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Chapter 7: ERP Implementation & Training. User Training Maintenance. Organizational Change from ERP. Productivity decline Jobs redefined, new procedures established, ERP fine tuned, organization learns to process new information streams Productivity gain
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Chapter 7:ERP Implementation & Training User Training Maintenance
Organizational Change from ERP • Productivity decline • Jobs redefined, new procedures established, ERP fine tuned, organization learns to process new information streams • Productivity gain • Develop new skills, structural changes, process integration, add bolt-ons • Payoff • Transform organizational operations to efficient level
Critical Success Factors • What the organization must do well to succeed • For IS Projects: • Top management support • Inherent in ERP • Clearly stated objectives • Inherent in ERP • End User involvement
ERP Critical Success FactorsUmble et al. (2003) • Clear understanding – strategic goals • Top management commitment • Project management implementation • Great implementation team • Cope with technical issues • Organizational commitment to change • Extensive education & training • Data accuracy • Focused performance measures • Resolution of multi-site issues
Implementation Strategy OptionsMarkus et al. [2000] • Business Strategy • Total local autonomy • Headquarters control – financial only • Headquarters coordination • Network coordination • Total centralization • Software Configuration • Single/multiple financial/operations • Technical Platform • Centralized/Distributed • Management Execution • Big bang/Phased rollout
Implementation Strategies • Big bang seemingly cheapest • Dangerous • Often makes sense in ERP if carefully planned • Phased rollout reduces risk • Especially good for large organizations
Levels of IS/IT Failure • Corresponding failure • Don’t meet design objectives • Process failure • Not on time &/or not within budget • Interaction failure • System not used as designed • Expectation failure • Return not what stockholders expected
Factors in ERP Implementation FailureWillcocks & Sykes [2000]
Features of Successful ERP ImplementationWillcocks & Sykes [2000] • IT Leadership • Business systems thinking • Relationship building • Have needed technical platform • Ability to troubleshoot • Informed buying • Contract efforts coordinated • Suppliers held accountable • Long-term relationships with suppliers
User Training • Focus on business processes • Not on using system • Explain why • Don’t skimp on time • Show why new system superior to old
Training Delivery Formats • Web-based virtual training • Computer-based training • Video courses • Self-study books • Pop-up help screens
ERP MaintenanceNah et al. (2001) • Corrective • Incorporate vendor patches, fix problems • Adaptive • Implement new features, internal customization, implement interfaces • Perfective • New versions • Preventive • Monitor response time, errors, track maintenance activities
ERP System Migration • Over time, need to adopt changes • Minor modifications • Maybe system replacement • Vendors change products • WHY • The longer the time between upgrades, the harder • Easier to support a smaller number of software versions • Migrations can increase sales of seats, add-ons
User Reasons to Migrate • Added functionality • Compliance with new standards • Discontinued vendor support • Customer problems in linked systems
Summary • Time, cost, functionality tradeoff • In ERP, functionality the most important • Critical success factors • Top support & clear objectives inherent in ERP • Need User Involvement • Phased implementation reduces risk • but increases time • Once installed, still many pitfalls • Vendors change products • User training critical