

Author: Gallagher Kevin P. Gallagher Vickie Coleman
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing Ltd
ISSN: 1741-0398
Source: Journal of Enterprise Information Management, Vol.25, Iss.2, 2012-02, pp. : 170-185
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Abstract
Purpose - The importance of involving subject matter experts (SMEs) in ERP implementations is well established. SMEs' knowledge of business and system processes are critical to conducting gap analyses and configuring enterprise systems. But what happens to SMEs on completion of the implementation phase? Prior qualitative research found that some organizations return SMEs to their old department, which can contribute to knowledge transfer; while other organizations retain the services of SMEs, to assist in ongoing efforts with support and enhancement of the systems. The purpose of this study is to understand post-implementation organizational choices - when SMEs are retained and returned. The aim is to understand these choices relative to the goals of their project. Theoretically, organizations that return SMEs move toward a distributed or hybrid model, while organizations that retain SMEs employ a centralized functional-support structure. In accordance with contingency theory, these structural choices should align with an organization's goals and measures of success. Design/methodology/approach - This research conceptually builds on prior qualitative research, but is still exploratory in nature. The authors report on findings from an online survey conducted with 65 organizations. The sample included small, medium and large firms. Respondents were key decision-makers in their organization's ERP initiatives (directors and managers) recruited from two user-group associations (higher education and health care), primarily from the USA and Canada. Descriptive statistics and
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