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ES Implementations in healthcare , Ambitions , Cycles , Approaches

ES Implementations in healthcare , Ambitions , Cycles , Approaches. Christiaan Katsma & Ton Spil. Agenda. Dynamics of the ES Implementation process Suitability of agile or incremental approaches Inspection of 5 cases in healthcare Results Discussion .

january
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ES Implementations in healthcare , Ambitions , Cycles , Approaches

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  1. ES Implementations in healthcare, Ambitions, Cycles, Approaches Christiaan Katsma & Ton Spil

  2. Agenda Dynamics of the ES Implementation process Suitability of agile or incremental approaches Inspection of 5 cases in healthcare Results Discussion

  3. Markus & Tanis (2000)ES Experience cycle Parr & Shanks (2001)

  4. Backgound ES Implementations traditionally are executed in a staged approach. Current Web applications, SOA, SAAS,.. based projects often use more incremental or agile approaches

  5. In the last century the incremental and agile implementation of ES was explained and described (Fichman & Moses, 1998; Stender 1999) But the monolithic technology behind the ERP systems at first prohibited actual incremental implementation approaches.

  6. RDI (Fichman & Moses, 1998) • “One question we have been asked is whether this methodology can be applied to enterprise resource planning (ERP) offerings from vendors like SAP, PeopleSoft or BaaN. We believe that except for the instance of a small company implementing a fairly well understood module, the answer will usually be no. “

  7. Sollution: Subsequent implementation efforts (Fleisch et al. 2004) R/3 Implementation ProcessReengineering ProcessReengineering Processorientedapproach R/3 Implementation Information System oriented approach

  8. Solution: Rapid implementation Squeeze

  9. Currently we see an initial trend (Mezaros & Aston, 2007; Karim et all; 2007) for system implementers to gradually come up with cyclical implementation approaches. In the perspective of implementation time and cycle usage these approaches more and more come close to the agile philosophy (Alleman, 2002)

  10. Organizations Learn: Cyclical implementation ES Implementation cycle Project chartering Configure & Rollout Onward & Upward Shakedown

  11. So we questioned…. • One decade after Moses & Fichmann (and others). What is the current state of implementing ES packages using cyclical or incremental approaches?

  12. Research set up 5 cases of ES implementations in the Netherlands in Hospitals. Different ambition and maturity levels Qualitative & longitudinal approach (started 2004) Interviews with at least three different “roles”in the project (Consultant, Healthcare professional, (Top) Manager)

  13. Why healthcare? The specific distinction between the flexible care processes on the one hand and the structured and repeating operational hospital management processes, like purchasing and controlling (Merode et al., 2004). This distinction was/is seen as impeding and complicating the implementation process. (end of the 90’s). We currently see that this typical characteristic is becoming a foundation for cyclical implementation efforts.

  14. What research perspectives on the implementation process? • Cycles • Ambition level • Approaches

  15. Phase I Project Chartering Phase II The Project Phase III Shakedown Phase IV Onward and Upward Cycles Based on Markus & Tanis we define a cycle as the entire proces from envisioning towards adoption of the ES.

  16. Ambition level Based on the MIT Alignment model and its developments (Venkatraman, Scott Morgan, Yetton et al.) we distinguish three ambition levels for ES implementations IT driven Replacement (IDR) Package enabled Reengineering (PER) Human driven renewal (HDR)

  17. Approaches • Practitioners choose to utilize implementation methodologies based upon their own experiences and habits (Aydin and Harmsen, 2002, Hirschheim and Klein, 1989) • Based upon (Goles and Hirschheim, 2000) we discern three distinctive approaches • Functionalistic • Integral • Interpretative

  18. Combining perspectives

  19. Our expectations

  20. Overview of the results

  21. Results We observe an increase in the use of cyclical approaches resulting in what we call macro dynamics at work in four out of the five hospitals studied. Macro dynamics means that the hospitals start drifting in either their ambition level, implementation approach or even both. Within the limitations of 5 cases we conclude that such a drift in most cases leads to implementation problems if not aligned within one implementation cycle. On the other hand persistence in ambition level and implementation approach results in a positive perception of the implementation project and its results.

  22. Conclusions Functionalistic approaches still dominate in the ES domain Only one hospital adopts a mere IT- Driven Replacement ambition. (compared to 5 years ago the healthcare domain is advancing to proces reengineering in the care processes. Humand driven renewal still is lacking as phenomena in the ES domain. There is great dificulty in the cases to be consistent in the adopted approach and ambition level. Changes within one cycle do not show good implementation results. Changes between cycles show moderate to good results

  23. Discussion • Incremental implementation still means : following the “entire” cycle, but shortening the stages. This makes us question: • What are aspects in the project stage that are suitable for more agility? • What technological barriers do we currently see to adopt agile approaches in the ES domain?

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