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A conceptual framework for the implementation of enterprise information portals in large organizations

journal contribution
posted on 2006-12-01, 00:00 authored by Rens ScheepersRens Scheepers
Addressing the diversity in information requirements across the enterprise is a central challenge in enterprise content management. Enterprise information portals (EIPs) hold promise in this regard, offering each user a gateway to customized and personalized content. However, in large organizations EIP implementers face the complexity of tailoring portals for potentially thousands of users. A conceptual framework based on marketing fundamentals is developed to inform EIP implementation in this respect. It is argued that EIP implementers should view their user community as a number of distinct segments in order to address divergent needs more specifically (as opposed to a ‘one size fits all’ approach). For each identified segment, a ‘mix’ of content (product), distribution (place), promotion and price (cost) should be considered. The framework is applied to two cases of EIP implementation in large organizations. It is proposed that segmentation enables better planning of the overall EIP implementation effort. Considerations such as the number of user segments, customization, and personalization of content, and the funding of EIP development in large organizations are also discussed. The concepts elaborated here also hold theoretical relevance for other IS implementation contexts that involve very large usercommunities with diverse information

History

Journal

European journal of information systems

Volume

15

Issue

6

Pagination

635 - 647

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan

Location

Basingstoke, England

ISSN

0960-085X

eISSN

1476-9344

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2006, Operational Research Society