The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/all/20050228091113/http://projectperfect.com.au:80/info_erp_imp.php

Project Management Information

Free White Papers and information for Project Managers

Latest News

Our Home Page
Home
Project Administrator main page
"Project
Administrator"
Software
   >Download 30
      day trial    >General Info
   >Cost
      Justification
   >FAQ for
      Buyers
   >Pricing
   >Buy Now
Method H Software Home Page
"Method H" ™
Software
   >General Info
   >Pricing
   >Buy Now
White Papers & Links
White Papers, Links & Free Stuff
   >White Paper
      Index
Consulting & Training Services
Consulting
& Training
   >Consulting
   >PM
      Assessment
Project Management Blog
Project Management Blog
Make contact with us
Contact us
Search the site
Search
Contents of the site
Contents
Spread the word
Tell your friends
about this page
Advise when we publish a new white paper
Let me know when
you publish a new
White Paper
 
 
Home - White Paper Index

ERP Implementation - The Traps.

Rating

Neville Turbit - Project Perfect

 

ERP implementations are littered with tales of lost millions and withdrawals after implementation. Many of the most experienced IT organisations have failed. So what are the secrets? What are the traps? This question could produce at least a book, and probably a sequel. Here are a few things the Vendor is not going to tell you about. They are by no means the most important, but they are missed in many implementations.

ERP Systems

Manage
Risks, Issues, Actions, Scope
and much more
on your ERP Project
with Project Administrator

Click for more details Project Management Software

Most organisations do not understand the costs associated with an ERP system when they first commence the implementation. The benefits are usually well understood. The Vendor will make sure of this. The costs do not surface until well into the implementation - and why should the Vendor talk to an organisation about the costs and difficulties when they are trying to make a sale?

On the surface, there are very attractive reasons for going ERP. Benefits include:

The costs and impacts are understandably not played up by the Vendors. Some of those are:

Corporate Culture

All the points above contain technical issues or business issues which can be managed if they are identified soon enough. Training can show people the impact of their actions in other areas. QA programs can focus on quality of data. What most managers who have been through an ERP implementation, will tell you, is the biggest impact is on "Corporate Culture". It is always underestimated and never overestimated.

Corporate Culture is a combination of two things.

Both feed off one another. Job applicants who feel aligned with the way the organisation works and comfortable with the style of person who interviews them, will likely get the job, and perpetuate the Culture.

To successfully take on an ERP system, an organisation needs to change it's "Corporate Culture". · It may need to change from being highly flexible and not paying a lot of attention to consistency or accuracy, to one of being almost obsessed with detail. · Of being prepared to have Business Practices that are actually adhered to rather than just being documented and forgotten. · People need to change from focusing on turnover to focusing on profit. ERP makes profit far more measurable down to Department, Customer and Material level. ·

Staff need to change their focus from their own job, to the whole organisation. What they do in their area has impacts in places they may never have envisaged. None of this is easy, and in many cases will be unachievable. Some people will not be prepared to make the change and will either leave of their own volition or be asked to leave. This is the cost of ERP.

Another dimension to "Cultural Change" is the timeframe in which the change is to be made. It basically needs to happen over a few days. One week you can bend all the rules and get away with it; next week the system will not let you. No matter how much training and preparation takes place, it cannot prepare many people for reality. That is not to say the preparation should not take place. The preparation will ease the pain, not take it all away. The more preparation the less the pain. On the positive side, some people will take to the system like the proverbial duck to water. These people tend to be (but not all are) younger, newer employees who have had experience in other organisations. They know the benefits of a good system and are frustrated with the current one. They will jump at the chance to make use of the new technology.

Change Management

Change Management is about setting expectations that lessen the pain of change. People involved in a change expect to go from A to B. Perhaps where they are actually going is to C. Change Management is about getting them used to the idea that C is the real destination.

To give an example, any new system is bound to have teething problems. If users expect that all is not going to run smoothly on day 1, and that they may be working back late for the first week because of problems bedding in the new system, they are less likely to reject the system when it does go wrong. On the other hand telling staff that this is going to be a great new system with no problems can only lead to disappointment and rejection when bugs appear. As such, change management is measurable.

Measuring attitudinal changes is not a complicated process. Properly managed, we can see how people feel about the changes over a period of time, and how they shift in their expectations. The results of money spent on change management can be seen. Not putting in the effort before implementation, will cost an organisation after implementation. What is the cost to an organisation of a system that is forced upon people, and with which they feel little ownership? They will either sink it, or ensure it never reaches it's potential. Either way, the organisation will never get the return on investment it imagined.

Other experiences.

A survey of organisations that have implemented ERP's was carried out recently. It identified "10 Common Causes of Disaster".

This involves the surprises that come out after the software is purchased. Organisations usually do not do enough to understand what, and how the product works before they sign on the bottom line. The Bleeding Edge ERP is so massive and integrated that reporting and linking to other systems (either your own or your customers and suppliers) can be much more difficult than you expect. Companies looking at ERP need to examine how they accept online feeds from a customer, or a customers' customer, and examine the technological enablers as well as the implications of these technologies inside of the Business.

Summary.

All this leads to a list of likely problems with an ERP system.

Most important of all, and the single biggest failure point for ERP implementations, is the need for change management. The need for change management is not likely to be recognized until it is too late. The changes required to corporate culture are likely to be grossly underestimated. It is going to be hard enough to cope with the technical issues without having to address major people issues as well.

If you found this interesting you might also find our white paper on the tricky pricing options that vendors can often hide away until you come to sign the cheque. See the White Paper on Software Pricing

For more information on Project Management visit www.projectperfect.com.au

To date, 121 people have rated this article. The average rating is 3.85 - Add your rating. Just select a rating and click the button. No other information required.

Only one rating per person is allowed.

 

ERP Implementation
1 2 3 4 5

Back to top