KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER TO AND AMONG END-USERS IN
PRE-PACKAGED ENTERPRISE APPLICATION SOFTWARE
IMPLEMENTATION:
An Exploratory Study of the Roles of Communities of Practice
Jimmy Tanamal
Department of Information Systems, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Keywords: Enterprise application [ERP, ES] implementation, knowledge transfer, end-users perspective, Communities
of Practice (CoPs), financial information system
Abstract: This paper is concerned with the roles of Communities of Practice (CoPs) in knowledge transfer during the
implementation of a particular IT artefact, i.e. the Pre-packaged Enterprise Application Software (PEAS
i
) or
also known as Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) software. Using an in-depth longitudinal case-study
across different stages of a Financial PEAS implementation in a large Australian university, we assess the
effectiveness and applicability of the practices of CoPs for transferring the PEAS knowledge to and among
end-users. The key finding of this paper is that CoPs can be utilized to enhance knowledge transfer for a
better PEAS implementation result. Our findings also indicate that CoPs can be assigned to steward
ii
this
dynamic PEAS knowledge in its most updated version among the very people who are its owners.
1 INTRODUCTION
Previous studies have indicated that it has become
popular for both large and medium-sized
organizations to license a Pre-packaged Enterprise
Application Software (PEAS) for their enterprise
system (Howcroft and Light 2002; Robey et al. 2002;
Shang and Seddon 2003). However, the PEAS comes
with its own ‘established way of doing business’ (Lee
and Lee 2000 p.282) and ‘imposes its own logic’
(Davenport 1998 p.122) on the adopting
organization’s business practice. In most of the
adoption cases, if not all, the configured PEAS
capabilities or functionalities embed a “best” business
practice which is not exactly the same as the adopting
organization’s legacy business practice. This
necessitates knowledge transfer or even changes to
the organization’s values, structure, and culture.
Regarding the knowledge transfer issue, Robey et al.
(2002 p.32) suggest adopting organizations to
exercise formal training along with a phased
implementation approach to help PEAS end-users
assimilate the new PEAS business practice.
As the PEAS “best” business practice contains
more than the canonical and codified element (Lee
and Lee 2000), formal training alone will be
insufficient and incapable of transferring the whole
aspects of this PEAS’ knowledge to its end-users.
Boudreau (2003) also indicates that PEAS end-users
learn to use a PEAS through formal and informal
ways. Communities of Practice (CoPs) with their
situated learning approach, which exist in the daily
life of the PEAS-adopting organization’s end-users
(Boudreau and Robey 2001 as quoted from Robey et
al. 2002 p.41; Wenger et al. 2002), can be exploited
to integrate and share the PEAS knowledge (Jones
and Price 2001; Pan et al. 2001) for this knowledge
transferring purpose.
For the preceding reason the research question in
this study is: What are the roles of Communities of
Practice in the knowledge transfer during a PEAS
implementation?
While the bulk of academic research has put the
top management involvement and satisfaction as,
consecutively, a critical success factor and benefit
measurement of a PEAS adoption, little consideration
has been given to end-user justified requirements,
participation and gratification. Inevitably, in
exploring the end-users knowledge transfer issue, this
paper is also exposing the end-users’ perspective
about the PEAS implementation.
647
Proceedings of ICEIS 2004
Sixth International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
Copyright © INSTICC
2 WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN
ABOUT THE TOPIC
This section is organized into two subsections. The
first subsection provides background on PEAS and
their implementation issues in relation to knowledge
transfer. It ends with an explanation about how
practice and informal training as part of situated
learning play a significant role in PEAS knowledge
transfer. The next subsection depicts CoPs as a social
structure in relation to situated learning and
knowledge sharing.
2.1 PEAS & Knowledge Transfer
Enterprise Systems can be defined as integrated
systems of people and organizational business units,
software [e.g. PEAS] and hardware, and
telecommunications networks for handling all core
corporate functions such as sales and marketing,
distribution, production and planning, finance and
human resources (Robey et al. 2002; Shang and
Seddon 2003).
Implementing a PEAS for an organization’s
enterprise system can span over a significant time
frame. According to Markus and Tanis (2000), the
whole implementation process can be ideally staged
into four following phases:
1. chartering phase [comprises decision making
leading up to the funding of an enterprise
system adoption; cut-over: finalized PEAS
selection based on fit-gap analysis],
2. project phase [comprises activities purposed
to get the selected PEAS up and running; cut-
over: system goes live],
3. shake-down phase [is the organization’s
coming to grips with the PEAS; cut-over:
normal operation has been achieved], and
4. onwards & upwards phase [continues from
normal operation until the system is replaced
with an upgrade or a different system].
The people component of enterprise systems is
crucial in each of the aforementioned implementation
phases. For example it is people [either top
management, project team members, vendors,
consultants, local IT staff or end-users] who
determine whether the execution of each
implementation phase is successful and whether the
benefits of the ongoing PEAS adoption have been
achieved. Howcroft and Light (2002) found that end-
users were marginalized during the procurement
process of packaged software in their case study. This
is intriguing as it ‘contradicts the rational approach
commonly reported in IS literature’ (p.76). They
implicitly suggest two consequences of a distinct lack
of end-user involvement: end-user resistance and
system implementation failure. It is interesting to see
the effect of end-user participation [or lack of
participation] in packaged software selection on
knowledge transfer.
PEAS, same as in-house application software,
were also developed based on a kind of business
practice
1
– normally, a hybrid of all the best practices
which might well mean that no such practice exists in
any of the real organizations. Hence, for most
organizations, the PEAS-embedded practice is
normally out-of-tune with their legacy business
practice.
This can be preliminarily identified by the gaps
and/or misfits between the PEAS capabilities and the
organization system requirements. Soh et al. (2000)
suggest a spectrum of resolution strategies ranging
from a greater PEAS customization to a greater
organizational change to resolve the implementation
barriers {Figure A below}. Adopting organizations
interested in embracing the “best” business practice
embedded in the PEAS will likely prefer
organizational changes to customization.
Robey et al. (2002) identify PEAS knowledge as
the knowledge of software technical navigation and
business practice. Lee and Lee (2000) further classify
1
A business practice is incorporated in an organization
structure and relationship as well as with an information
technology infrastructure (Holland and Light 1999 p.31).
misfit
System Requirements &
Legacy Business
Practice of the
Adopting Organizations
Product Capabilities &
“Best” Business Practice
embedded in the
Adopted PEAS
PEAS Customization,
Workaround,
Organizational Change,
or an
y
combination?
Knowledge Transfer
for End-Users
1: Software Technical Navigation
2: Explicit Business Practice
3: Implicit Business Practice
gap
Workaround
1: Neutral
2: Neutral
3: Neutral
Org. Change
1: Neutral
2: Necessary
3: Necessary
Full Customization
1: Neutral
2: Unnecessary
3: Unnecessary
Figure A: PEAS Implementation & Knowledge Transfer
ICEIS 2004 - DATABASES AND INFORMATION SYSTEMS INTEGRATION
648
the knowledge of this business practice as implicit
and explicit. The explicit or codified part can be
represented by sets of defined procedural steps to
accomplish a certain task or operation. The implicit
part governs how that task or operation is actually
being carried out effectively; for example work
culture, networks, values and norms. The cross-
functional nature of PEAS intensifies the impact of
the new implicit business practice on system adoption
- as compared to most of other packaged software.
As PEAS are enterprise-wide, complex, tightly
integrated, cross-functional, and “not easily
modifiable to fit an individual organization’s
requirements” (Jones and Price 2001 p.551), any
customization will risk some failures towards system
implementation (Sumner 2000). It is very costly as
well (Lee and Lee 2000; Davenport 1998; Davis
1998) with no guarantee that the customization will
work perfectly and in time. A small change to an
existing module in one of the functions might entail
serious ramifications across all other functions.
Besides, present customization diminishes the future
privilege for upgrading the PEAS without incurring
much cost. Adding some new modules is considered
of little risk though it will generate additional burden
on the financial resources for software development
plus some delay for “go-live”.
According to Forrester Research, ninety five
percent of Fortune 1000 organizations do not intend
to customize their PEAS (Davis 1998). This means
that the incorporated “best” business practice from
the PEAS is mapped and transferred directly with
little or no modification into the adopting
organization (Lee and Lee 2000). If there is no
customization but the business practices between the
adopted PEAS and the adopting organization are
different, then the organization should exercise a
significant change management program like job
redesign or redistribution. This situation also implies
that a more intensive knowledge transfer, especially
in relation to the knowledge of business practice, is
needed. Robey et al. (2002) suggest a knowledge
transfer through formal training that included both
technical and business practice along with an
incremental PEAS implementation approach.
However, Boudreau (2003) indicates that
individual end-users learn to use the PEAS through
different knowledge transfer channels. She argues
that informal training, as one of the possible
knowledge transfer channels, has a positive impact
on end-users’ learning. This informal training, often
called peer-to-peer learning or legitimate peripheral
learning, together with practice are an integral part of
situated learning and knowledge sharing, which are
the central ideas of Communities of Practice (Lave
and Wenger 1991; Wenger 1998).
2.2 Communities of Practice (CoPs)
According to Wenger et al. (2002), CoPs are groups
of people who share a concern, a set of problems, or
a passion about a topic, and who deepen their
knowledge and expertise in this area by sharing and
interacting on an ongoing basis. These groups can be
formally institutionalized or, on the other hand,
completely unrecognized by their parent organization
(p.27).
Brown and Gray (1995) share a similar definition
with Wenger et al. (2002) as they try to define what
kinds of people are grouped or grouping themselves.
Brown and Gray (1995) claim that these people are
peers in the execution of ‘real work’. They all know
the practice and not merely the explicit knowledge.
Brown and Gray (1995) also find that there are many
communities of practice within a single company,
and most employees belong to more than one of
them. Furthermore, most of these communities are
not named though each boundary is clearly set. It is
also not uncommon that one community can be a
subset of a larger community or in the other case it
can overlap with another community. A community
can also exist within one business unit – mostly for a
“communal memory” purpose (Wenger et al. 2002,
p.26). The size of a community (p.24) can be small [a
few people] or very large [hundreds of people]. CoPs
can be colocated [same location] or distributed, they
can also be homogeneous [same function] or
heterogeneous (p.25). These simple concepts can
help to understand and analyze the phenomena of
CoPs in an organization.
But still, people might not really realize that they
belong to CoPs as CoPs have become so integrated
with their daily lives. This obscurity can be tackled
using the reificative and participative identification
methods (Wenger 1998). The reificative
identification method is to identify members as
people that fall into a certain category or description.
While the participative method helps them identify
themselves with people whose experience is
constitutive of whom they are.
PEAS knowledge is dynamic and complex. It
evolves along the implementation phases and as
software upgrade is pretty much inevitable, this
knowledge will certainly need to be managed for
future purpose. Apparently, a CoP can also contribute
as a knowledge management tool partly based on its
situated practice approach.
CoPs as a knowledge-management tool
The social structure of an organization can play a
significant role in managing knowledge. Wenger et
al. (2002) reveal that conventional structures can not
address knowledge-related problems effectively.
KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER TO AND AMONG END-USERS IN PRE-PACKAGED ENTERPRISE APPLICATION
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649
Though learning does occur in conventional
structures [such as teams], the lessons learnt are
easily lost. They propose CoPs as the ideal social
structure to address knowledge stewardship. By
assigning practitioners the task to create and
communicate the necessary knowledge, CoPs provide
a social forum that supports the living nature of
knowledge.
3 RESEARCH APPROACH
3.1 Research Case
The case organization is a large Australian university
with around 1200 faculty/departmental [local] end-
users and 60 Central Finance [central] end-users.
Central Finance is a department by itself – a central
administrative department indeed. It is seen as the
main owner of the University’s Finance
Administrative IT System [F-AITS]. Beside the F-
AITS, the University is also supported by two other
major administrative IT systems, i.e. Human
Resources Administrative IT System [HR-AITS] and
Student Administrative IT System [S-AITS] – mainly
owned by the Human Resources department and the
Student Admin department respectively
2
.
A review of the University's AITSs was
established in 1999 as a means of assessing the
capacity of the University's current AITSs to support
the requirements articulated in the University Agenda
towards the Future.
The review concluded that many of the
University's current business practices were unlikely
to meet the University's longer term needs, as defined
by the University Agenda. The review also stated that
the University's AITSs were found to have served the
University very well to date, but had some limitations
which would prevent them from supporting the
University's activities well in the future.
This review triggered a university-wide project
to revamp and integrate all three existing
administrative IT systems plus a new Research
Administrative IT System [R-AITS]. The main focus
of this project is the S-AITS but for some particular
reasons
3
the F-AITS was implemented first.
2
These two departments are also categorized as central
administrative departments in the case university, just like
the Central Finance.
3
Two main reasons: first, financial systems are more or
less world-wide standardized (also evidenced in Soh et al.
2000) hence do not need much streamlining; second, the
University felt that it was good to provide more time for
Student PEAS to mature before acquiring one.
The case organization exercised an incremental
implementation approach in adopting the new F-
AITS. The incremental implementation approach
can be detailed as spreading the implemented
modules over the time and focusing heavily on the
Central Finance as the live testing and maturing
entity before it is implemented to other business
units, including the Human Resources and Student
Admin departments. Implementation Stage 1 went
live in early 2003 and was considered successful.
The switch to accrual accounting for internal use
was initially delayed for another year and later, is
postponed for another additional year due to end-
users’ learning pace and resistance.
3.2 Research Design & Data
Collection
The case study research methodology was employed
to assess the roles of CoPs in knowledge transfer
during PEAS implementation. This methodology was
chosen for a number of reasons. CoP is an informal
issue and cannot be manipulated as investigators have
no control over actual behavioral events (Yin 1998).
Also, CoP is still a novel issue (Eisenhardt 1989)
especially in relation to PEAS implementation. As
the implementation is currently being executed in the
case organization, investigators can gain a real-time
and inside view (Yin 1998). Furthermore, an in-depth
longitudinal perspective was chosen here to capture
the ‘reality’ of different aspects of the
unpredetermined phenomenon in details across time
and at different phases of PEAS implementation.
Data were collected from multiple sources and
analyzed in different ways before being synthesized
for the discussion. Data collection was started with
the case-organization documentations [such as Fit-
Gap Analysis Review, Project Status Reports and
Newsletter, Training Needs Analysis Forms]. This
was followed by participant observation to the end-
users training, in-person and telephone interviews,
passive observation to the user-group meetings, and
through emails. The investigator also subscribed to
the end-users mailing list.
Several groups of people who work for different
sections of the University, including department-
level, faculty-level, the Central Finance central
administrative department, and the Project Team
[especially the Training/Change Management team]
were interviewed. Each group [except the
Training/Change Management team] was comprised
of at least one other person who use the system
intensively and another person who only use the
system indirectly. Each person was interviewed more
than one time over a period of approximately nine
months. Except for Central Finance (central) end-
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650
users, all other (local) end-users were interviewed for
the first time before the new financial information
system went live. All first interviews were in-person,
semi-structured with more general and open-ended
questions. The list of interview questions was
developed from themes based in the literature review
(Neuman 1997) as well as the practical work issues in
relation to the usage of information system and the
organization documentation review. The second and
later rounds of interviews were guided with more
specific questions based on their answers in the first
round. Some of these later interviews were conducted
in-person and some over the phone.
4 RESULTS & DISCUSSION
The Financial and Accounting [F&A] CoP was
present in the case university even before the new F-
AITS was implemented. The most concrete evidence
was the old Financial User Group Meeting [oFUGM]
and the old Financial User Mailing List [oFUML].
The focus of these periodic informal meetings and
mailing list was at the F-AITS and its usage. That is
why both were named after the system – and were
renamed after the new F-AITS went live as FUGM
and FUML respectively. Both of these community
entities are university-wide, and included both local
and central end-users.
CENTRAL COP LOCAL COPS
LIAISON
GROUPS
Selected Representative
TESTERS Selected Representative
TRAINERS
EARLY
SUPPORTS
Selected
Representative
Selected
Representative
SITUATED
LEARNING
Collective Collective
MAILING
LIST
PERIODIC
MEETING
Collective
as
University-wide CoP
The F&A CoP also exists at the business unit
level
4
, although, the existence of such community is
felt more strongly among the Central Finance
[central] end-users compared to among other business
units [local] end-users. This is mainly because the
local end-users are not only administering the local
Financial and Accounting works. They, except the
4
CoPs within business units (Wenger et al. 2002, p.26)
HR and Student Admin central administrative
department
end-users, also administer the local HR and
Student administrative works [including using the
HR-AITS and S-AITS]
5
as well as other
administrative office works. Even when using
the F-AITS, the local end-users in general use more
than one module while the central end-users tend to
focus on one specific module. In fact, the different
specializations among the central end-users have
caused a varied sense of ‘shared meaning’ to the
F&A CoP among diverse divisions within the Central
Finance. Local end-users identify themselves as
members of F&A CoP through the reificative
identification method while central end-users identify
themselves as members of F&A CoP either through
reificative or participative identification method.
4.1 CoPs & Knowledge Transfer
In general, F&A CoPs were represented by a few key
central end-users and key local management people
in the PEAS presentation sessions during the
chartering phase of the PEAS implementation. One
representative from the central community, who also
worked before as a local end-user, commented:
The selection rules were pretty much set by the 1999
reviews, anyway. During the three-week selection
process, we were presented with three international
packaged software. Each [PEAS] was tested using
the same scenarios set by the Uni. … Their interface
was different compared to [the old F-AITS] but it
shouldn’t be a major problem. All three [PEAS] did
not exactly match the system requirements but each
vendor is willing to patch the gaps. I guess at the end,
it was the cost-benefit consideration … ehm, maybe
also the after-sales support, upgrading issue and the
alliance agreement that closed the deal. Anyway, the
final say came from the higher people up there, if you
get what I mean …
There is a resistance from a small number of
local end-users in the case organization. But it is
more rooted on the argument “why replace the old F-
AITS”, not “why choose this PEAS” as suggested by
Howcroft and Light (2002)
6
. This resistance has
increased the need and the importance of end-user
based knowledge transfer as follows:
5
This means that they are also part of other university-
wide functional CoPs.
6
To date, the project is still considered successful though
there are some adjustment made to the initial
implementation plan due to a slower learning tempo and
the resistance.
Table 1: CoPs Involvement & Participation
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4.1.1 Liaison Group & User Acceptance
Tests
The first significant participation of key local end-
users was in the project phase, i.e. through the F-
AITS Liaison Groups. Eight
7
groups altogether were
formed to contribute in the configuration process of
this pre-packaged software. Each Liaison Group
brought together various stakeholders [local end-
users, Project Team members, external consultants,
and Module Experts representing central end-users]
to discuss any issues related to the implementation
including more directed activities like mapping
existing processes, identifying opportunity for
improvements, and redesigning required processes.
The participation of the first three stakeholders came
naturally while it was more nominated voluntary for
the local end-users. The local participants’ views
about partaking in the Liaison Group were mixed
between being useful and useless. It was mostly
valuable especially when the discussion was still
fresh. Getting in touch with other stakeholders’
perspective and being able to contribute into the
discussion helped to better understand the overall
picture of the PEAS implementation. For the local
participants, it was their first encounter with the new
system though only on the surface. Expectations on
the new system were high as the Project Team was
selling the integrated and superior capabilities of the
PEAS compared to the existing system. Some gaps
and/or misfits were uncovered but they were told that
customization was to be avoided as much as possible
as it was costly. They were also involved in the later
user-acceptance tests using some given scenarios.
One of only a few local end-users who tested the
system pointed out:
I am glad that I decided to get involved in the user
testing. It was not a waste of time … It helped me to
understand the new system better. I told that to other
[user] trainers during our ‘Train the Trainer’ session
and they regretted that they were not involved.
8
Based on their experience of joining the Liaison
Group, these local participants felt that should there
be any end-users involvement during the selection
process of PEAS, it would not have a significant
effect on the content of required knowledge transfer.
The only important knowledge that they could think
of getting through such involvement was the pre-
packaged nature of the new software which they
learnt also through the discussion in Liaison Group.
7
E.g.: Accounts Payable Group, General Ledger Liaison
Group, Reporting Liaison Group, etc.
8
Not all the user-trainers were involved in the user
acceptance tests. The test for each module only required
one local end-user and one central end-user as the testers.
Lesson: During the Liaison Group discussion, central
and various local CoPs’ members shared their legacy
business practices (Jones and Price 2001) to form an
integrated view (Pan et al. 2001), followed by the
streamlining process through some brainstorming.
This all was important for a correct PEAS
configuration. Here, CoPs in relation to knowledge
transfer played a role in sharing the knowledge of
various business units’ legacy business practice
among the members who participated in the group
meetings. The knowledge was also shared to the non-
members, i.e. the Project Team personnel and
consultants. In addition to that knowledge, those few
CoPs members learnt the knowledge of PEAS
business practice, though not much of the implicit
part, from the non-members. Furthermore, a limited
knowledge of the PEAS technical navigation was
transferred through a scenario-based practice in a
testing environment.
4.1.2 Formal Training by Module Experts &
User Trainers
After the PEAS was configured as the case
organization’s new enterprise system, formal training
was on the way to be delivered. The Module Experts,
who were trained earlier at the vendor’s headquarters,
trained their colleagues, other central end-users.
These Module Experts also trained the Training team
[a sub-team of the Project Team] who later executed
the “Train the Trainer” [TtT] program. The TtT
program turned sixteen
9
key local end-users from
various faculties
10
into user-trainers
11
which
sequentially conducted formal training for their
fellow local end-users. The final goal of this program
is to create local new-system-expert end-users so that
when these user-trainers return to their 'home base',
they can provide a support for their faculty-wide
community through a coaching/mentoring role. The
core difference between these [central] Module
Experts and these local expert end-users is the first
group specialized in one module for the usage of both
central and/or local end-users while the later group
focused across modules for the local usage only.
Were the trainees ready to start using the new
system after they completed their training cycle? A
local end-user directly answered:
9
Some of these sixteen people also partook in the earlier
Liaison Groups.
10
Though the grouping of these user-trainers was based on
their faculty-origin, it did not mean that they all were from
the local faculty-level CoPs.
11
They were not expected to become professional trainers
in such a short time though they were equipped with
trainer skills.
ICEIS 2004 - DATABASES AND INFORMATION SYSTEMS INTEGRATION
652
Absolutely not. The new knowledge is huge and sort
of confusing. It takes time to really munch the whole
idea about this big system. Even when the trainer
tried to focus down on a very specific function, you
still somehow have to know about other [related]
functions. But I guess it is a good idea not to confuse
yourself by trying to understand every single field
and its usage. And … practice makes perfect will
surely apply here.
All other interviewed local end-users resonated
with a big no to that question. They gave varied
reasons but there was one commonality, i.e. they
need to internalize and put the taught explicit
knowledge into practice using the real system before
they could be really sure. But even without testing
this notion, they felt their lack of deep understanding
of the implicit business practice that worked in the
background had hindered them to see the whole
process flow.
Another departmental end-user commented that:
I think we need to be trained in a live system. The
trainer told us more than once that ‘This step is not
necessary in Training as we have created for you
some generic accounts. But when you return to your
office, you need to do it’. And in another training
session: ‘You will not need to do this step in the live
system because the data will have been there. This is
just because we do not have the purchase order
number yet, so we have to create one before we can
do the matching’. … I even experienced one session
where the system was down, so we just went through
the training manuals.
In one case, a trainee showed that he could
answer a question from a fellow trainee where the
user-trainer could not. A further investigation
revealed that this trainee had learnt about the new
system informally from his colleague prior to the
training. He learnt just by observing his colleague
performing a task using the live-system in a real
working environment and reading his colleague’s
training manuals. He sat in for the training partly
because it was a prerequisite to get authorization in
using the new F-AITS.
Overall, all end-users and even the Project Team
agreed that “Train the Trainer”, as just a variant of
the formal training, was insufficient in transferring
the whole aspect of PEAS knowledge. That is why
some support channels like Help-Desk have been
established to deal with the things left uncovered or
that could not be covered by formal training - even
conducted in a lab-based setting.
Lesson: The knowledge transferred through formal
training is not considered very task specific.
Voluminous materials presented in such a short time
and the teaching assumption of a perfect and normal
use of the new F-AITS [Wiedenbeck et al. 1995:
absence of error recovery information] devalue the
quality of formal training. At the end of the training,
end-users still can not comprehend the overall data
flow and the implicit business practice. Here, the
roles of CoPs in relation to knowledge transfer are
institutionalized. Some central and local CoP
members were involved formally in transferring the
knowledge of PEAS technical navigation and explicit
business practice to their fellow members. The
implicit business practice was intentionally not
covered for various reasons. At the end, the main
purpose of involving end-users in delivering the
training can be seen as an approach of capturing the
PEAS knowledge [especially the technical navigation
and explicit business practice parts which are more
easily transferred through formal ways with little
preliminary practice] among the university’s staff and
being more independent from external help as soon as
possible (Robey et al. 2002).
4.1.3 Support Channels & Situated Learning
Based on the prediction of a disruptive performance,
the Project Team activated several formal
community-based support channels, on top of the
online help, to back local end-users in using the new
system, especially in the earlier days of “go-live”.
Central end-users were covered by their Module
Experts as well as by the external consultants.
The central end-users [of the Accounting
Division, especially] learnt a lot through practicing
and informal training. They repeated the same tasks
again and again – very focused. They are the heavy-
usage end-users of the system. The volume has
helped them to master how to use the system and to
forget the previous practice that was not relevant
anymore. The other advantage of being so focused
was that they had more time to explore the system as
well to share among each other. They learnt more and
more through simply using the system frequently [i.e.
practicing]. The new business practice became
clearer and sensible when they shared any new
understanding to be tested by others (also evidenced
in Wenger et al. 2002).
The local F&A CoP within each faculty or
department is normally very small, on average it
consists of only four people
12
. In any composition, at
least one does the data-entry tasks and each data-
entry needs to be approved by a different person. In
summary, local end-users’ tasks can be categorized as
data-entry, budgeting and summary reporting. While
data-entry task is more monotonous and frequent as
12
This excludes the “Approver Only” end-users who will
only do approvals online – they were not the old F-AITS
end-users because that time approval was done on paper-
base.
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daily
13
, budgeting is once a year and summary
reporting is still more or less fed up from the Central
Finance. Hence, the budgeting and summary
reporting end-users are generally perceived as light-
usage end-users and the data-entry end-users as the
heavy-usage end-users of the system.
In the old F-AITS, local data-entry end-users
normally could try to get some help from their senior
colleagues first (not the other way around) before
they tried the Help-Desk. The logic was: data-entry
staff were newer than other staff; earlier, these other
staff had worked as data-entry officers so they had
the experience and knowledge to share. In the new F-
AITS, it is no longer the case if their senior
colleagues do not share the data-entry responsibility.
Even if their seniors do, they will normally do the
task more frequently than their seniors. It means they
will tend to know better than their seniors. Hence,
they go directly to the Help-Desk. Later, they find
that the Help-Desk is very useful and quick to answer
the system navigation and the solved operational
questions but not with the new operational problems.
In fact, they sometimes are referred to other more
advanced data-entry end-users [which are also local
end-users].
More than five hundred priority-one local end-
users were trained about a month before they started
to use the new F-AITS. They took the training when
they were still intensively using the old system [with
the old business practice mindset] to complete the
end of financial year tasks. On “go-live”, when they
were about to perform the same task using the new F-
AITS [with a different business practice], it was not
surprising that they had to recall what they have
learnt one month ago. But it was not the whole thing
as even the priority-two and -three local end-users,
who were trained after “go-live”, found that most of
the training knowledge could not be applied directly.
There was something else missing or it was simply
because the real practice was not as straight forward
as the training example. So they had to dig deeper
either from playing around and practicing, and/or
getting the helps from other end-users or the support
channels. One of the local end-users said:
The system is pretty much new to all other [local]
staff. So I would prefer to go to the Help-Desk
directly.
The rest indicated [when they were interviewed
before the system went live] that they would ask their
buddies – people to whom they used to relate when
using the old system which are normally their
superior or colleagues.
13
If the assistant is a casual (not a permanent) staff, then
data-entry works are likely to happen in batches every
second day or twice a week.
Central end-users were no better off than their
local counterparts. When they started to use the
system, a couple of days earlier than the local end-
users, they also needed a lot of help. As they were
only about 60 people, compared to around 1200 local
end-users, the support from the Module Experts and
consultants could be focused on them.
Both central and local end-users said that the
training was not sufficient. They needed more than
training knowledge to perform their work. Training
was able to introduce the software technical
knowledge and the explicit business practice. The
knowledge gained from such training was still more
in an explicit form (Nonaka 1994).
Though the daily usage of the accrual accounting
has been deferred, the new chart of accounts itself is
quite confusing. The old fifteen-character chart of
accounts now was changed to a twenty-seven-
character one. The initial problem was related in
setting up the correct [not too specific as well not too
broad] categories which was encountered before “go-
live”. After “go-live”, the problem was how to use it
consistently over the time and across all data-entry
officers within each business unit. In regards to this
consistent use issue, central end-users help to check
the data keyed-in by the local end-users but it was not
easy as each business unit has a different set of
categories.
At the earlier stage after “go-live”, everything
was slow. The same data-entry task took a longer
time as the end-users were still not familiar with the
system. But after more practice, entry time improved
though it has not reached expectations yet. The Mac
users still find the system a bit slow because of the
processing time – and are waiting for the vendor to
find a better solution. More things were learnt and
shared. Useful tips were gathered by the
FUGM/FUML principal and passed to the local end-
users during the FUGM and FUML.
Lesson: The nature of PEAS business practice and
IT-navigation knowledge put CoPs’ situated learning
[either informal training or practice] as a significant
and necessary complement to formal learning [i.e.
formal training] in the context of knowledge transfer.
Though both local and central end-users regard a
guided informal training as superior to a formal
training, this is impractical given the large number of
(especially local) end-users and as the usage of the
new system is rapid. Formal training can at least
introduce a general knowledge of the new system.
But it is not enough. The presence of support
channels like the Help-Desk is undeniable evidence
of formal training incapability. As the support is
normally a one-to-one help, empowering capable
end-users to take part in supporting novice end-users
is simply effective. This can have a significant impact
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on the project resources as well as on CoP cultivation
effort. Furthermore, this empowering process needs
to be regenerated by upgrading more end-users as
capable end-users to partake in this precious
knowledge transfer. Another interesting thing is the
evolution of local CoPs from colocated semi-
heterogeneous [e.g. department X CoP] to distributed
homogeneous [e.g. local data-entry CoP] because of
the new financial information system adoption.
4.2 CoPs to Steward the Dynamic
Nature of PEAS Knowledge
The knowledge about the PEAS is enormous and will
continue to evolve as the implementation process is
still ongoing. When end-users use the PEAS, they
learn more. This helps them to extend their usage of
the PEAS. By using it more, they learn more and vice
versa.
To date, the case organization’s end-users find
that there is new knowledge added to their system
knowledge bank every now and then through using
the system as well as interacting with other end-users.
The system is new so it will certainly take some time
to become proficient in using the system. Also, as
some deferred policy changes are being revealed,
there are more new things to learn.
Further training sessions are not an effective and
efficient way to convey these incremental updates
unless it is about a new module. A better way could
be through the periodic FUGM and/or the FUML –
both are part of the University’s F&A CoP and later,
the internalization of this updates can be socialized
through informal interaction among CoPs members.
The central modules experts and the local super-
users can play more significant roles in chairing and
addressing any ongoing issues in the FUGM and
FUML as the stewards of the PEAS knowledge. As
for the rest, FUGM and FUML can be a melting point
for newly-hired vs existing and heavy- vs light-usage
end-users. The existing end-users tend to revisit and
compare the logic between the new and old system
while the newly-hired ones do not. These two groups
apparently are heading in different directions. The
FUGM and FUML can be exploited to guide the
direction of these two groups. As for end-users with
different usages of the system, their learning speeds
are unequal. The meeting and the mailing list can
promote knowledge sharing among them to help the
slower ones to catch up with the rest. The light-usage
end-users can learn the mistakes from the heavy-
usage ones in using the system instead of reinventing
the wheel again. Also, in a practical way, these two
communication channels can be used to detect any
unwanted workarounds which can lead to identifying
unseen misfits [not mentioned in Fit Gap Analysis].
They can also function to promote the use of the
organization’s social capital in either a formal and
informal way as implied by one informant:
I feel that there was a shift of knowledge sources
around the [university-wide F&A CoP]. People can
feel it through the meetings and the mailing list. …
But anyway, my point is even if one is shy to ask or to
contribute in the open forum, at least, he or she
knows to whom they should relate in regard to a
certain issue. So, he or she can do it later in a more
private way.
5 CONCLUSIONS
Although the implementation program of the case
organization is still ongoing as well as its formal and
informal knowledge transfer processes, some
important lessons can be learnt.
Implementing any PEAS entails the adoption of
its “best” business practice. This business practice
contains more than just the canonical and codified
element (Lee and Lee 2000). Hence, formal training
alone, even with an incremental implementation
(Robey et al. 2002) – like this case study, is
insufficient and incapable of transferring all required
aspects of this knowledge. Furthermore, as each
individual learning approach is different (Boudreau
2003), it is best to exercise a wide-range of
knowledge transfer strategies – from formal to
informal ways. This is also inline with the nature of
the knowledge to be transferred. The knowledge of
software technical navigation and explicit business
practice needs to be internalized (Nonaka 1994) by
each end-user as part of individual learning process
before the canonical operation can be performed.
This internalization process takes time and needs
practice. It forms end-users’ quality of use (Boudreau
2003) of the new system in conducting their daily
works.
In the case organization, the PEAS adoption is
rapid although its implementation is gradual. All end-
users, either central or local, had to switch from the
old system to the new one in the course of a few of
days. Everybody is learning, and sometimes
unlearning as well as relearning. No one knows
everything, but there is massive knowledge to be
incorporated and more to come as the implementation
advances. Having decided to be knowledge-
independent as soon as possible, some key members
of the organization-wide CoP were assigned to
understand the new knowledge and to synthesize it
with the existing knowledge. Later they disseminated
the synthesized knowledge through formal and
informal ways.
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The main role of CoP in the knowledge transfer
to and among the end-users is as an enabler. CoPs
enable the PEAS end-users to share their knowledge
that they have learnt either formally and informally.
As end-users use the PEAS differently in terms of
usage-load and background, their learning process
differs in speed and direction. Here, CoPs enable the
PEAS end-users to avoid reinventing the wheel by
learning from others’ mistakes. At the same time,
CoPs also enable the PEAS end-users to assess,
revise, and shape the desired business practice for
competitive advantage purposes (Lee and Lee 2000)
through policy amendments, roles and
responsibilities redistribution. CoPs’ periodic
informal meetings and mailing list can be cultivated
to accommodate the above goals as well as to
promote the social capital usage.
Future research should investigate whether CoPs
can address end-user resistance towards a PEAS
adoption. That issue was not thoroughly investigated
in this study because it was categorized “sensitive”
by the case organization.
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i
This term is developed from a very similar term coined in
a paper by Shang and Seddon (2003). Every letter in this
acronym “PEAS” is essential to distinguish PEAS from
other IT products. For example, the word ‘pre-packaged’
is to distinguish PEAS from custom-built EAS, or other
packaged EAS that do not need a significant configuration
[and, likely, customization] process before they can be
used appropriately.
ii
The word ‘steward’ is coined as a verb by Wenger et al.
(2002) [e.g. in p.7 and p.26 of their book].
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