Impact of cultural factors on enterprise resource planning
Abstract
Abstract. Organizational culture can also be evaluated as an application stage for the processes and fixations that occur with communication. The lack of cooperation at the desired level may lead to a decrease in effectiveness, especially at the points where teamwork is required, and to a slower implementation. This is one of the most important factors especially for the common purpose and goal setting and for the generations of the application schedules to be generic. The expected cultural change with the ERP system in the company is that the communication and monitoring needs between the units can be met depending on the integration between the processes. During the installation, inter-departmental communication is one of the processes that must be carried out in different dimensions. However, it may be possible to provide mutual optimization between the processes and share the inconveniences. Thus, problems and methods of solution is collected in a common pool will provide opportunity to access the desired point on the same technical jargon and also potential problems the same communication language means in the other unit able to resolve this quickly and both costs and expected benefits. We can summarize the purpose of the research under the heading below: Determine the positive or negative relationships of the cultural factors required for more effective and successful ERP establishment. It can help to ensure that found relationships are taken into consideration in project planning for establishing business and consulting entities. Identifying Cultural Factors for ERP implementations as a guide to management and setting out the performance measurement system for ERP.
Keywords. Organizational culture, ERP system, Cultural factors.
JEL. M11, M14, M15.
Keywords
References
Carton, F., & Adam, F. (2003). Analysing the impact of enterprise resource planning systems roll-outs in multi-national companies. Electronic Journal of Information Systems Evaluation, 6(2), 21-32.
Falkowski, G., Pedigo, P., Smith, B., & Swanson, D. (1998). A recipe for ERP success. Beyond Computing, 6(3), 44-45.
Klaus, K., Rosemann, M., & Gable, G.G. (2000). What is ERP?. Information Systems Frontiers, 2(2), 141-162. doi. 10.1023/A:1026543906354
Nah, F.F., Lau, J.L. & Kuang, J. (2001). Critical factors for successful implementation of enterprise systems. Business Process Management Journal, 7(3), 285-296. doi. 10.1108/14637150110392782
Holland, C.P. & Light, B. (1999). Global enterprise resource planning implementation. Proceedings of 32nd Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, IEEE Computer Society Press, Los Alamitos, California.
Krumbholz, M., Galliers, J., Coulianos, N., & Maiden, N.A.M. (2000). Implementing enterprise resource planning packages in different corporate and national cultures. Journal of Information Technology, 15, 267–279. doi. 10.1080/02683960122282
Matolcsy, Z., Booth, P., & Wieder, B. (2005). The economic benefits of enterprise resource planning systems: Some empirical evidence. Journal of Accounting and Finance, 45(3), 439-456. doi. 10.1111/j.1467-629X.2005.00149.x
Markus, M.L., & Tanis, C. (2000). The enterprise systems experience from adoption to success. in Framing the domains of IT research: Glimpsing the Future through the Past, R.W. Zmud, (Ed.), Cincinnati, OH: Pinnaflex Educational Resources.
Ross, J.W., Vitale, M.R., & Willcocks, L.P. (2003). The continuing ERP revolution: 155 sustainable lessons, new modes of delivery, in Second-wave Enterprise Resource Planning Systems: Implementing for Effectiveness, G. Shanks, P. Seddon, & L. Wilcocks, (Eds.), Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Rosario, J.G. (2000). On the leading edge: Critical success factors in ERP implementation projects. Business World, 17, 15-29.
Seddon, P.B., Shanks, G., & Willcocks, L. (2003). Second-Wave Enterprise Resource Planning Systems. New York: Cambridge University.
Sumner, M. (2000). Risk factors in enterprise-wide/ERP projects. Journal of Information Technology, 15(4), 317-327.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1453/jest.v4i3.1366
Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
Journal of Economic and Social Thought - J. Econ. Soc. Thoug. - JEST - www.kspjournals.org
ISSN: 2149-0422
Editor: [email protected] Secretarial: [email protected] Istanbul - Turkey.
Copyright © KSP Library