Critical Success Factors for ERP Implementation: Two Directions Focusing on Employee Perceptions in Qatar
Abstract
Due to the high failure rate of enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems, implementation issues
have been highly addressed in the literature. Two major directions were followed in the literature
focusing on technology adoption theories and focusing on the critical success factors (CSF) of ERP
implementation from organizational perspectives. However, few studies covered both directions in one
study. This study extended the TAM with computer self-efficacy (CSE) and explored the major CSF
that influence the implementation process of ERP systems in a Qatari environment. Three hundred
twenty-one valid responses were collected from employees working in 40 different organizations with
varied business lines in Qatar. Results indicated that perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use, and
computer self-efficacy were significant predictors of behavioral intention (R2 = 0.56). Major findings
of the descriptive analysis related to the CSF concluded that top management support followed by
users’ training and project management process are the major ones perceived by the sample.
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