60%, the Relational Capital 20.30%, Structural Capital 19.55% and Social Capital 16.20%. The use of CI-FII software allowed the measurement of intellectual capital, becoming the technological support necessary to manage intellectual capital in the career of Telecommunications Engineering. In this way, the application software becomes a management tool for decision making. Finally, the evaluation of intellectual capital was an important contribution to the career of Telecommunications Engineering since each of the factors that generate value and inducers of success have been identified and measured, the results of which will allow us to propose strategies to achieve competitive positioning in a globalized world like the current one.
KW - Human Capital
KW - Intellectual Capital
KW - Relational Capital
KW - Social Capital
KW - Structural Capital
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85081100974&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85081100974
T3 - Managing Technology for Inclusive and Sustainable Growth - 28th International Conference for the International Association of Management of Technology, IAMOT 2019
SP - 260
EP - 272
BT - Managing Technology for Inclusive and Sustainable Growth - 28th International Conference for the International Association of Management of Technology, IAMOT 2019
A2 - Jain, Karuna
A2 - Sangle, Shirish
A2 - Gupta, Ruchita
A2 - Persis, Jinil
A2 - R., Mukundan
PB - Excel India Publishers
T2 - 28th International Conference for the International Association of Management of Technology: Managing Technology for Inclusive and Sustainable Growth, IAMOT 2019
Y2 - 7 April 2019 through 11 April 2019
ER -