software system accumulated a surprisingly low
number of instances.
Of the different business reasons, particularly
data visibility and integration in order to aid
managerial decision making and operations was
often reported as a reason for ERP acquisition.
Reasons related to business process re-engineering
and adoption of best practice business models, as
well as to globalization, and mergers and
acquisitions, were also reported to have triggered
ERP initiatives in rather many companies.
Surprisingly, the need for improved flexibility and
agility in terms of, for example, more efficient
reporting, was not often mentioned. Perhaps even
more surprisingly, value chain integration or e-
commerce were not among the most reported
reasons for ERP initiatives.
In about one third of the companies (16
companies) the three most important reasons for the
ERP acquisition were technological reasons.
Similarly, about one third of the companies (13
companies) reported business reasons to be the three
most important reasons for ERP acquisition. The
companies in the remaining third (12 companies)
reported a mixture of both technological and
business reasons among the three most important
reasons. The results indicate that rather many
companies view ERP acquisitions as technological
initiatives. Knowing the risks involved in ERP
implementation and wide effects of ERP systems in
organizations, this can be considered alarming. More
specifically, perceiving ERP as a technological
initiative does not allow harnessing the full potential
of ERP, which takes effect through re-engineering
and improving the business processes in
organizations.
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