Title: Measuring the Effectiveness of ERP systems
1Measuring the Effectiveness of ERP systems
- Peter Seddon, PhD
- Senior Lecturer
- Department of Information Systems
- The University of Melbourne
- p.seddon_at_dis.unimelb.edu.au
- http//www.dis.unimelb.edu.au/staff/peter
2Measuring the Effectiveness of ERP systems
- Chinese version translated by
- Bin Hu
- Department of Information Systems
- The University of Melbourne
- bin_at_staff.dis.unimelb.edu.au
3Measuring the Effectiveness of ERP systems
- 1. An example calculation of ROI
- 2.Why is measuring IT Effectiveness so hard?
- 3.What do we know about IT Effectiveness
measurement in practice? - 4. Individuals IT effectiveness
- 5. Senior Managers ERP effectiveness
- 6. Summary and Lessons
4Measuring the Effectiveness of ERP systems
- 1. An example calculation of ROI
- 2.Why is measuring IT Effectiveness so hard?
- 3.What do we know about IT Effectiveness
measurement in practice? - 4. Individuals IT effectiveness
- 5. Senior Managers ERP effectiveness
- 6. Summary and Lessons
51. Example calculation of ROI
- Report sponsored by SAP
- Analysis of The Boston Beer Companys investment
in an SAP R/3 system - Implementation, January, 1996
- Standard IRR calculation ROI of 83
Data from The ROI Report, Scalea and Company,
346 Beacon Street, Boston MA, August, 1997
6Boston Beer in 1997
- Leading craft brewer in the US
- contract brewer - using excess capacity of other
brewers - plus one brewery in Cincinnati - 380 employees 190 in sales, 120 in brewing, and
70 in administration - 1991-1996 net sales growth 46 compound, from
30M to 191M
7Boston Beers SAP R/3 Modules
- FI Financials
- SD Sales and Distribution
- AM Asset Management
- MM Material Management
- CO Controlling
- PP Production Planning
- PA Profit Analysis
- BS Basis (middleware)
8The Investment, 1995-1996
9Estimated Benefits, 1996-2000
- Reduction in Gen. Admin. Expense 5 of 12.5m
300,000 p.a. (rising to 900,000 by year 2000)
- Interest Savings on A/R reduction 6 of
reduction of 4m in Working Cap 240,000
(rising to 500,000 by year 2000) - Improved Budget Control of Sales Expenses
300,000 (rising to 800,000 by year 2000) - Improved Control of POS Expenses 240,000
- Increased A/P Discounts 100,000 p.a
10(No Transcript)
11Calculating ROI (IRR), 1996?
12Boston Beer Share Price 1996-99
- Source http//www.etrade.com, 27 Nov 1999
13Measuring ERP Effectiveness
- Boston Beers sales fell 3 during 1996-98.
- Most of the expected cost savings (which assumed
sales growth) were not realized. - The expected ROI was not achieved.
- Does this mean the investment in the ERP system
was a failure? - How should we measure ERP effectiveness?
14Measuring the Effectiveness of ERP systems
- 1. An example calculation of ROI
- 2.Why is measuring IT Effectiveness so hard?
- 3.What do we know about IT Effectiveness
measurement in practice? - 4. Individuals IT effectiveness
- 5. Senior Managers ERP effectiveness
- 6. Summary and Lessons
152. Why is measuring IT Effectiveness so hard?
(not just for ERP systems)
- Often hard to link benefits to any specific IT
investment (e.g., benefits of a LAN). - Cost savings are the easier to quantify, but
these are not the only benefits. - There are many different goals for evaluation
(e.g., feasibility, audit) - Different stakeholders evaluate the same system
differently - Evaluations change over time
16Willcocks and Lester list six types of goals for
IT investment
- Infrastructure building (cant cost justify)
- Cost efficiency (e.g., Boston Beer)
- Service to the business (e.g., better
information, better decision-making) - Enable business improvement (processes)
- Differentiating the business competitively
- Revenue generation
Willcocks and Lester, Beyond the IT Productivity
Paradox Wiley 1999
17Five Key Questions to get clear about IT
Effectiveness evaluation
- Q1. From whose perspective is effectiveness being
judged? - Q2. What is the system being evaluated?
- Q3. What is the purpose of evaluation?
- Q.4 What time frame is employed? (short, long)
- Q.5 How is effectiveness to be judged?
Based on Seddon, Staples, Patnayakuni, and
Bowtell, Dimensions of IS Success, Communications
of the AIS October 1999
18Q1. From whose perspective is effectiveness being
judged?
- independent stakeholder
- individual user
- a group of people
- project manager
- IT management
- owner/senior management
- society
19Q2. What is the system being evaluated?
- part of an information system (e.g., GUI)
- one particular system (e.g., the HR module)
- a type of system (e.g., ERP)
- all IT applications in an organization
- an inter-organizational information system
- an IT implementation process (e.g., ASAP)
- the IT function in an organization
20Q.3 What is the purpose of the evaluation?
- Performance appraisal
- to learn how to do better feasibility-study
evaluations in future - expect different levels of cooperation from staff
depending on purpose of evaluation - some evaluations may be much more comprehensive
than others
21Q.4 What is the time frame is employed?
- short term (e.g., on time and within budget for
implementation projects) - long term
22Q.5 How is effectiveness of the IT system to be
judged?
- Compared to
- some other organization (benchmarking)
- some ideal level of performance
- stated goals of the organization (e.g., the
feasibility study for an IT project) - past performance of the organization
- other desirable characteristics
23Measuring the Effectiveness of ERP systems
- 1. An example calculation of ROI
- 2.Why is measuring IT Effectiveness so hard?
- 3.What do we know about IT Effectiveness
measurement in practice? - 4. Individuals IT effectiveness
- 5. Senior managers ERP effectiveness
- 6. Summary and Lessons
24Firms evaluate effectiveness at 3 points in the
systems lifecycle
J.W. Ross, The ERP revolution Surviving versus
Thriving, Working Paper, CISR, MIT, 1998
25Firms evaluate effectiveness at 3 points in the
systems lifecycle
Feasibility Study
J.W. Ross, The ERP revolution Surviving versus
Thriving, Working Paper, CISR, MIT, 1998
26Firms evaluate effectiveness at 3 points in the
systems lifecycle
Feasibility Study
Development Stage
J.W. Ross, The ERP revolution Surviving versus
Thriving, Working Paper, CISR, MIT, 1998
27Firms evaluate effectiveness at 3 points in the
systems lifecycle
Feasibility Study
Development Stage
Post-implementation
J.W. Ross, The ERP revolution Surviving versus
Thriving, Working Paper, CISR, MIT, 1998
28What percentage of firms evaluate their
investments in IT? (formal reviews not just
ERP)
Source Seddon, Graeser, and Willcocks (1999)
data from IT managers in 80 large European and US
firms in 1998. Average annual turnover US4.5B.
Average annual IT budget was US38 million.
291. Feasibility Stage Evaluation problems(survey
of 97 UK firms, Ballantine 1993)
301. Feasibility Stage Evaluation Methods (80
respondents in US, UK, A NZ, Bacon 1992)
312. Development-stage Evaluation
322. Development-stage Evaluation
- For project managers, the key success measure is
often on time and within budget. - This has little to do with the economic value of
the project. - Some projects are abandoned, which means the
entire cost of the project is wasted. - Studying these abandoned projects gives insight
into development-stage problems and evaluation
332. Development-stage Evaluation(Willcocks and
Lester 1996, n50)
- 80 of the 50 organizations had abandoned
projects because of negative development-stage
evaluations. - The most important reasons for abandonment were
- project over budget (17/50 respondents)
- organizational needs changed (23/50 respondents)
- user requirements changed (22/50 respondents).
342. Development Stage Evaluation Reasons for
project abandonment (Norris 1996)
- Unacknowledged divisions between users on
mandatory and desirable requirements and the
scale of benefits expected from them. - Gung-ho attitudes to managing risks.
- An assumption that short training courses at the
launch of the system will be sufficient to change
well-established working practices and to
encourage users to adopt the system. - The above are consistent with findings on BPR.
353. Post-implementation Evaluation
Post-implementation
363. Criteria for Post-Implementation
Review(Willcocks and Lester 1996, n50)
- 83 comparison to the feasibility study
- 63 cost-effectiveness
- 53 quality of product
- 48 systems availability
- 44 productivity
- 22 user satisfaction
- 15 of organizations used the top six criteria,
and a further 15 used the top five (excluding
user satisfaction).
373. Post-implementation Reviews
Question
Source Seddon, Graeser, and Willcocks (1999),
n80
383. Post-implementation Reviews
Question
Source Seddon, Graeser, and Willcocks (1999),
n80
393. Post-implementation Reviews
The remainder of this presentation focuses on
post-implementation benefits only, i.e., on
benefits from use, once the system is operational.
40Measuring the Effectiveness of ERP systems
- 1. An example calculation of ROI
- 2.Why is measuring IT Effectiveness so hard?
- 3.What do we know about IT Effectiveness
measurement in practice? - 4. Individuals IT effectiveness
- 5. Senior Managers ERP effectiveness
- 6. Summary and Lessons
414. A model of factors affecting individual
perceptions of IS effectiveness (n119266)
0.2
Importance of the task
Knowledge of the system
0.2
ns
0.5
0.1
0.4
Support Staff
Ease of Use
Perceived Usefulness
0.3
ns
0.3
0.2
Information Quality
Perceived Net Benefit
0.2
42Comparing scores on Old and New Systems
(September, 1996 and January, 1998. All scales
17)
Source Seddon and Staples (1999)
43Measuring the Effectiveness of ERP systems
- 1. An example calculation of ROI
- 2.Why is measuring IT Effectiveness so hard?
- 3.What do we know about IT Effectiveness
measurement in practice? - 4. Individuals IT effectiveness
- 5. Senior Managers ERP effectiveness
- 6. Summary and Lessons
44Why are senior managers interested in ERP
effectiveness?
- To improve IT investment decision-making in
future - To learn from reported experience of others
- to understand capabilities of ERP systems and so
tap possible sources of competitive advantage - to identify areas to target for future
development
45Answers to the five key questions for evaluating
IT effectiveness
- Stakeholder senior management
- System the entire ERP system
- Purpose of evaluation previous slide
- Time frame costs and benefits to date, plus
costs and benefits for the next 2-3 years
(including software and hardware upgrade costs) - Effectiveness criteria Balanced IT Scorecard
46Balanced IT Scorecard criteria
- 1. From the corporate financial perspective,
e.g., ROI - 2. The customer/user perspective (e.g., on-time
delivery rate, satisfaction) - 3. Business process (e.g., purchase invoices per
employee) - 4. An innovation/learning perspective (e.g., rate
of cost reduction for IT services) - 5. From the systems project perspective (e.g.,
on-time, quality, cost) - 6. A technical perspective (e.g., implementation
efficiency, capacity utilization, response times)
Source Graeser and Willcocks (1998)
47Norris says for post-implementation evaluation of
IT effectiveness, create a task force
- Different stakeholder interests must be
represented - Task force must have
- Authority vested from the top
- Board-level access
- Company-wide emphasis
- Business management insight.
Source Norris (1996)
48Benefits checklist Analysis of vendor success
stories on WWW (Shang, PhD in progress, 1999)
49Content analysis of the 182 WWW cases suggests
that, from the perspective of senior management,
there are five categories of benefits from ERP
systems (Shang 1999)
- 1. Operational
- 2. Management
- 3. Strategic
- 4. IT infrastructure
- 5. Organizational
501.Operational benefits (Shang 1999)
- Cost reduction labour, training, inventory
- Cycle-time reduction
- faster delivery to customer,
- faster administrative processes
- Increased productivity
- Improved data quality
- Improved customer service
512.Managerial benefits (Shang 1999)
- Better resource management inventory,
maintenance, production scheduling, workforce
management - Better decision making improved market
responsiveness, fast response to work changes,
fast response to customer needs - Better control analysis by line of business,
product, customer, geographic area production
costs management
523.Strategic benefits (Shang 1999)
- Support for future business growth
- Support for business alliances
- Lock-in customers (realtime data sharing,
interactive customer service) - build business innovation
- build cost leadership
- enhance product differentiation
- sustain competitiveness
534.Infrastructure benefits (Shang1999)
- Increased business flexibility
- reduction in IT costs legacy systems
maintenance, mainframe replacement, year 2000
compliance - increased infrastructure capability global
platform, database integrity - flexibility adaptable modern technology,
extendable, compatible
545.Organizational benefits (Shang1999)
- Support organizational changes (restructuring)
- business and employee skills learning
- greater customer focus for staff
- empowerment and accountability
- teamwork
- better employee morale and satisfaction
55Downsides of ERP systems
- Vendor success stories do not mention the
problems of ERP system use such as - Dependence on vendor upgrades
- Poor response times
- Inflexibility/Expensive customization
- Staff leaving for better salaries
- others
56Plan (for next year)
- Persuade a number of user organizations to use a
combination of the IT Scorecard and the ERP
Benefits Checklist to assess the effectiveness of
their current systems. - Will also ask them to identify downsides
(unwanted consequences) of ERP systems. - Hope to identify some common factors that led to
greater perceived success. - Expect user knowledge to be a key determinant of
success.
57Measuring the Effectiveness of ERP systems
- 1. An example calculation of ROI
- 2.Why is measuring IT Effectiveness so hard?
- 3.What do we know about IT Effectiveness
measurement in practice? - 4. Individuals IT effectiveness
- 5. Senior Managers ERP effectiveness
- 6. Summary and Lessons
586. Summary and Lessons
- IS effectiveness measurement is difficult because
there is no simple causal relationship between IT
expenditure and benefits. - Financial measures such as Boston Beers ROI, and
changes in corporate profitability, are clearly
invalid in some circumstances. - The previous section contains our best recipe for
ERP effectiveness measurement from the senior
management perspective - Taskforce scorecard checklist.
59Finally
- Establishing value for money depends on the
business judgement of the managers involved - it
is no more amenable to numerical analysis than
any other value judgement. (Norris 1996)
Source Norris, G.D. Post-investment appraisal,
in Willcocks L. Investing in Information Systems,
London Chapman and Hall, 1996 193-221.
60Questions?
- Peter Seddon and Bin Hu
- Department of Information Systems
- The University of Melbourne
- p.seddon_at_dis.unimelb.edu.au
- http//www.dis.unimelb.edu.au/staff/peter