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ERP Key-User Concept

The key-user concept identifies and develops internal power users who bridge business operations and IT — the people who become the organizational ERP-knowledge backbone. Successful ERP implementations consistently invest in key-user programs; underinvested programs consistently produce post-go-live problems regardless of system quality. For US mid-market projects, the key-user investment is one of the highest-leverage operational practices.

Who should be a key user

Effective key users share specific characteristics. Domain expertise: deep operational knowledge of their functional area — not just current procedures but the underlying business rationale. System curiosity: willingness to explore the ERP's capabilities, configure settings, troubleshoot issues. Communication skills: ability to explain the system to colleagues, capture requirements from users, escalate complex issues to IT. Operational influence: respected by peers; colleagues approach them with questions; their adoption drives broader adoption. Sufficient time allocation: minimum 20-30% of working time for the key-user role during implementation; 5-15% ongoing post-go-live. Without time allocation, key users cannot perform the role regardless of personal capability.

Number and distribution

Typical key-user counts. Small business (under 50 users): 5-10 key users covering main functional areas. Mid-market (50-200 users): 15-30 key users with module-and-process-area coverage. Upper mid-market (200-500 users): 30-60 key users with deeper specialization. Enterprise (500+ users): 60-150+ key users organized in formal community structures. Distribution across modules and entities matters: each major functional area (financial accounting, controlling, sales, purchasing, inventory, production) should have at least one dedicated key user. Each significant entity in multi-site or multi-state operations needs local key-user coverage to handle regional, regulatory and operational-context specifics.

Key-user responsibilities

  • During implementation: requirements validation, design reviews, user-acceptance testing, training-the-trainer for end-user rollout, configuration of master data, change management within their team
  • At go-live and during hyper-care: first-line support for colleagues, issue triage and escalation, on-floor training and coaching, communication of system changes and updates
  • Steady-state operations: ongoing user support, configuration changes in their area, new-employee onboarding to ERP usage, requirements gathering for enhancements, representation in change-control discussions
  • System evolution: input to upgrade planning, evaluation of new features, champion of best-practice adoption, liaison with central IT or the ERP competence center

Risks and success factors

Three patterns characterize successful key-user programs. (1) Explicit time allocation: without protected time for the key-user role, the operational day job crowds it out. A documented agreement with line management on time allocation is essential. (2) Career development: the key-user role should be visibly valued, with career-development implications. Without career impact, key-user attrition becomes a problem. (3) Ongoing community support: regular key-user meetings, a shared knowledge base, peer learning across modules and entities. The community produces compounding value over years. Risks: key-user attrition (replacement is hard), single-point-of-failure when only one key user covers a critical function, role drift toward pure IT support without business orientation, and lack of management attention post-go-live causing the program to fade.

Practical guidance

Five concrete recommendations. (1) Select key users carefully, not arbitrarily — include line management in the selection. The wrong key user damages the program more than no key user. (2) Invest in formal training: vendor-certified training programs (SAP S/4HANA certifications, Microsoft Dynamics 365 certifications, NetSuite SuiteFoundation) build solid foundations. (3) Pair new key users with experienced colleagues: mentorship accelerates competence development. (4) Maintain a key-user community: monthly meetings, a shared knowledge base, peer recognition. (5) Plan for succession: identify back-ups for every key user; rotate periodically to spread knowledge. Mature key-user programs typically deliver 30-50% lower ongoing IT-support cost and substantially better user experience compared with weak programs.

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