1 Enterprise Resources Planning (ERP) and Supply Chain Management (SCM) Technologies.
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Transcript of 1 Enterprise Resources Planning (ERP) and Supply Chain Management (SCM) Technologies.
1
Enterprise Resources Planning (ERP)
and Supply Chain
Management (SCM) Technologies
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Evolution of Enterprise Systems
Add capacity planning
Linked with financial andsales management
Enterprise resourcesplanning (ERP)
Supply chain managementand electronic commerce
Supply chainManagement (SCM)
Manufacturing resourcesplanning (MRP II)
Material requirementplanning (MRP)
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Enterprise Resources Planning (ERP) Systems• ERP was the biggest thing in business software in the
1990s. It changed the way companies worked by bringing together all their operational parts into one smoothly functioning whole.
• The market leader, a German software form called SAP, , has been able to increase its revenues by more than 60% a year and has been the fastest-growing software company in the world. SAP’s competitors, such as Oracle, Baan, and PeopleSoft, have also enjoyed rapid growth in sales.
• ERP systems promise the seamless integration of all the information flowing through a company - financial and accounting information, human resource information, supply chain information and customer information.
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Scope of an Enterprise System
• Enables a company to integrate the data throughout its entire organization
• Functions supported by SAP R/3:
Financials•Accounting receivables/Payables
•Assets accounting
•Cost-center accounting
•Product cost accounting
•Standard and period-related accounting
Human Resources•Human-resources time accounting
•Payroll
•Personnel planning
•Travel expenses
Operation/Logistics•Inventory management
•Material Req. planning
•Material management
•Project management
Sales and Marketing•Order management
•Pricing
•Sales management
•Sales planning
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Anatomy of an Enterprise system
Customers SuppliersSales force
and customer
service reps
Back-office
admin. workers
Central Database
Employees
Sales and Delivery
Applications
Service Applications
Reporting Applications
Human Resource
Management Applications
FinancialApplications
Mfc. Applications
Inventory
and supply
applications
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Benefits of Enterprise Systems
• Enterprise systems are designed to solve the problem: the fragmentation of information in large businesses
– Separate computer systems represent one of the heaviest drags on business productivity and performance.
– Maintaining them also leads to enormous costs.– If its sales and marketing systems are incompatible
with its financial-reporting systems, management is left to make important decisions by instinct rather than real time product and customer information.
• An ERP system streamlines a company’s data flows and provides management with direct access to a wealth of real-time operating information.
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Risks of Enterprise Systems
• The enormous technical challenges of rolling out enterprise systems: these systems are profoundly complex pieces of software, and installing them requires large investments of money, time and expertise.
• An ERP system is extremely expensive– The huge investment required to implement an ERP at
large companies -- ranging from $50 million to more than $500 million -- need to be weigh carefully against the eventual savings the system will produce.
• But the biggest problems are business problems. Companies may fail to reconcile the technological imperatives of the enterprise system with the business needs of the enterprise itself.
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The Logic of the System May Conflict with the Logic of the Business • An ERP is a generic solution. Vendors try to structure the
systems to reflect best practices, but it is the vendor, not you, that is defining what “best” means.
• Some degree of ERP customization is possible because the system is modular. However, the system’s complexity makes major modifications impracticable.
• With the same package, how similar can our information flows and processes be to those of our competitors before we begin to lose our competitive differentiation in the market?
– The question will be moot if a company’s competitive advantage derives primarily from the distinctiveness of its products, e.g. Apple Computer.
– For companies that compete on cost rather than on distinctive products or superior customer service. How to protect a critical differentiation posts a real problem
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The Impact on an Organization
• By providing universal, real-time access to operating and financial data, ERP allow companies to create flatter, more flexible, and more democratic structures.
– Some companies use ERP to break down hierarchical structure, freeing their people to be more innovative and more flexible.
• ERP also involves the centralization of control over information and the standardization of process, which look like hierarchical, command-an-control organizations with uniform cultures.
– Other companies use ERP to inject disciplines into organizations.
• A multinational corporation may ask a more challenging question: how much uniformity should exist in the way it does business in different regions or countries?
– Uniformity allows them to achieve tight control but make them to lose lots of flexibility.
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Doing it Right at Elf Atochem
• Following a series of mergers in the early 90s, Elf Atochem found itself hampered by the fragmentation of information systems among its 12 business units.
• The company decided to go with SAP’ R/3 and structured the implementation of its ERP to radically improve its service levels, the critical competitive differentiation.
– Focused on four key processes that are most distorted by the fragmented organizational structure.
– Install only those R/3 modules required to support customer services. It did not, for example, install the modules for human resource management or plant maintenance.
• Elf Atochem also made changes to the organizational structure to maintain its focus on customer.
• The system gave Elf Atochem the real-time information is needed to connect sales and production planning for the first time.
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Limitations of ERP
• Ill-fitted with e-commerce– The absence of a standard set of e-business solutions,
for example, lacking front-office applications.– High license fees for each user are no longer
appropriate for e-business; what is needed is a volume pricing model.
• Transaction centric systems with little planning capability– Little supply chain management option.– Little advanced planning and optimization.
• Lack business intelligence applications, such as strategic enterprise management.
– It focused on automating processes, not on getting information to key decision maker.
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Supply Chain Management (SCM)
Technologies
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From ERP to SCM
• Enterprise resource planning (ERP)– Focus on the transactional activities that have already
taken place rather than planning for what will be.– Focus on activities that occur within the four walls of
the company.• Supply Chain Management (SCM)
– The SCM products take a prospective view of the future with more emphasis on planning activities and extend their reach to customers and suppliers
– Model an entire supply chain, including vendors, distributors, and points of demand.
– Advanced supply chain planning and optimization to help you gain the forward visibility to spot opportunities for improvement now and in the future.
– Internet access capability.
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Why SCM?
• ERP primarily focuses on internal functional efficiencies inside your company.
• SCM is about planning and visibility. The emphasis is less on point solutions and more on integration and connectivity as the whole supply chain.
• Effective supply chain requires understanding and managing the interrelationships among transportation, warehousing, inventory, purchasing, production planning, customer service, order processing and even forecasting. This isn’t your ordinary MRP software. This is sophisticated stuff, built around engines that use artificial intelligence and complex algorithms to optimize resources and drive a well-planned supply-chain strategy.
• Most companies start with an ERP system and then move on to supply chain planning software. But some directly get at the benefits promised by supply-chain tools.
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How Are ERP and SCP Related?
Enterprise resourcesplanning (ERP)
Supply chainPlanning (SCP)
Dialogue
Raw data for planningengine to produce optimal solution
Optimal solution databack into ERP for execution
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The SCM Solutions
• SCM is a optimization tool to synchronize and optimize the elements in supply chain so that supply meets demand.
• The SCM applications has two major types:– Supply chain Planning (SCP) focuses on planning. SCP products
handle supply chain network design, demand planning and forecasting, supply planning, manufacturing planning and scheduling, and distribution planning.
– Supply chain execution (SCE) handles execution and control. SCE includes warehouse management systems, transportation management, international trade logistics, inventory management and order management.
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The Market for SCP Applications
• The market for supply chain planning applications is currently divided between best-in-class providers concentrating on this market and ECR venders.
• The large-scale ERP vendors, including SAP, Oracle, Baan, and PeopleSoft, provide an integrated offering. Application integration on a transactional level allows for the update of information in real time, yet the functionality of such applications is very limited in comparison to stand-alone packages provided by the best-in-class leaders, including i2, Manugistics, Numetrix and Logility.
• To choose a package, the fundamental tradeoff is between the ease of simplifying vendor relationships, infrastructure considerations, and choosing a system with functionality that may provide a better fit for your organization.
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The Gartner SCM Magic Quadrant
Completeness of vision
Abi
lity
to E
xecu
te
Challengers
Niche Players
Leaders
Visionaries
••
•i2
ManugisticsBaan
• SCT/Flyer• Synquest•PeopleSoft
•WebPlan •SAP
•LPA
Mersia
•
DemandMgmt.
•
APS
•••Numetrix
••
• Thru-Put
Logility
ParagonAspen Tech/Chesapeake
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The Magic Quadrant Process
• The ability-to-execute axis shows how well a vendor a vendor performs today; The vision axis shows how well a vendor will do in the future.
• The magic quadrant sectors:– Niche quadrant: Either focuses on a small segment of
the market and does it well, or is unfocused and does not out-innovate others.
– Challengers quadrant: Executes well today but is not in synch with market direction.
– Visionaries quadrant: Understands where the market is going or has vision of changing market rules, but does not execute well yet.
– Leaders quadrant: Executes well today, well-positioned for tomorrow.
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i2 Technologies
• i2 is the world’s leading provider of supply chain management and intelligent eBusiness solutions.
• i2 recently launched RHYTHM eXchange services, which leverages the global reach of the Web combined with the power of the Intelligent eBusiness solutions.
• i2’s Intelligent eBusiness solutions merges the e-commerce front-end with intelligent back-end fulfillment.
• i2 has made its home among discrete manufacturers.• i2 was the first to integrate all the components of MRP in
one package, and also the first to do the calculations in memory, as opposed to on a hard disk.
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Rhythm eXchange Sevices
• Most eBusiness solutions differentiate through attractive but static web store-fronts and online catalogues with little to no customer personalization or back-end supply chain integration.
• i2’ Intelligent eBuisness solutions aim to eliminate the shortcomings of current systems by
– enabling highly personalized and intelligent customer facing solutions;
– providing operational excellence to business processes;– integrating customer facing “front-end”solutions to the
operational “back-end” supply-chain processes;– and enabling creation of virtual trading communities.
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Key Components for Intelligent eBusiness• RHYTHM eCustomer Suite (TM) -- an intelligent “front-
en” for managing the entire customer lifecycle in a highly personalized manner.
• RHYTHM Intelligent Fulfillment Server (TM) -- a product designed to integrate the customer facing solutions with the efficient back-end supply chain processes to ensure profitable fulfillment.
• RHYTHM eXchange Services -- Software and services that provide for seamless integration among trading partners.
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i2 Rhythm’s Functionality
• Product Lifecycle Management for product leadership.• Supply chain management for operational excellence.• Customer management for customer intimacy.• InterProcess Planning to integrate the above three processes,
maximizing resource utilization and profitability.• Strategic Planning for accurate long-term decision-making
and scenario-based analysis.• High-performance Web fulfillment, increased efficiency,
collaboration over the Internet, and maximum responsiveness to customer demand.
• RHYTHM integrates Web front-end applications with back-end business process optimization.
• RHYTHM allows you to rapidly integrate and collaborate with business partners and customers through flexible, open standards.
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Manugistic
• The most widely used SCM solution in the industry• Has had its great success with consumer packaged goods
(CPG) manufacturers.• NetWORKS, an Internet-enabled set of collaborative applets
for demand planning and forecasting, order processing, load tendering, and material and supply planning.
• It doesn’t run its software in memory. But a partnership deal with Information Resources Inc., a market-research company. IRI provides Manugistics’ customers with demographic data that helps them develop targeted consumer-marketing campaigns.
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Manugistic’s e-Chain Solutions
• Manugistics’ Open Application Integration (OAI) product family will include two products:
– OAI/Enterprise (a great single site model): configuration, master planning, demand management, manufacturing planning & scheduling, material planning, network design and optimization, open application integration, purchase planning, replenishment planning, supply chain analysis, transportation management, and vendor managed inventory (VMI) / continuous replenishment planning(CRP).
– OAI/Net ( not available): a product that will address direct, real-time, business-to-business integration and leverage the Internet for easy integration with trading partners such as customers, suppliers, distributors or transportation providers.
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Baan Solutions
• BaanERP:– BaanERP provides end to end Enterprise Resource
Planning software. Its functionalities include sales order management, procurement, inventory, warehousing, project management, manufacturing
• BaanSCS– BaanSCS products handle all aspects of strategic,
tactical, and operational supply chain planning, including supply chain modeling, demand planning, supply planning, manufacturing and distribution planning, transportation planning and execution, route planning and scheduling, as well as plant scheduling and execution.
• Baan’APS comprises four product offerings: demand planning and forecasting, constraint-based supply-chain planning, plant level scheduler, and closed loop shop floor control.
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SAP Solutions
• The SAP supply chain initiative provides solutions for integrating strategic decision support, data warehousing, planning and simulation, optimization, forecasting, sales force automation and customer relationship systems.
– SAP APO (SAP Advanced Planner and Optimizer)– SAP business-to-business procurement– SAP LES ( Logistics Execution System)– electronic commerce
• SAP products are based on– open interfaces– standard implementation methodologies
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Comparison of SCM Vendorsi2 Technologies Manugistics Baan SAP
Demand planning
Supply planning
Manufacturing scheduling
Transportation management
Enterprise resourceplanning (ERP)
Distribution and supplychain planning
Collaborative planning
Multi-enterprise data integration
Electronic commerce
Merging e-commercefront-end and the back-end order fulfillment
Concurrent and intelligentonline and offline channel
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Interfaces
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Interfaces
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
No
Strategic planning Yes No No No
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Costs of the SCM systems
Cost for The System Consulting
Distributor
Manufacturer
Retailers
$100,000 to $200,000
$150,000 to $300,000
$450,000
$50,000
$75,000
$100,000
Whole packages average around $70,000 to $900,000, but range from
$150,000 to $20 million.
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Link Web Commerce to Supply Chain
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The Fallacies of E-Commerce Fulfillment • Fallacy #1: We’re selling over the Web, so we must be
making money over the Web -- fail to capture the true costs of fulfillment.
• Fallacy #2: Our differentiation on the Web will come from our front-end processes -- fail to consider through most differentiating section of back-end processes.
• Fallacy #3: We can always do back-end integration later -- poorly integrated front- and back-end processes and lead to excessive costs and erosion of customer loyalty.
• Fallacy #4: Our logistics operations can handle Web commerce fulfillment -- highly automated warehouses are ill-suited to picking and packing the smaller Web orders.
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The Fallacies of E-Commerce Fulfillment (Continue)• Fallacy #5: Our existing supplier relations will support Web
commerce -- fail to create a partnership with manufacturers to enable efficient fulfillment and to discourage manufacturers from selling direct.
• Fallacy #6: Our order management system can handle Web commerce -- fail to handle the high-volume transactions found with Web commerce.
• Fallacy #7: We can now sell effectively to anyone around the globe -- ill-equipped to handle international trade deals.
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Merging the E-Commerce Front-end with Intelligent Back-end Fullfillment
“A front-end Web site is often the easiest and least differentiating section of an effective Web strategy…A little-discussed, not-so-pleasant fact is that many Web commerce transactions are unprofitable because of back-end fulfillment problems.”
-- Garner Group, “The Fallacies of Web Commerce Fulfillment” April 1999, B. Enslow