from Part I - Implementation and Effectiveness: Overview
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2012
Introduction
Recognizing the need to present a single face to global customers, to respond rapidly to customer demands, and to seek out economies of scale, business executives have been for some time regularly examining the capabilities offered by information technology (IT). As a result, from the mid 1990s on, many firms have been replacing the legacy systems that form the base of their information processing capabilities with enterprise resource planning systems (ERPs). ERPs replace a firm's disparate transaction processing systems with a single, integrated system that embodies the newly understood tight interdependencies among a firm's functional units. ERPs have offered much promise for revitalizing IT infrastructures and enabling global business process integration (O'Leary, 2000; Sauer and Willcocks, 2001), but as the research in this book demonstrates, implementation of these highly touted systems has regularly proven to be very expensive, and the rewards for implementation often appear to be elusive.
A Mckinsey report looking at the 1995–2000 period concluded that spending on IT in the USA had doubled, as had the labour productivity annual growth rate over the same period. However, despite claims to the contrary, little of that productivity growth could be attributed to IT, and in fact the majority of the US economy saw no or little productivity growth while accounting for 62% of the IT spending in that period.
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