Production Planning & Control: Assignment
Production Planning & Control: Assignment
ERP:
"ERP" stands for Enterprise Resource Planning. It refers to a suite of software
that organizations use to manage day-to-day business activities, such as
accounting, procurement, project management, risk management and
compliance, and supply chain operations. A complete ERP suite also includes
enterprise performance management, software that helps to plan, budget,
predict, and report on an organization’s financial results.
ERP systems tie together and define a plethora of business processes and enable
the flow of data between them. By collecting an organization’s shared
transactional data from multiple sources, ERP systems eliminate data duplication
and provide data integrity with a "single source of truth."
Today, ERP systems are critical for managing thousands of businesses of all sizes
and in all industries. To these companies, ERP is as indispensable as the
electricity that keeps the lights on.
Benefits of ERP:
• ERP can improve quality and efficiency of the business. By keeping a
company's internal business processes running smoothly, ERP can lead to
better outputs that may benefit the company, such as in customer service
and manufacturing.
• ERP supports upper level management by providing information for
decision making.
• ERP creates a more agile company that adapts better to change. It also
makes a company more flexible and less rigidly structured so organization
components operate more cohesively, enhancing the business—internally
and externally.
• ERP can improve data security in a closed environment. A common control
system, such as the kind offered by ERP systems, allows organizations the
ability to more easily ensure key company data is not compromised. This
change, however, with a more open environment, requiring further
scrutiny of ERP security features and internal company policies regarding
security.
Some examples of ERP software are SAP ERP, Microsoft Dynamics GP, Oracle
ERP Cloud, NetSuite ERP, SYSPRO etc.