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ERP: complexities, ironies, and advances. (Manage).


Enterprise resource planning See ERP.

(application, business) Enterprise Resource Planning - (ERP) Any software system designed to support and automate the business processes of medium and large businesses.
 (ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) An integrated information system that serves all departments within an enterprise. Evolving out of the manufacturing industry, ERP implies the use of packaged software rather than proprietary software written by or for one customer. ) is still what it is: your back-office automation system for managing the vast majority of business transactions in your enterprise. But now ERP is stepping out in multiple directions.

The acronym acronym: see abbreviation.


A word typically made up of the first letters of two or more words; for example, BASIC stands for "Beginners All purpose Symbolic Instruction Code.
 "ERP"--for enterprise resource planning--was defined in 1990 by Gartner, Inc. (Stamford, CT). That was then. This is now. Gartner's Research Director in the Business Process and Applications Group, Brian Zrimsek, sees three major changes affecting ERP now:

1. Process extensions. "Today, ERP is still for the enterprise, but the enterprise is changing. It's becoming more virtual." consider how the OEMs are outsourcing aspects of car design and the rise in contract manufacturing. Both of these business processes span physical enterprise boundaries. "ERP starts to struggle as you outsource more activities," says Zrimsek. The build/made items in ERP become bought/purchased items. The visibility that comes from routings, work-order statuses, and work-in-process data acquisition gets lost. Hence the drive for collaborative information systems among outsource partners. But remember, points out Zrimsek, "ERP wasn't built with the Internet in mind."

2. Verticalization of functionality. ERP was initially built for manufacturing and distribution. Now, fully integrated, feature-rich, ERP systems have extensions for supply chain management (SCM (1) (Software Configuration Management, Source Code Management) See configuration management.

(2) See supply chain management.
), customer relationship management (CRM (Customer Relationship Management) An integrated information system that is used to plan, schedule and control the presales and postsales activities in an organization. ), warehouse management, and several other business processes. Zrimsek has seen ERP deployed in just about all industry sectors; food, petrochemical, aerospace and defense, the armed services The Constitution authorizes Congress to raise, support, and regulate armed services for the national defense. The President of the United States is commander in chief of all the branches of the services and has ultimate control over most military matters. , and even the public sector. Consequently, ERP vendors A list of Enterprise resource planning (ERP) vendors. ERP vendors by revenue
The largest vendors worldwide in 2005 according to Gartner Dataquest:

Market share 2005 according to Gartner Dataquest[1]
# Vendor Revenue
(million $) Market share
 are deepening the functionality of their systems to meet the needs of the target industries.

3. Architecture. Before client-server computing in the early 1990s, which was kind of the birth of ERP, resource planning Resource planning may refer to:
  • Enterprise resource planning (ERP)
  • Manufacturing resource planning (MRP and MRPII)
  • Distribution Resource Planning (DRP)
  • Human resources (HR)
 systems were very monolithic. ERP deployments were basically mainframe deployments. Upgrading meant taking out the whole thing and putting in a new system. Today, users are loathe to pay 20% to 60% of what they paid in system implementation for upgrades! migrations. This is putting pressure on ERP vendors to provide software that is open, component-oriented, and migratable in pieces--thereby leaving existing, desired, ERP components (as well as SCM, CRM, etc.) in place and functional.

Add that all together and you see why Gartner is coining the term "ERP II" to label the "next act in the evolution of ERP, which expands beyond enterprise-centric optimization and transaction processing Updating the appropriate database records as soon as a transaction (order, payment, etc.) is entered into the computer. It may also imply that confirmations are sent at the same time.

Transaction processing systems are the backbone of an organization because they update constantly.
 to a new focus on improving enterprise competitiveness." So, dismiss anything written that ERP is dead. "It's not accurate to say there's nothing happening in ERP. There's lots happening. ERP is still growing and evolving," exclaims James Shepherd, Senior Vice President at AMR (1) (Adaptive Multi-Rate) A variable rate speech codec selected by the 3GPP for the 3G evolution of the GSM cellphone system (WCDMA). Using the Algebraic CELP (ACELP) compression technology, AMR provides toll quality sound at transmission rates from 4.75 to 12.  Research (Boston, MA). ERP is still doing what it's supposed to: provide a common database for an entire enterprise. "ERP is truly the enterprise backbone. That can't go away," says David Schaap, Product Marketing Manager for BRAIN North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , Inc. (Ann Arbor Ann Arbor, city (1990 pop. 109,592), seat of Washtenaw co., S Mich., on the Huron River; inc. 1851. It is a research and educational center, with a large number of government and industrial research and development firms, many in high-technology fields such as , MI). If anything, ERP is manufacturing's equivalent to Microsoft's Office Suite: lots of core functionality and changes that are far more incremental Additional or increased growth, bulk, quantity, number, or value; enlarged.

Incremental cost is additional or increased cost of an item or service apart from its actual cost.
 than they once were.

Automotive ERP

"What's new in ERP is no different than what has always been new in the product category currently known as 'ERP,' formerly 'MRP II' [manufacturing resource planning Manufacturing Resource Planning (MRP II) is defined by APICS as a method for the effective planning of all resources of a manufacturing company. Ideally, it addresses operational planning in units, financial planning in dollars, and has a simulation capability to answer ], formerly 'MRP' [material requirements planning (application) Material Requirements Planning - (MRP) A system for effectively managing material requirements in a manufacturing process.

Information systems have long been an important part of the manufacturing environment.
]: The difference has to do with what's being added to ERP," says Shepherd. That is, the scope, features, and functions of ERP continue to expand. Some of these, points out Shepherd, are invented by the ERP vendors; most are invented by small, niche vendors, later co-opted by the ERP vendors. "That's progress as usual in ERP," Shepherd adds.

And yet, ERP still doesn't fit automakers very well mainly because they have evolved their own way of doing business, which is sufficiently different than other industry sectors. However, ERP does fit the operations of the suppliers. Nowadays, suppliers are implementing ERP packages rather than writing their own systems or modifying "off-the-shelf" to some unrecognizable system state, as they did in the past. One key reason is that because automotive is a key target market for the ERP vendors; automotive-specific functionality is now the "price of admission." For example, look at Release Management from Oracle Corp. (Redwood Shores, CA). This module manages customer schedules, then reconciles demand with existing requirements. It posts shipping and sequence schedules, and generates updates to sales orders The sales order, sometimes abbreviated as SO, is an order received by a business from a customer. A sales order may be for products and/or services. Given the wide variety of businesses, this means that the orders can be fulfilled in several ways.  and forecasts. The module lets OEMs and suppliers automate the receipt and processing of inbound planning, shipping, and production sequence schedules. As necessary, the module generates exceptions if data i s missing or invalid; valid schedules will continue to be processed. Once validated, customer schedules are archived and accessed by schedule history, original schedule date/quantity, associated sales order, and customer authorization information using the Release Management Workbench.

Several automotive companies require that trading partners use cumulative accounting; that is, send cumulative ship-to-date quantities or discrete requirement quantities with a cumulative total indicating what quantities are needed over the period. Oracle's Release Management converts these cumulative quantities into net quantities. This forecasted demand is reconciled with existing demand in Oracle Order Management and Oracle Planning. The reconciled customer demand goes to Oracle Shipping Execution, which manages picking, packing, and shipping inventory, as well as issuing the appropriate ship notice and invoice information through an EDI-related gateway to the OEM's trading partners. For non-Oracle users, Oracle's Trading Partner Architecture helps integrate trading partner-code to Oracle Release Management, Order Management, and Shipping Execution.

Is this still ERP? Yes!

The recently announced Rapid Planning Matrix (RPM) from SAP America, Inc. (Newton Square, PA), is an enhancement to the production planning Production planning

The function of a manufacturing enterprise responsible for the efficient planning, scheduling, and coordination of all production activities.
 and detailed scheduling in SAP's Advanced Planner and Optimizer (APO apo- 1 A prefix indicating a protein component in a conjugated molecule–eg, apoferritin, apolipoprotein, see there 2 Apolipoprotein, see there ). That said, RPM is more an MRP (Material Requirements Planning) An information system that determines what assemblies must be built and what materials must be procured in order to build a unit of equipment by a certain date.  engine. Running in main memory, RPM processes vast quantities of data and spits back the exact work content of sales orders per work area, including due-dates and line positions. It can explode 100,000... 150,000... whatever, fully configured car sales orders in one to 1.5 hours, a process that could take up to 10 days in R/3.

RPM lets companies run MRP after every shift, see demand for the next three to five weeks, and push consistent and accurate information down the supply chain. It also identifies potential bottlenecks and generates reliable delivery dates to users. This is crucial as automotive moves from a make-to-stock operation to build-to-order. This capability is also, says Juergen Helmle, SAP's Vice President of Automotive, the starting point Noun 1. starting point - earliest limiting point
terminus a quo

commencement, get-go, offset, outset, showtime, starting time, beginning, start, kickoff, first - the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the
 of supply chain planning. "RPM is technically a part of our SCM product, not a part of R/3, but I would still call it a core ERP function."

SAP has also recently announced its Packaging Logistics module. (Delphi and other automotive suppliers call this "Label Management.") This module manages packing instructions and multi-level packing bills of material. The module lets suppliers set packing Set packing is an NP-complete problem in combinatorics, and was one of Karp's 21 NP-complete problems.

Suppose we have a finite set S and a list of subsets of S.
 instructions about what materials are to be packed in what type of container, and in what quantity. With this, suppliers can ship different part numbers in different containers--on the same pallet. Shipping palletized containers, even with mixed parts, saves in inventory and materials management Materials management is the branch of logistics that deals with the tangible components of a supply chain. Specifically, this covers the acquisition of spare parts and replacements, quality control of purchasing and ordering such parts, and the standards involved in ordering,  on the shop floor. The module also manages return able packaging, including monitoring the number of returnable packaging items in circulation.

Are these ERP functions? Yes, answers Helmle, even though it runs across material management, sales and distribution, and production planning.

ERP II considerations

There are a couple of ironies with ERP. The first revolves around the very issue of system complexity and the reality that software/systems integration is both difficult and expensive--COM, CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture) A software-based interface from the Object Management Group (OMG) that allows software modules (objects) to communicate with each other no matter where they are located on a private network or the global , Java, .NET, XML XML
 in full Extensible Markup Language.

Markup language developed to be a simplified and more structural version of SGML. It incorporates features of HTML (e.g., hypertext linking), but is designed to overcome some of HTML's limitations.
, and Web-based technologies notwithstanding. This reality, now more than ever, supports the argument for standardizing ERP, CRM, SCM, and the rest of the alphabet soup on one or two large ERP vendors, even if the resulting system is not "best of breed." Says Paul Hebeler, Oracle's Automotive Industry The automotive industry is the industry involved in the design, development, manufacture, marketing, and sale of motor vehicles. In 2006, more than 69 million motor vehicles, including cars and commercial vehicles were produced worldwide.  Director, "There has to be a compelling reason to going with multiple packages."

(Hebeler also confirms that unlike the other major ERP vendors, Oracle plans to be the one-source provider for that alphabet soup of enterprise applications. "And don't forget, we have the database, too," he adds. When quizzed that supposedly no vendor can do it all, Hebeler responds, "That's probably true, It takes a special vendor.")

Suggests BRAIN's Schaap, "People should still be asking their ERP providers to keep them current in terms of new industry mandates, which are constantly changing, and additional incremental functionality to address the changing market." The larger ERP vendors are more apt to do this, especially as mergers, acquisitions, and outright business failures take their toll on small ERP companies. On the other hand, a niche vendor might be better able to provide software for specific ERP-related (or soon-to-be ERP-related) tasks.

This "bigger is better" approach to ERP has other ramifications ramifications nplAuswirkungen pl . Vendors now have more "touch points" within the enterprise to sell ERP, whether that be manufacturing, finance, SCM, CRM, and so on. For customers though, ERP is becoming--if it hasn't already--more unwieldy, more difficult, and more expensive as it tries to deal with the staggering complex problem of enterprise management.

Despite the best of intentions, concludes Shepherd, "the problem of managing a business doesn't get any simpler. Now I have to sell my products 900 ways, I have to bring lots more new products to market in a week instead of years, and I'm global instead of local. It's a much more complex environment than it used to be."
The Transition to ERP II: Meeting the Challenges

ERP EVOLVING INTO SOMETHING MORE

ERP'S expansion today involves six elements that touch business,
application, and technology strategies.

ERP                                      ERP II

Enterprise optimization    ROWE          Value chain
                                         participation/
                                         e-commerce enablement

Manufacturing and          DOMAIN        All sectors/segments
distribution

Manufacturing, sales and   FUNCTION      Cross-industry, industry
distribution, and finance                sector and specific
processes                                industry processes

Internal, hidden           PROCESS       Externally connected

Web-aware, closed,         ARCHITECTURE  Web-based, open,
monolithic                               componentized
                                         monolithic

Internally generated       DATA          Internally and externally
and consumed                             published and subscribed


Source: Gartner Research
COPYRIGHT 2002 Gardner Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:enterprise resource planning
Comment:ERP: complexities, ironies, and advances. (Manage).(enterprise resource planning)
Author:Gould, Lawrence S.
Publication:Automotive Design & Production
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 1, 2002
Words:1641
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