The goal for any manufacturing operation is to produce
quality products at the lowest possible cost while striving to exceed customer
expectations. Achieving this consistently and cost-effectively depends on
gaining deep insight into the supply chain, especially when it comes to
managing the complexities of formulating and producing products to custom
specifications. This requires tremendous agility and a truly dynamic operating
environment that's capable of assimilating real-time information flows across
supply-chain touch points with ease. But when it comes to joining the
supply-chain management dots, manufacturers face serious technical challenges
in terms of process and data flows - especially when it comes to integrating
the "spaghetti soup" of systems controlling individual customer,
supplier and production functions. To resolve this integration challenge, manufacturers
are taking a fresh look at enterprise resource planning (ERP) packages such as
SAP, as a means of seamless connectivity to customers and suppliers.
Let’s take a brief look at the SAP Integration process for Supply chain planning data:
It is
broken into 3 main parts: 1) SAP’s ERP Interface, 2) An API and Middleware
adaptor, and 3) The Supply Chain Planning Master Data Management module. The
setup is straightforward:
SAP’s Production Interface serves three functions; it moves
static data outbound from SAP, it receives static data inbound to SAP, and it
moves transactional data both in and out of SAP.
The planning API is broken into 2 functional areas.
The first functional area deals with the movement of static model data such as: product,
BOM, or Route information to the applications and results data such as Forecast, Production Plan from the
supply chain applications to SAP, and the second area with real-time
transactional data. The final process is used to transform the customer’s data into the form needed for the
planning modules. This is accomplished through the Master Data Management
layer.
The integration is almost effortless with the presence of
standard interfaces. What this means is that the actual movement and
transformation of the data is not going to be the risky part of a supply chain
planning project, so there is no need to panic.
Potential Challenges
in ERP Implementation
Almost all technical implementations are associated with challenges
and risks. I’ve pointed out a few of them below:
Risk and Complexity
The FoxMeyer Drugs Bankruptcy in 1996 was attributed to their
failure of ERP. SAP’s SCM deployment did not expect to handle this level of
volume of orders. According to company
executives, they ran some simulations but not with the level of data we have in
the operating environment. FoxMeyer tried to solve this problem by sending
hundreds of workers to work around the issues but the underlying software kept
failing in middle of the process. Totally, this bug cost FoxMeyer tens of
millions of dollars.
Business managers usually underestimate the risk and the
complexity of a SCM system. A current version of a simple ERP system now
consists of millions of lines of code. This is too complex for any small team
of people to understand the whole system. Complexity goes along with a big number of bugs. These bugs
cause a risk that managers could not see and estimate it clearly. If the system
is down for a couple of hours, it is already millions lost for the company.
Hidden Costs
There are many hidden costs in designing and implementing a
new ERP system for the organization that managers usually do not plan for. This
makes up the total cost for the implementation to be much higher than the
benefits gained from the implementation.
- Training Cost: people usually underestimate this cost. It usually takes a while for staff to adapt from the old system to the new system, for the changing of the old process to the new process.
- Variety forms of data: Data in SCM system is usually not in a standard format. The data comes from multiple suppliers and the order requests come from multiple retailers and distribution centers. This makes it very difficult for any firm to standardize this data and match same items from different suppliers.
- High Consulting Cost: The consultant may not have enough experience to plan for the project and the project may require longer time to finish or more payment to the consultant.
- Integration and Implementation: Consultants want to test with the real dry-run to see how it affects the system, but usually the firms don’t want people to touch in their valuable data. This makes the integration, implementation and test process much harder than it is planned.
To what extent would
companies be successful in implementing ERP Systems and does this really add
value to their SCM processes, in terms of saving costs and resources?
References:
https://community.dynamics.com/dynamicbusiness/b/theedge/archive/2011/04/05/what-can-erp-do-for-the-supply-chain.aspx
http://vodkhang.com/career/does-erp-and-scm-actually-save-money
http://web.adexa.com/adexa-blog/?Tag=ERP
http://www.mainward.com/mw/consulting/scm.jsp
Great Blog...
ReplyDeleteI like the way you written the post.
All the points are very informative and easy to undersatnd.
EresourcrERP provides production planning control module that gives capabilities for planning, execution, quality & plant maintenance.It generates Master Production Schedule.
Thanks for such a nice blog on production module in erp.
Thanks For Your valuable posting,This is for wonderful sharing,I would like to see more information from your side.I am working in Erp In Chennai
ReplyDeleteGreat post thanks :)
ReplyDelete