Western ERP Roll-out in China: Insights from Two Case Studies and
Preliminary Guidelines
Paola Cocca
a
, Filippo Marciano
b
, Elena Stefana
c
and Maurizio Pedersoli
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, University of Brescia, Via Branze 38, Brescia, Italy
Keywords: Enterprise Resource Planning, Multisite ERP Implementation, China, Chinese Culture, Case Study, Roll-out,
Western ERP.
Abstract: China is one of the countries with the highest failure rate of implementation of foreign western - ERP
systems. Western companies encounter difficulties in their roll-out projects in China mainly for cultural
issues. Based on the insights from two case studies, this paper aims to provide a preliminary analysis of the
main criticalities of western ERP roll-outs in China and suggest guidelines to increase their success rate.
1 INTRODUCTION
An Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system is
defined as “a set of business applications or modules,
which links various business units of an organisation
such as financial, accounting, manufacturing and
human resources, into a tightly integrated single
system with a common platform for flow of
information across the entire business (Beheshti,
2006).
Although the first introduction of ERP systems
dates back to the 1990s (Jacobs and Weston, 2007),
the rate of success for this kind of projects remains
relatively low (Panorama Consulting, 2015).
China is reported by the literature to be one of the
countries where the failure rate of implementation of
foreign - western - ERP systems is very high (Ge and
Voss, 2009; Xue et al. 2005, Zhang et al. 2003; Zhang
et al. 2005). Indeed, cultural differences play a
relevant role during the implementation of the ERP
system in those countries whose culture is radically
different from the culture of the ERP vendor. Culture
affects the communication, the organization
structure, how the technology and the business are
perceived, the legal requirement, and generates
resistance to change in all users whenever the
imposed ERP culture is different from theirs (Zhang
et al., 2005).
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6351-6042
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3502-9092
c
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6679-0362
Having become one of the greatest economy in the
world, China and its market are of great interest for
western enterprises, that often decide to establish
there a subsidiary or to make a joint venture with a
Chinese company. These enterprises adopt ERP
systems of western vendors and thus may encounter
difficulties in their roll-out projects in China. A roll-
out is an expansion of the domain of the ERP from a
company (or a group of companies) to a subsidiary
that currently does not use an ERP or uses another
system. It is basically an implementation of the ERP
system that is running in the headquarters, in one or
more of the subsidiaries. Managing a multisite ERP
implementation project is particularly challenging
when multiple locations with different managerial
reporting lines, languages spoken, and national
cultures are involved (Markus et al., 2000).
The topic of ERP roll-out of western companies
in their Chinese subsidiaries is under-investigated in
the literature. Only Avison and Malaurent (2007)
describe the case of the roll-out of a French firm’s
ERP in its Chinese subsidiary, first analysing the
main criticalities, and then, after a few years,
assessing the post-implementation results (Malaurent
and Avison, 2015).
A few papers dealing with ERP implementation in
China are available in the literature, but they deal
mainly with the implementation of a western ERP by
independent Chinese companies, not foreign-owned
Cocca, P., Marciano, F., Stefana, E. and Pedersoli, M.
Western ERP Roll-out in China: Insights from Two Case Studies and Preliminar y Guidelines.
DOI: 10.5220/0009513705790586
In Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems (ICEIS 2020) - Volume 2, pages 579-586
ISBN: 978-989-758-423-7
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
579
(Zhang et al., 2003; Zhu et al., 2010; Sun et al, 2015;
Xue et al., 2005; Srivastava and Gips, 2009; Yan et
al., 2019; Lai et al., 2016; Marble and Lu, 2007; Liang
et al., 2004; Elmeziane and Elmeziane, 2012). In
addition, Reimers (2003) and Zhang et al. (2005)
present some cases of ERP implementation in
Chinese foreign-owned companies, but they do not
clarify if they were stand-alone ERP implementation
or roll-outs.
Although the majority of issues and critical
success factors identified for a western ERP stand-
alone implementation in China might be valid also for
an ERP roll-out, roll-outs present some peculiarities
that should be taken into consideration. For example,
due to the need to adapt local business processes to a
global standard template, a multisite ERP
implementation may not necessarily yield the same
benefits across all the local subsidiaries (Carton and
Adam, 2003). Furthermore, the degree of process
standardisation imposed to the subsidiary impacts the
degree to which the ERP system will change
managerial autonomy, task coordination, and process
integration in the subsidiaries: change in these factors
usually provokes organizational conflict and adds a
“political” element to ERP roll-outs (Markus et al.,
2000).
Based on these gaps identified in the literature, the
objective of this work is to analyse the main
criticalities of western ERP roll-out in China and
suggest guidelines with the aim of increasing the
success rate of such projects.
The paper is organised as follows. In Section 2 an
analysis of the background literature is performed to
identify the cultural elements that could affect an ERP
roll-out project, in particular focusing on Chinese
culture. Section 3 describes the research methodology
adopted. In Section 4, two cases studies of roll-out
projects are presented and discussed. Finally, based
on the main insights from the case studies some
preliminary guidelines to increase the success rate of
roll-out projects in China are provided.
2 BACKGROUND
2.1 Cultural Issues in ERP Roll-out
Projects
The culture of an organization is defined as “a pattern
of shared basic assumptions that a group learns as it
solves its problems of external adaptation and internal
integration, that has worked well enough to be
considered valid and, therefore, to be taught to new
members as the correct way to perceive, think and
feel in relation to those problems” (Schein, 2000).
Then national differences such as national culture,
language, management style, politics, regulations and
customs can affect the “way of doing business”
(Hofstede, 1983; Simchi-Levi et al., 2000.), and thus,
organisational culture (Carton and Adam, 2003).
Many authors assert that organizational culture
plays an important role during multisite ERP systems
roll-outs and there is a need to recognise the unique
social context, especially when the ERP business
model reflects western practices (Shah et al., 2011;
Soh et al., 2000; Davenport, 1998; Umble et al., 2003;
Wagner and Newell, 2004; Ward et al., 2005).
Moreover, the failure to adapt ERP packages to fit the
national culture could lead to project running over
time and over budget (Krumbholz et al., 2001).
Culture has been identified as being one of the
most important factors influencing the success of
ERP systems (Chadhar and Rahmati 2004; Leidner
and Kayworth 2006; Palomino Murcia and Whitley,
2007). Indeed, cultural preferences and practices may
exacerbate problems since companies which
implement ERP systems suffer a radical change in
their organizational information systems (Davison
2002, Olson et al. 2005).
The following cultural factors that could affect
ERP roll-out projects have been identified in the
literature:
- Mismatch with local culture: ERP systems are
packaged software; this means that they contain the
vendor’s culture, most of the time under the form of
“best practice”. The “best practices” embody the best
applicable business processes, without taking into
consideration local characteristics. This causes a
“clash of culture” whenever the local practices
developed by national requirements (for example law,
taxation, ecc.) are different from “best practices”
(Davenport, 1998; Davison, 2002; Zaglago et al.,
2013).
- Management culture: if managers cannot see the
strategic implication of ERP systems or cannot
activate all the company to move in a certain
direction, the company will be affected by it (Talet
and Al-Wahaishi, 2011).
- Cultural change: the viewpoint of most enterprises
is function-based, while ERP systems are process-
based, therefore the introduction of an ERP could
cause disruptive organisational changes, thus
generating resistance inside the organisation
(Hammer, 1990; Marnewick and Labuschagne,
2005).
- Information flow: if the culture of the subsidiary is
highly hierarchical, it is possible that information is
ICEIS 2020 - 22nd International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
580
not shared inside the company, thus the integration is
deterred (Marnewick and Labuschagne, 2005).
- Communication culture: if management does not
explain its action to employees, on the longer run, the
workforce will not have the holistic view of the
organisation and its goals (Talet and Al-Wahaishi,
2011). The lack of information exchange results in
distorted use of the ERP systems, because they will
be used to reinforce hierarchical control instead of
cross functional integration (Rasmy et al., 2005).
- Language: different languages hinder the
communication between the parties. The assumption
that English can be used as the only language of
communication is incorrect: it is possible that users
may not be fluent in English. Whenever this happens
it is necessary to deploy countermeasures. Possible
problems that can rise from different language usage
are: misinterpretation, inability to use the system,
incorrect specifics, training failure (Avison and
Malaurent, 2007; Malaurent and Avison, 2015).
2.2 Chinese Culture
One of the most business relevant characteristics of
Chinese culture is the guanxi”. The core idea of
guanxi” involves “relationships between or among
individuals creating obligations for the continued
exchange of favours” (Dunfee and Warren, 2001;
Zhang et al., 2009). Due to personal obligation with
another person an individual might also pursue
behaviours that are detrimental to his/her company.
Nonetheless the Chinese people see the guanxi as a
useful way of doing business because the bond
between two individuals/enterprises gives benefits in
the long run (Marble and Lu, 2007). For example: a
supplier can always accept an emergency order if that
customer gives priority to that supplier when making
orders, even if it is not the best candidate. Guanxi”
can be seen as a double-edged sword, as it can allow
profitable relationships for both of the actors/parties,
but it can also hinder them whenever individuals
sacrifice the best interest of the organisation to
maintain their personal relationship.
Chinese business affairs are governed by
personalism and high context communication
resulting in heavy reliance on informal (oral) rather
than formal (written) communication/interchange
(Martinsons and Westwood, 1997). This is highly in
contrast with the highly formalised, rule-based
approach of western ERPs. As an example, many
Manufacturing Resource Planning (MRP II) system
implementations did not benefit the company because
they were only used as inventory recording systems
instead of being used as planning tools (Marble and
Lu, 2007).
The Chinese are affectionate to their way of doing
business and do not want to discard it in exchange of
the western one, just because the ERP does not
implement it (Marble and Lu, 2007). This could be
solved including the local business practices by
customization of the ERP system (but this may create
risk and hinder some benefits) (Marble and Lu, 2007).
In Chinese business culture, organisation is
strictly hierarchical (Lockett, 1988). In addition,
management is not accustomed to share information
with employees; consequently the scope and the
progress of a strategic project, like an ERP
implementation, are usually unknow to the
workforce.
Another aspect of the culture is that management
is inclined to act as a father figure to the employees
(Marble and Lu, 2007; Martinsons and Revenaugh,
1998). This means that management is perceived to
know what is best for the company and that
employees should just trust the top decision. The lack
of debate and questioning of the leader’s decision
only enforce the hierarchical position of the
management inside the organisation. Everybody
under the management lacks the organization “big
picture” and goals.
The responsibility is concentrated only in the
management position. This is taken to the extreme
where the employees do not have responsibility for
the result of their work (Martinsons and Revenaugh,
1998). As ERP makes people accountable for what
they do, this implies a strong culture resistance from
the bottom (Martinsons, 1996).
Chinese business culture views change differently
than western culture. The Confucian-derived model
of change is cyclical and continuous (Marshak, 1993).
The Chinese considers that movement and
tranquillity are complementary and occur in a
constant ebb and flow without reaching a specific or
stable end state (Martinsons and Revenaugh, 1998).
Because the culture of radical change is not rooted in
the Chinese culture, the past still has a great value and
causes a reluctant behaviour to change, hindering
innovation. In addition, Chinese employees do not see
ERP systems, and Information Technology (IT) in
general, as a way to do business. They tend to prefer
manual processes or old systems (Srivastava and Gips
2009; Liu et al., 2011) and see the ERP as a way to
automate current processes instead of a chance of
process improvement.
The language problem should not be overlooked.
Several authors highlight the necessity of providing
the system and the documentation in Chinese because
Western ERP Roll-out in China: Insights from Two Case Studies and Preliminary Guidelines
581
only a small part of the personnel is able to understand
English (Avison and Malaurent, 2007). Language
problem rises the need to adopt certain measures like
interpreters or local consultants to impart the training
to the user.
China business is characterized by a high degree
of collectivism (Hofstede, 1983), meaning that the
perception others have on someone has a significative
value inside Chinese society. The concept of mianzi
is one of the main constructs. “Mianzi” means “face
in Chinese and describes one’s reputation or dignity
in social context. This translates into a culture that is
not prone to address error, especially in public. The
traceability of information and transparency of ERP
systems poses a threat to this social construct, because
the error of an individual can be displayed to the
entire organization. For example, ERP
implementation usually requires business process
reengineering (BPR), thus giving the impression that
something was wrong with how the business was
previously carried on, threatening the social position
of the management. Another possible implication of
the mianzi is the “Asian yes” (Avison and
Malaurent, 2007) that is the act of agreeing on
something or with someone only on the surface; for
example, “Chinese cannot explain their proper need:
calling attention to any problem of a business partner
is viewed as a direct insult” (Marble and Lu, 2007).
However, Chinese people could follow traditional
norms and value in some context, but also display
individualism and competitiveness in others (Leung,
2008). Chinese education system promotes
competition and hard work. University graduates are
extremely competitive because they strive for a better
position in society and materialistic achievement
(Leung, 2008). Many Chinese now crave for wealth
and status and struggle to reach their goals. An
example is employee turnover: from basically zero
turnover of state-owned enterprises, now the rate of
turnover has spiked to the 30% (Leung, 2008). This
because people tend to change often their job in
pursuit of higher remuneration and social status.
3 METHODS
Giving the exploratory nature of this study, a multiple
case study empirical research methodology was
adopted (Sousa and Voss, 2001). The sample was
composed by two Italian companies that have
completed in 2018 the roll-out of the ERP
implemented in their Italian headquarters in one
Chinese subsidiary. In both cases, the ERP system
implemented is SAP. Limiting the analysis to one
ERP brand ensures that the variation in the data is not
merely due to variation in the ERP system (Reimers,
2003). Different data collection methods were used,
including semi-structured interviews with roll-out
project’s team members and analysis of companies’
documentation. To conduct the semi-structured
interviews a guideline for the interviewer was
developed outlining the subjects to be covered, the
questions to be asked, and the specific data to collect
(Voss, Tsikriktsis, and Frohlich, 2002). The data
collected have then been analysed in order to identify
the main problems experienced by the case study
companies and the possible solutions to adopt.
4 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
4.1 Case A
Case A is an Italian multinational group leader in the
sector of automation. The Chinese division was
established in 1993 as a private venture between
Company “C” and a leading Chinese company in the
sector of automation. Since Case A has the objective
to reunite all the companies under the same ERP
system, it has started multisite phased roll-outs in all
its subsidiaries. The previous information system of
the Chinese subsidiary comprised two different
systems and lacked all the features of an ERP system.
The benefits expected from the Chinese roll-out were:
Replication of the procedures and methods
adopted by the other companies of the group.
Better control of the Chinese business unit from
the Italian headquarters.
Allowing the upper management of the group
easier data analysis and cross check.
Planning of the material with Material
Resource Planning (MRP) logic.
The possibility of the intercompany flow, i.e.
automatic creation of a sales order in Italy
triggered by the creation of a purchase order in
China.
Adoption of some custom SAP transactions of
the group.
Automation of the billing process in
compliance with the Golden Tax System
(GTS), i.e. the Chinese electronic tax
administration system.
The actors involved in this project were the CIO
and the IT personnel of the headquarters, some
business people of the Italian company (like the sales
and purchase responsible), the staff of the Chinese
company (that represent the key users), the board of
directors of the group and external consultants from
ICEIS 2020 - 22nd International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
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two different agencies. The project team was divided
by nationality and coordinated by two project
managers. The Italian team was responsible to fit of
the Chinese company practices to the ERP business
model, implement the system, issue the training,
provide the documentation and manuals, and support
the user during the change of system. The Chinese
team was responsible to provide the specifics of their
business processes, execute the BPR and learn the
logic of the new ERP system.
Difficulties related to national differences, like
taxation and legal issues, required the contracting of
SAP local consultants for the initial stage of the
project. High geographical distance was a problem
since the IT personnel of the Italian headquarters
could not follow the implementation project on-site.
Also the language was critical. Except some
executive staff members, the other Chinese users did
not speak English. Therefore, Chinese consultants
were contracted to issue training in mandarin.
Nevertheless, the users did not completely grasp the
logic behind the new business processes and the
request of new customisations were fragmented and
contradictory.
In addition, one week after the end of the project
preparation phase the majority of the Chinese
consultants left the project, causing several handover
issues and difficulties with users’ training.
Several technical problems arose during the final
preparation stage and also after the go-live, causing
manual corrections and losses of time. Furthermore,
the Chinese management requested last-minute
changes to the business model already tested and
approved. This is probably due to the Chinese habit
not to rush to solve problems, but to simulate
agreement first even if they do not understand or do
not agree upon something, and then do what they
think is right.
ERP system was seen as a mean to archive
operational transactions instead of using it as an
actual business empowerment tool: it was not rare
seeing an employee manually solve some problems
and then record the result in the ERP.
Nevertheless, the implementation project
respected the budget and planned deadline, and the
system was getting used correctly by the Chinese
users.
4.2 Case B
Case B is a multinational group that produces engine
components for tractors and bulldozers. The Chinese
division was a small start-up with around 30 workers,
all between 30 and 40 years old. The plant director
was Italian with more than 10 years of experience
working and living in China. The start-up before the
project did not have any IT personnel neither an
information system. Furthermore, accounting was
managed by a third party.
The start-up was organised on the same business
model of the Italian plant, so the roll-out project was
simplified, because it was not necessary to create a
new model and there was no need to perform a BPR.
The decision not to automate the billing process
in compliance with the GTS because of the scarce
volume of sales to Chinese customers saved time and
effort, and reduced the complexity of the project.
During the project some local consultants were
contracted, because a few users (i.e. production
workers) did not speak English, and Chinese
legislation was unknown to the Italian consultants.
The training was issued by local and Italian
consultants to the key users. The key users then issued
the training to the end-users. The training manuals
were make available for consultation months before
the go-live, but were entirely in English, because they
were the same from the previous international roll-
outs. Nevertheless, during the training period
significant problems did not arise. Translation related
to the system were minimal. It was planned to
translate only what was mandatory (e.g. accounting
items) and some print-outs for the production workers
that did not speak English.
The data conversion step was carried out
smoothly, thanks to the limited dimension of the
Chinese plant: low number of material codes and little
production. The only issue regarding data migration
was related to the financial part, but it was just due to
a miscommunication between the Chinese accountant
and the third party that managed their accounting.
Overall the project was on budget and on time and
the user accepted the new system without showing
resistance.
The fact that the start-up was comprised mainly of
young personnel with a good level of education led to
less resistance to change. That was facilitated also by
the lack of consolidated habits and previous
experiences of information system technologies.
The presence of a plant director that could speak
Italian and Chinese helped in the communication of
requirements, feedback and instructions, playing the
role of a bridge between the two cultures.
4.3 Comparison of the Cases
The two cases present some differences.
The Chinese subsidiary of Case B was modelled
after the headquarters business model and this
allowed to skip the BPR phase. This was probably
Western ERP Roll-out in China: Insights from Two Case Studies and Preliminary Guidelines
583
possible because of the relationship between the two:
the subsidiary was a recently founded start-up which
was entirely under control of the headquarters. This
allowed the replication of the models. Instead, for
Case A the lack of complete control on the subsidiary
and the presence of a Chinese company with half the
ownership brought the joint venture to develop
different business models than the Italian
headquarters. This required the Chinese division to
undertake a BPR to partially align itself with the
Italian business model.
The subsidiaries of the two companies have
different market targets: Case A’s subsidiary is
focused on Chinese customers, while Case B’s has to
deal with customers of different nationalities. This
might have impacted on two aspects: the first one is
the language and the other is the customisation of
ERP’s interface and forms. Having to deal with
international customers, Case B’s subsidiary
probably hired workers who already possessed good
competence in the English language. Instead, the
majority of Case A’s subsidiary customers are
Chinese and so competence in English language
might result not mandatory. Also, the fact that most
of the customers were Chinese required the
development of an interface for the GTS and some
print forms in Chinese for the customer, increasing
the workload compared to Case B.
Another aspect dealing with the language is the
role of local consultants: even if in both the projects
local consultants were contracted, in Case A they
were contracted to issue training in Chinese to the
majority of users and to provide support during the
go-live. Case A also experienced the defection of a
large number of local consultants, probably as a
consequence of the high employee turn-over rate that
is characterizing the Chinese enterprise (Leung,
2008). In Case B instead, the number of users who
could not speak English was small. Therefore,
Chinese consultants were principally contracted to
aid the users during the go-live support.
The Chinese culture did not play a relevant role in
Case B, while in Case A it created some difficulties
in terms of acceptance of the system as a way of doing
business and regarding the behaviour of the users
(“Asian yes”). This may be related to the interplay of
multiple factors: the nationality of the customers, the
history of the subsidiary, the mean age of workers, the
former IT tools.
4.4 Preliminary Guidelines
Based on the literature review and the main insights
from the case studies, a set of preliminary guidelines
for the management of a western ERP roll-out in
China are proposed in the following.
4.4.1 Strategy
The strategy for the roll-out must be defined during
the planning phase: a clear definition of the level of
customization (Mamoghli and Cassivi, 2019), which
modules will be rolled out, what are the benefits
expected form the project, what is the budget and time
committed to the project. Clearly identifying the
goals and the objectives helps the organization avoid
“scope-creep” and allows monitoring of the project.
Consider that customization could increase users’
acceptance (Light, 2005). However, customizations
of the system that were not planned should be
carefully analysed and accepted by the project
manager only if aligned with the planned goals and
objectives (Grabis, 2019).
4.4.2 Change Management
It is necessary to establish a change management
program to smooth the resistance to change of the
users caused by their different cultural background:
involving user in the project, training, creation of user
expectancy, shared documentations and use of
leadership to create an organizational culture
sympathetic to the ERP system.
4.4.3 Documentation
Having written documentation allows individuals to
remain up-to-date with the project: what are the
requests, what are the solutions that meet the requests,
and what are the changes to these solutions.
Documentation must be accessible to the interested
actors and updated keeping track of all changes.
4.4.4 Top Management
Top management should sponsor the project
throughout the organization increasing users’
involvement and commitment to the project. It can
also establish an incentive and prize program to
reward the project team’s members for the realization
of the project milestones, goals and objectives.
4.4.5 Team and Language
Communication is negatively influenced by the
differences in language between the headquarters and
the subsidiary. This complicates processes like
training (increased difficulty of the users to
understand the logic and how to use the system), the
request of changes (risk to misunderstand the requests
ICEIS 2020 - 22nd International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
584
of the users, and the answers of the project team) and
the BPR. Having project managers with different
cultures could be useful to by-pass the
communication barriers. One project manager could
be the company’s CIO, the other should be a
subsidiary’s key user with project management skills
or knowledgeable about that ERP system. In addition,
the possibility to implement an ERP system that
integrates the Chinese language decreases the
resistance of the non-English speaking users
(Malaurent and Avison, 2015).
Local consultants can be contracted to be part of
the project team and can provide useful information
regarding national regulation. They should also be
knowledgeable about the ERP system in order to help
to develop and test it. Local consultants could
improve the relation with the users by eliminating
communication barriers. It is recommended to link
their retribution to the results of the project and to
implement incentives to limit their turnover.
5 CONCLUSION
Based on a literature review and analysis of two case
studies, some preliminary guidelines to increase the
success of western ERP roll-outs in China have been
proposed. However, the small number of cases and
the fact that both companies were Italian limit the
generalisability of results. Additional roll-out cases
should be investigated, possibly including companies
from various western countries, to confirm the
validity of the preliminary findings and assess also
the possible impact of different national cultures.
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