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Introduction To ERP: Enterprise Systems Using SAP

This document discusses the evolution of enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems from isolated business functions and information silos to integrated systems that provide consistent data across all business areas in real time, focusing on the development of SAP's ERP software and modules from the 1970s to today's integrated systems that allow data to be entered once and used throughout organizations.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
179 views59 pages

Introduction To ERP: Enterprise Systems Using SAP

This document discusses the evolution of enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems from isolated business functions and information silos to integrated systems that provide consistent data across all business areas in real time, focusing on the development of SAP's ERP software and modules from the 1970s to today's integrated systems that allow data to be entered once and used throughout organizations.

Uploaded by

Phuoc Huynh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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INFS 5024 - Enterprise Systems using SAP

Module 1
Introduction to ERP
Objectives

After completing this module, you will be able to:


• Identify the factors that led to the development of
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems
• Describe the distinguishing modular characteristics
of ERP software
• Discuss the pros and cons of implementing an ERP
system
• Summarise ongoing developments in ERP
Questions

• What is an Information System?


• What is it composed of?
Introduction

• An Information System (IS) is a collection of


components that work together to provide
information to help in the operation and
management of an organisation
Source: www.psu.edu
Introduction (contd…)

• Efficient, integrated information systems are very


important for companies to be competitive
• An Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system can
help integrate a company’s operations
– Acts as a company-wide computing environment
– Includes a database that is shared by all functional
areas
– Can deliver consistent data across all business
functions in real time
The Evolution of Information Systems

• In the past: Information Silos

Source: opentext.com
Question

• Examples of problem that may arise due to use of


information silos?
The Evolution of Information Systems
(contd…)

• Integrated ERP system is incredibly complex


– Not feasible until the 1990s

• Current ERP systems evolved as a result of:


– Advancement of hardware and software technology
– Development of a vision of integrated information
systems
– Reengineering of companies to shift from a functional
focus to a business process focus
Computer Hardware and Software
Development

• Computer hardware and software developed rapidly


in the 1960s and 1970s
• First practical business computers were the
mainframe computers of the 1960s

1946 (ENIAC)
Computer Hardware and Software
Development (contd…)

• Advancements in computer software


– 1970s: relational database software developed
• Provide businesses the ability to store, retrieve, and analyze
large volumes of data
– 1980s: spreadsheet software became popular
• Managers can easily perform complex business analyses
Early Attempts to Share Resources

• By the mid-1980s, telecommunications


developments allowed users to share data and
peripherals on local networks
– Client-server architecture
• Servers became powerful, less expensive and provided
Scalability
• By the mid-1980s, database management system
(DBMS) required to manage development of
complex ERP software existed
• By the end of the 1980s, the hardware needed to
support development of ERP systems was in place
– Fast computers, networked access, advanced DBMS
The Manufacturing Roots of
ERP (contd.)
• Manufacturing software developed during the 1960s
and 1970s
– Evolved from simple inventory-tracking systems to
material requirements planning (MRP) software
• MRP lets plant manager plan production and raw materials
requirements by working backward from sales forecast
• Electronic data interchange (EDI)
– Direct computer-to-computer exchange of standard
business documents
– Allowed companies to handle the purchasing process
electronically
• Avoiding cost and delays resulting from paper purchase order
and invoice systems
– Now known as Supply Chain Management (SCM)
Management’s Impetus to Adopt ERP

What is wrong with the following business model?

Information and material flows in a functional business model


Management’s Impetus to Adopt ERP
(cont’d)

• Hard economic times of the late 1980s and early


1990s caused many companies to downsize and
reorganize
– Stimulus to ERP development
• Inefficiencies caused by the functional model of
business organization
– Silos of information
– Limits the exchange of information between the lower
operating levels
Management’s Impetus to Adopt ERP
(cont’d.)

Information and material flows in a business process model

✓ Set of cross functional processes


✓ Information flows without top mgmt’s involvement
✓ Provides flexibility and rapid decision making capability
ERP Software Emerges: SAP and R/3

• 1972: five former IBM systems analysts in


Mannheim, Germany formed Systemanalyse und
Programmentwicklung (Systems Analysis and
Program Development*, or SAP)
• SAP’s goals (took 20 years to achieve):
– Develop a standard software product that could be
configured to meet the needs of each company
– Data available in real time
– Users working on computer screens, rather than with
voluminous printed output
*SAP: Systems, Applications and Products in Data
Processing
SAP Founders

• Checkout timeline of their journey of 46 years here:


https://www.sap.com/corporate/en/company/history.
html
SAP Begins Developing Software Modules

• During their work on order processing system for


German chemical company ICI, Plattner and Hopp
had developed the idea of modular software
development
• Software modules: individual programs that can be
purchased, installed, and run separately, but that all
extract data from the common database
• The team could not afford buying their own
computer until 1980
– Accessed client’s mainframe systems at night
• 1982: SAP released its R/2 mainframe ERP
software package
SAP Begins Developing Software Modules
(cont’d.)

• 1980s: sales grew rapidly; SAP extended its


software’s capabilities and expanded into
international markets
– Accommodated different languages, currencies,
accounting practices, tax laws etc.
• By 1988, SAP had established subsidiaries in
numerous foreign countries
R/1 vs R/2 vs R/3

• SAP R/1: 1 tier architecture


– 1 server for Presentation, Application and Database
• SAP R/2: 2 tier architecture, Mainframe version
– Server 1: Presentation
– Server 2: Application + Database
• SAP R/3: 3 tier architecture, Client Server version
– Server 1: Presentation
– Server 2: Application
– Server 3: Database
• R stands for?
SAP R/3

• 1988: SAP began development of its R/3 system to


take advantage of client-server technology
• 1992: first version of SAP R/3 released
• Client server architecture allowed R/3 to run on a
variety of computer systems
– Unix, Windows NT etc.
• SAP R/3 system was designed using an open
architecture approach
• Open architecture: third-party software companies
encouraged to develop add-on software products
that can be integrated with existing software
– Such as bar code scanners, PDAs, cell phones etc.
SAP Architecture
New Directions in ERP

• Late 1990s: Year 2000 (or Y2K)


problem motivated many
companies to move to ERP
systems
– Pay millions of dollars to
correct Y2K problem or invest
in an ERP System?
• By 2000, SAP AG had 22,000
employees in 50 countries and
10 million users at 30,000
installations around the world
• By 2000, SAP’s competition in
the ERP market:
– Oracle
– PeopleSoft
• Late 2004: Oracle succeeded in
its bid to take over PeopleSoft
New Directions in ERP (cont’d.)

• PeopleSoft
– Founded by David Duffield, a former IBM employee
– Today, PeopleSoft, under Oracle, is a popular
software choice for managing human resources and
financial activities at universities
• Oracle
– SAP’s biggest competitor
– Began in 1977 as Software Development
Laboratories
– Founders: Larry Ellison, Bob Miner, and Ed Oates
New Directions in ERP (cont’d.)
• SAP ERP
– Latest versions of ERP
systems by SAP and other
companies allow:
• All business areas to
access the same
database
• Elimination of redundant
data and
communications lags
• Data to be entered once
and then used
throughout the
organization
– Less probability of typos
New Directions in ERP (cont’d.)
• Current SAP ERP system: SAP ECC 6.0 (Enterprise Central Component 6.0)
– Sales and Distribution (SD) module
– Materials Management (MM) module
– Production Planning (PP) module
– Quality Management (QM) module
– Plant Maintenance (PM) module
– Asset Management (AM) module
– Human Resources (HR) module
– Project System (PS) module
– Financial Accounting (FI) module
– Controlling (CO) module
– Workflow (WF) module
Modules

• SD: Records sales orders and scheduled deliveries,


customer information
• MM: Manages acquisition of raw materials from
suppliers and subsequent handling of raw materials
inventory
– Storage to work in progress to shipping of finished
goods
• PP: Maintains production information
• QM: Plans and records quality control activities
• PM: Manages maintenance resources and planning
to minimize equipment breakdowns
Modules (cont’d.)

• AM: Manages fixed asset purchases and related


depreciation
• HR: Employees recruitment, hiring, training
– Includes payroll and benefits
• Every activity in company impacts financial position of
the company (FI, CO)
• FI: Records transactions in the general ledger accounts
– Generates reports for external reporting purposes
• CO: serves internal mgmt. purposes, assigning
manufacturing costs to products and to cost centers so the
profitability of company’s activities can be analysed.
– Supports managerial decision making
Modules (cont’d.)

• WF: not a module, rather set of tools used to


automate activities in ERP
– Perform task-flow analysis
– Prompt employees by e-mail if action is required
Quiz Time!
SAP ERP Software Implementation

SAP’s Example
• Not all companies that use SAP use all of the SAP
ERP modules
• Company’s level of data integration is highest when
it uses one vendor to supply all of its modules
– Else, needs additional software to act as bridge
• Periodic batch data transfers. Not real-time.
• Software upgrades problematic
• Configuration options allow the company to
customise the modules it has chosen to fit the
company’s needs
SAP ERP Software Implementation (cont’d.)

• Tolerance groups
– Specific ranges that define transaction limits
• Minimizes risk of fraud and abuse
– SAP has defined the tolerance group methodology as
its method for placing limits on an employee
– Configuration gives flexibility to the company to
further tailor tolerance group methodology for other
uses
• E.g. variance (shortage/overabundance) of small percentage
in shipment
– But, should be documented as to why?
SAP ERP Software Implementation
(cont’d.)

• Features of SAP ERP


– First software that could deliver real-time ERP
integration
– Usability by large companies
– High cost
– Automation of data updates
– Applicability of best practices
• Best practices: SAP’s software designers choose the best,
most efficient ways in which business processes should be
handled
ERP for Midsized Companies

• By 1998
– Most of the Fortune 500 companies had already
installed ERP systems
– ERP vendors refocused their marketing efforts on
midsized companies
• SAP All-in-One
– Single package containing specific, preconfigured
bundles of SAP ERP tailored for particular industries
– Can be installed more quickly than the standard ERP
product
ERP for Midsized Companies (cont’d.)

• BusinessByDesign: ERP product hosted by SAP


and accessed through web browser.
– SaaS – Software as a Service
• Application hosting
– Third-party company provides the hardware and
software support
– Makes ERP systems like SAP more appealing to
midsized companies
• SAP and Oracle are facing competition from smaller
providers of ERP software such as OpenERP,
SAGE and NetSuite
Responses of the Software to the
Changing Market
• In mid-1990s, many companies complained about the
difficulty of implementing SAP R/3 system
– Cancelled implementation-Dell, Length implementation-
Owens Corning, surplus chocolate bars-Cadbury
• SAP responded by developing Accelerated SAP (ASAP)
implementation methodology
– Eases the implementation process
• SAP continues to extend capabilities of SAP ERP with
additional, separate products that run on separate
hardware and extract data from the SAP ERP system
– E.g. Business Warehouse – analyse data from separate
server
Choosing Consultants and Vendors

• One person cannot fully understand a single ERP


system
• Before choosing a software vendor, most
companies:
– Study their needs
– Hire an external team of software consultants to help
choose the right software vendor(s) and the best
approach to implementing ERP
Significance and Benefits of ERP
Software and Systems

• More efficient business processes that cost less


than those in unintegrated systems
• Easier global integration
• Integrates people and data while eliminating the
need to update and repair many separate computer
systems
• Allows management to manage operations, not just
monitor them
• Can dramatically reduce costs and improve
operational efficiency
Horizontal View of ERP

• Supports Transaction Processing Systems


• Supports Decision Support Systems
• Supports Executive Information Systems for
decision making
• Supports Electronic Commerce
Vertical View of ERP

• Finance & Accounting


• Procurement
• Sales & Marketing
• Human Resource Management
• Operations Management
• Manufacturing
• Pharmaceutical
Questions About ERP

• How much does an ERP system cost?


• Should every business buy an ERP package?
• Is ERP software inflexible?
• What return can a company expect from its ERP
investment?
• How long does it take to see a return on an ERP
investment?
• Why do some companies have more success with
ERP than others?
How Much Does an ERP System Cost?

• Size of the ERP software


– Corresponds to the size of the company it serves
• Need for new hardware that is capable of running
complex ERP software
• Consultants’ and analysts’ fees
• Time for implementation
– Causes disruption of business
• Training
– Costs both time and money
Should Every Business Buy an ERP
Package?

• Some of a business’s operations, and some


segments of its operations, might not be a good
match with the constraints of ERP
• Sometimes, a company is not ready for ERP
• ERP implementation difficulties result when
management does not fully understand its current
business processes and cannot make
implementation decisions in a timely manner
Is ERP Software Inflexible?

• Many people claim that ERP systems, especially


the SAP ERP system, are rigid
• Options for customization offered by SAP ERP
– Numerous configuration options that help
businesses customize the software to fit their needs
– Programmers can write specific routines using
Advanced Business Application Programming
(ABAP)
• Once an ERP system is in place, trying to
reconfigure it while retaining data integrity is
expensive and time-consuming
What Return Can a Company Expect from
Its ERP Investment?

• ERP eliminates redundant efforts and duplicated


data; can generate savings in operations expense
• ERP system can help produce goods and services
more quickly
• Company that doesn’t implement an ERP system
might be forced out of business by competitors that
have an ERP system
• Smoothly running ERP system can save a
company’s personnel, suppliers, distributors, and
customers much frustration
What Return Can a Company Expect from
Its ERP Investment? (cont’d.)

• Cost savings and increased revenues occur over


many years
– Difficult to put an exact dollar figure to the amount
accrued from the original ERP investment
• ERP implementations take time
– Other business factors may be affecting the
company’s costs and profitability
– Difficult to isolate the impact of the ERP system alone
• ERP systems provide real-time data
– Improve external customer communications
How Long Does It Take to See a Return on
an ERP Investment?

• Return on investment (ROI): assessment of an


investment project’s value
– Calculated by dividing the value of the project’s
benefits by the project’s cost
• ERP system’s ROI can be difficult to calculate
• Peerstone Research study
– 63 percent of companies that performed the
calculation reported a positive ROI for ERP
– Most companies felt that nonfinancial goals were the
reason behind their ERP installations
Why Do Some Companies Have More
Success with ERP Than Others?

• Usually, a bumpy rollout and low ROI are caused by


people problems and misguided expectations, not
computer malfunctions
– Executives blindly hoping that new software will cure
fundamental business problems that are not curable
by any software
– Executives and IT managers not taking enough time
for a proper analysis during planning and
implementation phase
– Executives and IT managers skimping on employee
education and training
Why Do Some Companies Have More
Success with ERP Than Others? (cont’d.)

• Usually, a bumpy rollout and low ROI are caused


by people problems and misguided expectations,
not computer malfunctions (cont’d.)
– Companies not placing ownership or accountability
for the implementation project on the personnel who
will operate the system
– Unless a large project such as an ERP installation is
promoted from the top down, it is doomed to fail
– ERP implementation brings a tremendous amount of
change for users
Why Do Some Companies Have More
Success with ERP Than Others? (cont’d.)

• For many users, it takes years before they can take


advantage of many of an ERP system’s capabilities
• Most ERP installations do generate returns
The Continuing Evolution of ERP

• Understanding the social and business implications


of new technologies is not easy
• ERP systems have been in common use only since
the mid-1990s
• ERP vendors are working to solve adaptability
problems that plague customers
• Demand for new ERP installations is still going
strong
Additional Capabilities within ERP

• Sales production
– Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
applications
• Increase the efficiency of the sales force
• Data analysis
– Data mining: statistical and logical analysis of large
sets of transaction data, looking for patterns that can
aid decision making
• Internet connectivity
– Web services
Strengths of ERP

• Covers many business functions


• Strong workflow capabilities
• Currently implemented in many large firms
• Supports the concept of data entered once at its
source
Weaknesses of ERP

• Expensive
• Very complex
• Demands highly trained staff
• Lengthy implementation time
• Creates internal conflict in organisations
• New versions every 6 months (a weakness?)
Current User Base

• In Aust:
– Refer www.sap.com/australia
• In SA
– SA Power Networks
– BHP Billiton
– Balfours
– EDS
– Codan
– Viterra (formerly ABB Grain)
SAP Industry Solutions

– Life Sciences
– Aerospace & Defense – Logistics Service Providers
– Automotive – Media
– Banking – Mill Products
– Chemicals – Mining
– Consumer Products – Oil & Gas
– Defense & Security – Postal Services
– Engineering, Construction & – Professional Services
Operations – Pharmaceuticals
– Financial Service Provider – Public Sector
– Healthcare – Railway Services
– Higher Education & Research – Retail
– High Tech – Telecommunications
– Industrial Machinery & – Utilities
Components – Wholesale Distribution
– Insurance
Summary

• Speed and power of computing hardware increased exponentially, while


cost and size decreased
• Early client-server architecture provided the conceptual framework for
multiple users sharing common data
• Increasingly sophisticated software facilitated integration, especially in two
areas: A/F and manufacturing resource planning
• ERP software is expensive to purchase and time-consuming to implement,
and it requires significant employee training—but the payoffs can be
spectacular
– For some companies, ROI may not be immediate or even calculable
• Experts anticipate that ERP’s future focus will be on managing customer
relationships, improving planning and decision making, and linking
operations to the Internet and other applications through service-oriented
architecture
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6qys-562kp4
Quiz Time!

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