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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Putting the enterprise into the enterprise system

Thomas H. Davenport
- 01 Jul 1998 - 
- Vol. 76, Iss: 4, pp 121-131
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TLDR
The author discusses the pros and cons of implementing an enterprise system, showing how a system can produce unintended and highly disruptive consequences and cautions against shifting responsibility for its adoption to technologists.
Abstract
Enterprise systems present a new model of corporate computing. They allow companies to replace their existing information systems, which are often incompatible with one another, with a single, integrated system. By streamlining data flows throughout an organization, these commercial software packages, offered by vendors like SAP, promise dramatic gains in a company's efficiency and bottom line. It's no wonder that businesses are rushing to jump on the ES bandwagon. But while these systems offer tremendous rewards, the risks they carry are equally great. Not only are the systems expensive and difficult to implement, they can also tie the hands of managers. Unlike computer systems of the past, which were typically developed in-house with a company's specific requirements in mind, enterprise systems are off-the-shelf solutions. They impose their own logic on a company's strategy, culture, and organization, often forcing companies to change the way they do business. Managers would do well to heed the horror stories of failed implementations. FoxMeyer Drug, for example, claims that its system helped drive it into bankruptcy. Drawing on examples of both successful and unsuccessful ES projects, the author discusses the pros and cons of implementing an enterprise system, showing how a system can produce unintended and highly disruptive consequences. Because of an ES's profound business implications, he cautions against shifting responsibility for its adoption to technologists. Only a general manager will be able to mediate between the imperatives of the system and the imperatives of the business.

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Citations
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Value‐added ERP information into information goods: an economic analysis

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Motivations and Trends for IT/IS Adoption: Insights from Portuguese Companies

TL;DR: The findings of this study reveal that the reasons for adoption and the role that information systems and technologies play is evolving in Portuguese companies and that the adoption of certain types of systems like Enterprise Resource Planning systems is now consolidated, whereas the adoptions of other systems like Business Intelligence systems should increase significantly in the near future.
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ERP Usage in Banking: An Exploratory Survey of the World's Largest Banks

TL;DR: The results indicate that, despite a predominant usage of ERP systems in back-office areas, banks seeERP systems as a long-term strategic investment to support organizational effectiveness.
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Using enterprise systems to realize digital business strategies

TL;DR: A transformational model of how ES data are transformed into knowledge and results is developed to evaluate the role of digital business strategies in achieving benefits using an ES and highlights the importance of tools and practices for accessing relevant information through an integrated ES so that competent decisions can be established towards achievingdigital business strategies, and optimizing organizational performance.

An agile supply chain for a project-oriented steel product network

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How enterprise system software differs from other system software?

Enterprise system software differs by integrating various systems into one, streamlining data flow, but can be costly and rigid, imposing its logic on a company's operations unlike traditional in-house systems.