The notion of best practice is a foundational concept for vendors of Enterprise Resource Planning
systems who use it to support a claim to provide tried and tested, ‘best of breed’ process models. This
study illustrates how a best practice ERP system was actually created. The product resulted from a
socio-political process involving negotiations amongst a small group of interests in a particular context.
This process is illuminated through the presentation of an intensive case study in which we follow
the creation of the ERP product destined to be marketed as a best practice solution for higher
education institutions. We focus on the design of an ERP-based grants management system to highlight
the role of software in shaping operations and strategy at both a firm and industry level. The
design of IT shapes the boundaries of organizational knowledge and decision-making by classifying
work practices and translating them into the software. The focus of our investigation is the process
by which a small group of powerful actors came to define the ‘best practice’ for an industry. Findings
reveal the politics involved in constructing, marketing and disseminating best practice claims. Using
theoretical concepts from Science and Technology Studies literature, we illuminate how the design of
the ERP product changed the nature of work, and how later such practices were locally refuted and
amended, despite the original product continuing to be sold by the software vendor. The ethics of
such ‘best practice’ claims are questioned.
2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.