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Minggu, 06 Maret 2011

Midmarket ERP Solutions Buyer’s Guide

For all but the smallest organizations, an enterprise resource planning (ERP) system promises big gains, helping to grow revenue, increase productivity company-wide, improve efficiency throughout the enterprise, and manage costs. In this guide, you’ll find details on what to look for in a midmarket ERP package, the benefits it should bring to your midsize company, and what you need to know before you commit to a solution.

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  1. Lean Manufacturing Support
    As the name implies, lean manufacturing is essentially using less of
    everything. For midsize manufacturers with limited resources, this waste
    reduction in production and business processes can be an especially
    critical cost saver. With lean manufacturing, an organization can avoid
    overproduction, excess inventory, wasted motion, unnecessary processes
    and idle time. Lean manufacturing can also help an organization deliver
    products more quickly to customers, be more fl exible and, ultimately,
    succeed in a global marketplace.
    A few vendors in this Buyer’s Guide support lean manufacturing, including
    Infor, Oracle-PeopleSoft, and QAD (via an add-on module).

    BalasHapus
  2. SOA
    SOA — also called Web services — has been called the next big thing in
    enterprise architecture. Infor defi nes it as “an architectural approach to
    building and deploying software that is interoperable by design.” SOA
    allows software capabilities to be easily connected and reused, making
    it quicker and cheaper to assemble, deploy and sustain enterprise-grade
    technology. With an SOA, organizations can more quickly adapt to
    changing business processes.
    Several midmarket ERP vendors support SOA, including Infor, QAD,
    Microsoft and SAP. Infor’s Open SOA is a “building-block way of tying
    together a heterogeneous IT architecture.” QAD has begun re-architecting
    its line of business applications to allow it to connect in many diff erent
    ways under an SOA; it currently uses QAD QXtend to “bridge SOA
    requirements with [its] traditional software implementation model.”
    Microsoft, of course, leverages .NET to support SOA, and SAP does it with
    the open technology SAP NetWeaver platform, which supports the use of
    Java, Microsoft .NET and IBM WebSphere development tools.

    BalasHapus
  3. In its “ERP Providers Serving the Midmarket” report, AMR Research found
    that midsize organizations are using ERP to support a variety of business
    issues, including globalization, lean manufacturing, conducting e-business,
    consolidation, shared services, collaborating with suppliers and meeting the
    requirements of new customers.
    To wring the most benefi ts from an ERP solution, an organization has to use it to
    its fullest capabilities. Considering the expense of acquiring and deploying an
    ERP package, it’s surprising how underutilized it often turns out to be. According
    to Aberdeen’s “2007 ERP in Manufacturing” survey, the average midsize company
    uses only about 11 out of 24 generic ERP modules, or approximately 72 percent of
    the available functionality. (Is this math right)
    As midmarket companies extend their reach into markets around the world, they
    require increasingly sophisticated systems to support and run their business.
    With ERP, they can use enterprise-grade technology as a competitive weapon,
    managing costs, introducing effi ciencies throughout the supply chain and
    manufacturing processes, and streamlining and automating business processes
    across the organization. For some companies, ERP can mean the diff erence
    between success and failure.

    BalasHapus