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Exploring Factors Causing Disparity between Desired and Experienced Effects of Campus ERP Systems

Al Dhafari, Zubaida Mathikhour Hashil LU and Li, Mengmeng (2014) INFM10 20141
Department of Informatics
Abstract
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems have been used by organizations and companies the world throughout since 1990. Many universities have recently replaced their legacy systems with ERP systems to improve work efficiency. One solution available for universities by way of management information system is the Campus ERP system. The Campus ERP system helps universities incorporate all departments and functions within a single database system that manages all student information. Campus ERP is used to facilitate the routine work of end users and to achieve a better resource management. Nevertheless, the effects of Campus ERP systems experienced by users do not correspond with their desired effects of these systems. To investigate the... (More)
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems have been used by organizations and companies the world throughout since 1990. Many universities have recently replaced their legacy systems with ERP systems to improve work efficiency. One solution available for universities by way of management information system is the Campus ERP system. The Campus ERP system helps universities incorporate all departments and functions within a single database system that manages all student information. Campus ERP is used to facilitate the routine work of end users and to achieve a better resource management. Nevertheless, the effects of Campus ERP systems experienced by users do not correspond with their desired effects of these systems. To investigate the reasons for these differences, we conduct a empirical study at the University of Nizwa (UoN) in Oman to identify the difference between the expected and desired effects of Campus ERP system and the reasons for that difference. The target group from UoN were administrator, developer and teachers. We examine the impacts of the Campus ERP system by introducing the TOC model as a catalogue of criteria to investigate the determinants affecting the influence of the ERP system. In our study, we classify these determinants as avoided reasons, identified reasons, and unidentified reasons. We investigate whether there exist any differences between the experienced effects and desired effects at UoN, assuming that the university is aware of the avoided reasons and the identified reasons. Thus, we set out to discover the unidentified reasons for the difference. By doing so, we contribute to a new understanding of unknown influential factors that lead to the difference between the desired and expected effects of ERP systems, which is significant as a yardstick for the successful implementation of Campus ERP projects. (Less)
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author
Al Dhafari, Zubaida Mathikhour Hashil LU and Li, Mengmeng
supervisor
organization
course
INFM10 20141
year
type
H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
subject
keywords
Campus ERP, ERP effects, evaluation criteria for ERP systems, TOC model, TOSP model, checking model, influential factors, relevance to effectiveness
report number
INF14-043
language
English
id
4623090
date added to LUP
2014-09-09 09:37:16
date last changed
2014-09-09 09:37:16
@misc{4623090,
  abstract     = {{Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems have been used by organizations and companies the world throughout since 1990. Many universities have recently replaced their legacy systems with ERP systems to improve work efficiency. One solution available for universities by way of management information system is the Campus ERP system. The Campus ERP system helps universities incorporate all departments and functions within a single database system that manages all student information. Campus ERP is used to facilitate the routine work of end users and to achieve a better resource management. Nevertheless, the effects of Campus ERP systems experienced by users do not correspond with their desired effects of these systems. To investigate the reasons for these differences, we conduct a empirical study at the University of Nizwa (UoN) in Oman to identify the difference between the expected and desired effects of Campus ERP system and the reasons for that difference. The target group from UoN were administrator, developer and teachers. We examine the impacts of the Campus ERP system by introducing the TOC model as a catalogue of criteria to investigate the determinants affecting the influence of the ERP system. In our study, we classify these determinants as avoided reasons, identified reasons, and unidentified reasons. We investigate whether there exist any differences between the experienced effects and desired effects at UoN, assuming that the university is aware of the avoided reasons and the identified reasons. Thus, we set out to discover the unidentified reasons for the difference. By doing so, we contribute to a new understanding of unknown influential factors that lead to the difference between the desired and expected effects of ERP systems, which is significant as a yardstick for the successful implementation of Campus ERP projects.}},
  author       = {{Al Dhafari, Zubaida Mathikhour Hashil and Li, Mengmeng}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Exploring Factors Causing Disparity between Desired and Experienced Effects of Campus ERP Systems}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}