Abstract

Implementing a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system requires significant consideration with respect to change management and the associated business risks. This paper describes how to best achieve the change goal and minimize these risks. The research question under investigation is: “How can Kotter’s change management model be used effectively to enhance the value and utilisation of a CRM system”. Kotter’s eight-stage change model is the adopted change model used by the organisation under study. As business intelligence (BI) is a growing field within industry and academia alike, limited substantive research has been done regarding how to manage the change process itself within a BI project. Often research either focuses on the technical development (e.g., agile methodology) or the change process from a holistic perspective. However, both are needed to effectively manage the risk of failure. The research design for this study was that of a single organisation case study. The research questions were addressed by using a deductive research style. To allow for multiple perspectives and triangulation of the data, a mixed-methods approach (Quant + QUAL) was used. Outcomes of the research showed that whilst there was some success in the implementation of Kotter’s change model, it could have been significantly improved if the competencies identified in this research were considered and incorporated prior and during the change journey. Building on Kotter’s classic work with change management, this research fills the gap by describing the pertinent competencies required in managing the change process, identifying common pitfalls and investigating the common threads between the ‘data to outcome’ process and the change management process to better mitigate the risk This paper adds value to current change literature/models by defining and describing the importance of these competencies when embarking on a change program related to BI tools and systems and how these competencies are incorporated into Kotter’s model.

Highlights

  • The success or failure of change management processes within an organisation has a direct impact on business risk and the associated financial outcomes (Kerzner 2018)

  • Current Customer Relationship Management (CRM) utilisation results described an organisation with an inconsistent level of utilisation across department and hierarchy, indicating that that the implementation of Kotter’s change model was not successful

  • The intent of this research was to adapt an already well-known and recognised model within the CRM business intelligence (BI) context, currently in use in the case organisation, so that it can be realistically implemented within the case organisation and other business environments to minimise risk and enhance the chance of change success

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Summary

Introduction

The success or failure of change management processes within an organisation has a direct impact on business risk and the associated financial outcomes (Kerzner 2018). There is no universally accepted definition of Business Intelligence (BI) (Nethravathi et al 2020), it can be viewed as an umbrella term that includes the applications, infrastructure and tools, and processes that enable analytics of information to improve and optimise decisions, actions and performance (Hackney et al 2015; Gartner 2021). The inherent complexity within the emerging business intelligence (BI) discipline, coupled with the significant challenge of having a clear change goal in planned change, is making the change process for BI projects ambiguous at best and not adequately addressing the risk management issues. Trieu (2017) determined that there is a gap between BI value and the process of organisational change

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