that's a problem and we're going to have to fix it
>it takes an order of magnitude more time and effort
that's not a problem
the fact that Jane the accounting drone has to do twice the amount of work, or has to hire an intern to help her out, or even wants to quit because the job is so awful now is not a problem
it's a rounding error in the overall cost of implementing an ERP system
a new screen with some new data to show for the exec is worth 20 Jane's and her opinions on the new system
you can't even call the new system unethical or fraudulent because 10 people other then Jane can now stop using broken excel sheets to organize their work
This sounds about right to me. In particular, it tends to partiton the organization into (A) the people whose job it is to plug away at the ERP system (orders, invoices, tickets, etc), and (B) the people who actually do whatever it is that the company does.
(C) - License costs can also play into this partitioning.
Then you hope (and work to ensure) that the benefit achieved for B, by having consistent org-wide information systems to work from, is enough to cover the overheads of A and C.
>people complain that things don't work
that's a problem and we're going to have to fix it
>it takes an order of magnitude more time and effort
that's not a problem
the fact that Jane the accounting drone has to do twice the amount of work, or has to hire an intern to help her out, or even wants to quit because the job is so awful now is not a problem
it's a rounding error in the overall cost of implementing an ERP system
a new screen with some new data to show for the exec is worth 20 Jane's and her opinions on the new system
you can't even call the new system unethical or fraudulent because 10 people other then Jane can now stop using broken excel sheets to organize their work
basically Jane is collateral damage