Title: paei
1IFIP WG8.6 Working Conference Diffusing Software
Product and Process Innovations Banff, April
7-10, 2001
Telling an Innovation Story
E. Burton Swanson The Anderson School at UCLA
2Outline
- Making sense of the buzz
- Basic concepts revisited
- Core processes
- Organizing visions and their careers
- Innovating with ERP
- The innovators dilemma
- Implementation and assimilation gaps
- Summary
3Buzzwords!
- What are they?
- Why so many in the world of IT?
- How should managers and researchers deal with
them?
ERP!
E-commerce!
Data warehouse!
CRM!
4Basic concepts revisited
- Innovation- an idea, practice, or object new to
the organization adopting it - Often identified by a buzzword
- Examples ERP, CRM, Data warehouse
- Innovation diffusion- the process by which an
innovation spreads over time among
organizations - Involves communication leading to adoption and
implementation - Typically involves more imitation than it does
invention - An organization innovates relatively early or
late compared to others
5Core processes
understanding the innovation in terms of the
communitys organizing vision for it
deciding whether and when to undertake the
innovation, making a resource commitment
undertaking the project, making it happen,
bringing the innovation to life for its users
making the innovation a part of routine, everyday
practice
6Organizing visionRef Swanson and Ramiller, 1997
- A focal community idea for applying IT in
organizations - Typically identified by a buzzword
- Defines the innovation in broad strokes and is
the basis for its comprehension - Produced by and sustained through the communitys
talk about it (e.g. at trade shows and in the
trade press) - Provides for interpretation (what is it?),
legitimation (why do it?), and mobilization of
entrepreneurial and market forces (in providing
requisite products and services) - Drives and is driven by the innovations adoption
and diffusion - Has a characteristic career (in terms of its
visibility, prominence, and influence over time)
7Launching ERPRef Wylie, 1990
- ERP Environment Check List
- GUI
- SQL calls to RDB
- 4GL
- Client/server architecture
- Multiple DB support
- Integrated software and DB
- ERP Functionality Check List
- Hybrid process/discrete/distribution
- Production graphics
- Analytic graphics
- Internal integration
- Engineering
- Business core systems
- Data collection
- External integration
Recent events in hardware, operating systems and
applications are crystalizing (sic) our
definition of Enterprise Resource Planning
systems-- the Next-Generation MRP II.
8ERPs Career
Here comes SAP! (Fortune, 1995)
Whats all the buzz about? Simply put, R/3
seems to be a case of the right product at the
right time. (Xenakis, CFO, 1996)
The growing number of horror stories about
failed or out-of-control projects should
certainly give managers pause. (Davenport, HBR,
1998)
As 1999 winds down, it seems ironic that
enterprise resource planning (ERP) has again
attained almost the same dubious status it had
when the acronym entered the lexicon in 1990-
that of an idea that would never work. (Keller,
Manufacturing Systems, 1999)
(I)t becomes clear the enterprise resource
planning strategies were really designed to get
the corporate house in order. (Connolly,
Computerworld, 1999)
9Innovating with ERPSuccess correlates
- Know-why
- Business benefits (e.g., working better with
customers and suppliers) - Not other reasons (e.g. resolving Y2K problems,
moving to a client/server environment) - Know-how
- Top managements understanding of implementation
costs - Not underestimating task complexity
- Willingness to change business processes as
needed - User sophistication and facility with package
- Vendor support
Ref Swanson, Innovating with Packaged Business
Software in the 1990s, Anderson School at UCLA,
2000
10The innovators dilemmaOpportunity and risk
11Implementation gapsWhat happens when
implementation is long and problematic?
Implementation gap the difference at any time
between cumulative adoptions and implementations
Adoptions
Implementations
12Illustrative gapsRef Fichman and Kemerer, 1999
13Assimilation gapsFailing to achieve a new
competence
- Lack of infusion
- Breadth
- Depth
- Lack of learning
- Novice
- Expert
- Lack of acceptance
- Attitude
- Behavior
- Lack of routinization
- Change absorption
- Essentiality to work
14SummaryElements of a story
- Telling the story
- Focus on a firm, or on an industry
- Focus on a specific innovation, or on a family of
related innovations - Focus on an inter-organizational,
inter-innovational field - Focus on the discourse
15References
- Davenport, T. H., Putting the Enterprise into
the Enterprise System, Harvard Business Review,
July-August, 1998. - Fichman, R. G., and Kemerer, C. F., The Illusory
Diffusion of Innovation An Examination of
Assimilation Gaps, Information Systems Research,
10, 3, 1999, 255-275. - Keller, E., Lessons Learned, Manufacturing
Systems, November 1999, 44 ff. - Ramiller, N. C., The Textual Attitude and New
Technology, forthcoming in Information and
Organization. - Ramiller, N. C., Airline Magazine Syndrome
Reading a Myth of MIS-management, forthcoming in
Information Technology and People. - Rogers, E. M., Diffusion of Innovations, 3rd
Edition, Free Press, 1987. - Swanson, E. B., Innovating with Packaged
Business Software in the 1990s, Anderson School
at UCLA, IS working paper 3-00, September 7,
2000. - Swanson, E. B., and Ramiller, N. C., The
Organizing Vision in Information Systems
Innovation, Organization Science, 8, 1997,
458-474. - Wylie, L., ERP A Vision of the Next-Generation
MRP II, Scenario S-300-339, Gartner Group, April
12, 1990.