ERP Gets A Complete Makeover
July 24, 2006 from InformationWeek – “The words "enterprise resource planning" conjure up ugly images: tortuously complex business processes, missed deployment deadlines, massive cost overruns. For more than a decade, ERP has been synonymous with beastly software projects. Now the three most influential vendors--SAP, Oracle, and Microsoft--are re-architecting their applications with the promise that things will get better…
The new ERP systems will be more evolutionary than revolutionary, some analysts think. Unlike the move to client-server computing, businesses won't have to rip out their installed IT systems. SAP, Oracle, and Microsoft promise to usher customers along with incremental steps to their next-generation apps.
At the heart of all three vendors' ERP redevelopment efforts is the adoption of service-oriented architectures, Web services standards, and business process management technology. SOA and BPM, the vendors say, are critical to making their applications more modular and easier to adapt as needed--say, when two companies merge--something that's been sorely lacking in ERP software…
But while SOA and Web services are driving the vendors' ERP redevelopment efforts, they draw a yawn from some IT managers, particularly those at small companies like Tasty Baking. "It really doesn't mean anything to me right now," CIO Bayles says. "I don't have 100 applications I'm trying to integrate."
SOA is low on the IT priority list at some large companies as well. Ingersoll-Rand's Libenson calls service-oriented architecture "the buzzword of 2006," adding that his company doesn't have detailed plans for adopting Web services. He sees them mainly as a way to link ERP applications to legacy systems, adding, "My goal is to find a way to get rid of our legacy systems."
180 View – We don’t think ERP investments are made because of technology such as SOA or web services. However, if the technology can clearly demonstrate an ROI, the investment decision-makers will be listening. We think that at some point in the next couple of years, web services will allow companies to exchange electronic transactions such as Purchase Orders no matter what the system. That means that a supplier does not need to enter customer orders into their systems – now we’re talking ROI.
July 24, 2006 from InformationWeek – “The words "enterprise resource planning" conjure up ugly images: tortuously complex business processes, missed deployment deadlines, massive cost overruns. For more than a decade, ERP has been synonymous with beastly software projects. Now the three most influential vendors--SAP, Oracle, and Microsoft--are re-architecting their applications with the promise that things will get better…
The new ERP systems will be more evolutionary than revolutionary, some analysts think. Unlike the move to client-server computing, businesses won't have to rip out their installed IT systems. SAP, Oracle, and Microsoft promise to usher customers along with incremental steps to their next-generation apps.
At the heart of all three vendors' ERP redevelopment efforts is the adoption of service-oriented architectures, Web services standards, and business process management technology. SOA and BPM, the vendors say, are critical to making their applications more modular and easier to adapt as needed--say, when two companies merge--something that's been sorely lacking in ERP software…
But while SOA and Web services are driving the vendors' ERP redevelopment efforts, they draw a yawn from some IT managers, particularly those at small companies like Tasty Baking. "It really doesn't mean anything to me right now," CIO Bayles says. "I don't have 100 applications I'm trying to integrate."
SOA is low on the IT priority list at some large companies as well. Ingersoll-Rand's Libenson calls service-oriented architecture "the buzzword of 2006," adding that his company doesn't have detailed plans for adopting Web services. He sees them mainly as a way to link ERP applications to legacy systems, adding, "My goal is to find a way to get rid of our legacy systems."
180 View – We don’t think ERP investments are made because of technology such as SOA or web services. However, if the technology can clearly demonstrate an ROI, the investment decision-makers will be listening. We think that at some point in the next couple of years, web services will allow companies to exchange electronic transactions such as Purchase Orders no matter what the system. That means that a supplier does not need to enter customer orders into their systems – now we’re talking ROI.
Labels: ERP




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