ERP Systems and Organisational Change [electronic resource] :A Socio-technical Insight / edited by Bernard Grabot, Anne Mayère, Isabelle Bazet.
by Grabot, Bernard [editor.]; Mayère, Anne [editor.]; Bazet, Isabelle [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
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Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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MAIN LIBRARY | TA177.4-185 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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TA1637-1638 Fundamentals of Three-Dimensional Digital Image Processing | T55.4-60.8 The Delft Systems Approach | TA177.4-185 Network Models and Optimization | TA177.4-185 ERP Systems and Organisational Change | QA241-247.5 Catalan's Conjecture | RL1-803 Thyroid Disorders with Cutaneous Manifestations | T55.4-60.8 Modeling of Metal Forming and Machining Processes |
The Mutual Influence of the Tool and the Organisation -- ERP Systems in the Extended Value Chain of the Food Industry -- Integrative Technologies in the Workplace: Using Distributed Cognition to Frame the Challenges Associated with their Implementation -- ERP Implementation: the Question of Global Control Versus Local Efficiency -- Why ERPs Disappoint: the Importance of Getting the Organisational Text Right -- Contradictions and the Appropriation of ERP Packages -- Exploring Functional Legitimacy Within Organisations: Lessons to be Learnt from Suchman’s Typology. The Case of the Purchasing Function and SAP Implementation -- How to Take into Account the Intuitive Behaviour of the Organisations in the ERP? -- Process Alignment or ERP Customisation: Is There a Unique Answer? -- Process Alignment Maturity in Changing Organisations -- A Cross-cultural Analysis of ERP Implementation by US and Greek Companies.
ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) systems are now the backbone of the information systems in public and private sector organisations. Yet, even if their ability to address the fragmentation of former information systems, provide functional integration and support best practices is recognised, difficulties remain. These difficulties, arising during and after their introduction in organisations, have been widely discussed, leading to many articles and books explaining reasons of failure, listing conditions of success, and suggesting project management methods that are supposed to allow their harmonious implementation. ERP systems are clearly software systems which are supposed to support organisational and individual work. Thus, ERP Systems and Organisational Change considers both the social and technical perspectives on this phenomenon. It is necessary to analyse not only the influence of the software on the organisation but also how the different uses made of these systems result in an unpredictable mutual adjustment between those in the organisation and the tool. The book illustrates various aspects of this mutual adjustment, with contributions by engineers, computer scientists, consultants, sociologists and economists which, together, provide a unique and comprehensive view of the problem. Without trying to build an artificial consensus, several case studies are commented upon alternatively with a technical and social view, showing how the same facts can have different interpretations and thus contribute to a better understanding of the phenomenon in question. ERP Systems and Organisational Change is a must-read text for students and researchers in management, engineering science and sociology, as well as for technical and human resource managers and consultants in charge of implementation projects.
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