1 / 39

IFIP 8.3 task force

IFIP 8.3 task force. Learning from case studies in decision making & decision support 5 th April 2007, UCC. “Putting the P back into ERP”. Does ERP help managers do their work Who gets the benefit, HQ or site? Writing the case studies (finding the thread)

sauda
Download Presentation

IFIP 8.3 task force

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IFIP 8.3 task force Learning from case studies in decision making & decision support 5th April 2007, UCC

  2. “Putting the P back into ERP” • Does ERP help managers do their work • Who gets the benefit, HQ or site? • Writing the case studies (finding the thread) • Finding the dependent variable (IS, Org, DM) • Framework to model the gap between reality and ERP • Learning from case studies on decision support?

  3. Research questions • Is there a gap between ERP & reality? • Significance of gap for mgt decisions? • How should this gap be managed?

  4. The cases

  5. 2 in depth cases with embedded units of analysis (site and HQ)

  6. Field data can be sliced & diced

  7. For Mfg, # observations is still high

  8. Case findings • Data • Organisation and applications • Key management decisions, role of ERP

  9. Data • BI layer on top of ERP introduces data replication reporting latency • Data handling (ETL) re-introduces data integrity and timeliness issues • Metadata in BI tools redundant with respect to ERP • Decision support required by managers is aggregate operational data • BI tools are used to “bridge the gap” between operational systems and reality. • BI = glue connecting operational systems to the real world • BI becomes critical to the organisation, and skills are rare

  10. Virtualisation • Virtualisation: capturing & storing data relating to changes in the physical environment in an information system • A measure of the degree to which information systems can reflect business reality • Pre-supposes a structure (database), as data captured is related to a logical entity

  11. Turning raw data into information = value-adding process

  12. iValue Chain example * Capture at source eg. match physical goods received to a stock item in the system

  13. Integration at a data level • The level of “inter-connectedness” of IS • # relationships in the database • Reduces the risk of redundancy in system • Ensures integrity • Can boost system performance

  14. Integration at a process level • Logical steps can be linked and triggered • Output from step 1 = input for step 2 • Automation of administrative processes • Flow of work through departments not reliant on human intervention

  15. Integration introduces latency

  16. Integration ≠ data integrity • Data integrity means closing the gap between reality and it’s virtual mirror • Golden data: right first time & all the time • One version of the truth • If business changes, rules need to change

  17. But ERP cannot be changed • Bureaucracy around change management • In any case, the answer is no • Business often asked to change process • Investigative skills have been centralised • Data integrity is now de-centralised • So gap inevitably widens, requiring > BI

  18. Writing the case studies • The horizontal story • Making sense by theme • The vertical story • Finding interdependence

  19. Findings • Data integrity and investigative power • Technical latency • Planning versus actual data • Coping with changing business models • The widening functionality gap • Use of BI tools to bridge the “gap”

  20. How managers do their work • What is happening? Actual • What should be happening? Plan • What therefore would happen if? What-if? • Adjust plan and/or change actual Manage

  21. Where do managers get their info? • What is happening? ERP + BI • What should be happening? Manual • What therefore would happen if? ? • View of actual data is improved …

  22. But business models evolve • High margin to high volume • Hardware to software & service • Manufacturing becomes logistics • Gap opens between ERP & reality

  23. The zipper

  24. IS for management Physical Virtual Actual Plan

  25. Framework to model the gap Decision layer ------------------ Reporting layer (pivots, broadcast rules, …) ----------------------------------------------- Consolidation logic and reconciliation (meta data) ----------------------------------------------- Interface layer (from planning systems) ---------------------------------------------------------- Extraction layer (which tables, when, where, …) ---------------------------------- Transaction layer (ERP)

  26. Themes • ERP no different than any other TPS • Change Management bureaucracy • Goal focus driving behaviour • Hard vs. Soft goals • Latency

  27. GSK local “wins” – Jun 2005 • Data integrity • Management accounting • Trust in data? • But: no ability to change anything! • Diffusion of knowledge: JF • PS. Both JF and his boss now left!

  28. Post Go Live • The technical support offsite is atrocious. We are very very disappointed with that. … • Since the core team moved away, and since the next wave started for SAP implementation, they lost interest

  29. Research on decisions difficult • Managerial decision making is fast • Characterised by deadlines • Difficult to prioritise in terms of importance • Use “the best available information” • Defining role of IS in DS is tricky

  30. Solution: focus on goals • Unit of analysis is goal, not decision • Managers define the goals, not researcher • If it’s a goal, it must be important • Measure IS role in goal achievement • But does it work?

  31. Post-ERP process improvement

  32. Why no role for ERP team or IS? • Don’t have the skills? • Don’t have the enthusiasm? • … • Neither company seems to be capitalising on ERP learning experience

  33. Out

  34. Post go-live example • “There was an awful lot of resources thrown at go-live, most of those resources were gone after go-live. Trying to get something fixed, it wouldn’t happen.” • “In order to actually utilize it in a way that actually improves our lot, took, is still taking, quite a long time, and if you can’t do it yourself, it’s even worse, because you can’t get IS available, at times to do the work.“

  35. GSK local “wins” – Apr 2004 • More efficient Sales and Distribution processes • Management of bulk solvent • MRP for material spares • Better procurement process • Simplified labelling • Real-time view of stock levels

  36. Ownership - Apr 2004 • Information • Answer many reporting requirements = Excel • Data • Single instance, remote server • Requirement for local data warehouse • 8 new people in full-time data maintenance • Process • No more fasttrack orders! • Changes to template for local needs difficult • Subject to changes made on behalf of other sites

  37. Findings • Goal setting in MNC’s seems to be increasingly cross functional • Goal setting in MNC’s seems to be increasingly quantitative “Load and chase” mentality • Integration implicit in ERP systems is cross functional • Impact of this integration on transaction processing is explicit • Impact of this integration on decision making is not explicit • ERP processes notoriously inflexible • Respondents vary in understanding of role of ERP administrative processes

  38. Impact on management decision making? • Jury’s out for operational performance • Many functions maintain local DW’s for decision support • Data volumes become a performance issue • Questions could be refined: • How well does ERP support the measurement of basic operational goals / metrics (revenue, capacity, inventory, billings, bookings, backlog, …) • Can an off-line decision making model that requires actual figures be accurate if not integrated with ERP? • At what point does the mixture of on-line and off-line manual systems become unreliable?

  39. Outcomes • Framework for assessing the value and impact of “integration” across business functions • Decision process orientation in analysing managerial requirements (not transactional / data oriented) • (Management by Objective) MBO strategies to include education on decision making processes and tools for their achievement • Creation of technostructure

More Related