SAP & ERP Consulting from the Customer Point of View

SAP implementation ROI, SAP architecture, & SAP business solutions

How the SAP Consulting Peter Principle Works

September 12th, 2011
SAP Peter Principle

SAP Peter Principle

Most of us working in business for any period of time have heard of the “Peter Principle.”  It was “formulated by Dr. Laurence J. Peter and Raymond Hull in their 1968 book The Peter Principle, a humorous treatise which also introduced the ‘salutary science of Hierarchiology’ …” [FN1]  While the exact quote is a little different, it has come to mean that people tend to rise to their level of incompetence in organizations built on hierarchies.

As an important caveat before getting into this topic, I have known many really hard working folks who have risen through the ranks the “old-fashioned” way –, through hard work and “paying their dues.”

My Experiences with the SAP Consulting Hierarchy

After over 20 years in IT, and over 20 SAP projects, I have seen the Peter Principle again and again.  It’s the nature of how the IT consulting world works.  It is frustrating, and it is enough to drive the competent, diligent, and most talented consultants absolutely crazy.

The “Peter Principle” happens in the consulting world because this is what organizations who implement SAP demand of their implementation vendors.  Sure, that sounds counter-intuitive and crazy, but unfortunately it is a sad reality.

You might be asking yourself right now, IS HE CRAZY?  Maybe a little, but on this point, let me assure you, it is quite true and in a moment you will see exactly how it happens and why.

Enter the Crazy World of Consulting – Why Consulting Incompetence is Rewarded

Once inexperienced, incompetent, or “less than optimal” consultants get onto your SAP, ERP, or other IT project, you are now set up for seeing the “Peter Principle” in effect.  On your implementation or upgrade project an inexperienced or incompetent consultant will ultimately make a mess, however it won’t be seen right away.  There may be signs along the way, but only deep experience will recognize this unless it is blatantly obvious.  There is always some reasonable sounding explanation, or some gibberish, or some babble that is pronounced with confidence but you don’t really understand it. Or, they have become polished and provide entirely rational and reasonable explanations, whether true or not.  After all, they are the “expert” you hired so they must know what they are talking about, right?  Nonsense!

First Sign of the SAP Peter Principle

“Blah, blah, blah”  I have no idea what you just said but just so I don’t look stupid I’m not going to challenge it.

As I’ve written on many occasions, part of the key skills and experience a good consultant or business analyst MUST possess is the ability to take the complex and make it simple.  ANYONE can take something complicated and keep it complicated, or worse still, make it more complicated, or, worst of all, make it a mess.  It takes experience and competence to take the complex and simplify it.  But all that “technical babble” and jargon sounds so convincing, so educated, so, foreign.  It’s a foreign language that you don’t completely understand and these incompetents know it.  Unscrupulous consultants know if they can make something up and sound as though they know what they are talking about you will believe them –, you hired them for their expertise.  They can game you to increase scope, or extending project timelines, or busting your budget and they do this because they are personable and manipulative.

How Can You Identify the SAP Con Artists?

Accountability, Responsibility, and Quality.  The cons avoid accountability or direct responsibility.  On a project where they are discovered they must be nearly forced to have clear accountability for delivery.  They must be pressed into doing what I call “due diligence” around a solution to make sure it will work correctly.

If you catch it early enough you can keep these incompetents from being rewarded for blowing your budget, causing project delays, and creating even MORE complicated and convoluted processes than you had BEFORE you did your SAP implementation.

How Customers Provide Perverse Rewards for Incompetence

The incompetent consultant’s area seems to have users who struggle with problems / issues / bugs that need the most fixing and the most attention.  By this time many companies have invested so much time and effort with the incompetent consultant that they don’t see any other options but to continue with this fraud.  The incompetent consultant is needed badly to support the mess they make for some time after you go live.

One way you can tell you have been manipulated or gamed during the project is by the quality, completeness, and accuracy of the solution the consultant delivers at go-live. 

From a consulting firm’s perspective, the incompetent consultant puts in lots of extra billable hours, helps them get extensions and budget increases, and needs to have lots of extra consulting support.  They are always behind, and no matter how hard “they try”, they always have another excuse for why the problems they cause really aren’t their fault–, it’s always someone else.

These consultants stay on long after go-live to ensure that their questionable solutions are supported by the same person who made the mess to begin with.  This is what customers insist on because by the time go-live happens they are “stuck” with the mess and “stuck” with the “con”sultant who made the mess.

Incompetent consultants tend to be VERY personable most of the time, and ingratiate themselves with the customer / client so that there is no question that they are working SO hard, and doing such a GREAT job.  It could never be their fault.

How SAP Consulting Vendors Reward and Promote the Peter Principle

For the consulting vendor, billing hours go up, staffing and utilization numbers are high, additional “backfill” support is needed and more people are staffed.  From their metrics and possible compensation incentives the incompetent consultant is doing a great job!  On the other hand the highly experienced, competent, and diligent consultants “work themselves out of a job.”  The competent consultants tend to have fewer go-live support issues, they usually have more engaged, involved, and knowledgeable users.  And they are just plain better prepared.  They are not “needed” as you go-live and you, as the customer, get rid of them to cut the blown budget wherever you can.

In a partner oriented firm the incompetent consultant is headed for being a manager, senior manager, managing partner, etc.  The incompetent consultant has great utilization, helps to get more staff on projects, and is always busy.

In the consulting companies incompetence is rewarded and incentivized by the consulting firms.  The most competent and diligent consultants are passed over for career enhancement precisely because of their competence – they may finish projects earlier than their incompetent peers and may be “on the bench” more frequently.

The more skilled the incompetent consultant is at being personable, at presenting a compelling case for why they are doing such a great job but you need more resources, the better positioned they are for higher level promotions.  After all, in consulting firms, senior level positions are focused on getting billable resources out and billing.  The more experienced and capable at this the better positioned you are for partner or senior management.

Stay tuned next week – details on how to spot them and then ferret them out…

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SAP IT Convergence Beyond Business to IT Alignment

September 6th, 2011
SAP IT Business Convergence

Business - IT Convergence

In the new global business age it is more important than ever to leverage technology organization expertise for business benefit.  Too often technology organizations focus on technology for the sake of technology rather than for how it might improve products and services or how it might create more customer focus.

In today’s competitive global economy, filled with international economic instability, no part of the enterprise can afford to move very far from what pays the bills.  If your SAP or IT organization is focused completely on technology solutions you lose sight of what is important to the business.  And what is that?  Customers: customer retention, acquisition, loyalty, satisfaction, and experience.  Without customers there is no growth or revenue.  Without growth or revenue there is no need for that expensive SAP or IT investment.

Finding SAP IT Convergence in Innovation and Customer Focus

A dynamic shift away from “back office” or operational focus is needed to move the SAP organization toward genuine IT convergence.  To make the change requires a deeper and more meaningful understanding of business itself.  It requires a focus on the organization’s products or services (i.e. innovation, read Process Execution of Business and IT Innovation) and then how those products or services are marketed and sold.

This emphasis on IT convergence, especially in the SAP enterprise, is about preparing your organization for the changes which are beginning to shape the future of enterprise applications, or “ERP III” (for a detailed explanation of ERP, ERP II, and ERP III see ERP vs. ERP II vs. ERP III Future Enterprise Applications).  So what is ERP III?  ERP III is the next generation of enterprise applications which leverage social media (or other collaborative tools) in news ways to integrate customers into the borderless enterprise.

Without a clearer focus on customers as well as innovation in the enterprise, or “how business gets done,” the SAP and overall IT organization becomes a very expensive operational support layer.  Without the genuine business focus the organization becomes a commodity to be outsourced.

How Can You Transition to Full SAP IT Convergence?

By now the need for full convergence is clearer.  But if it’s still not clear enough consider another element or your SAP or IT organization–, look at the pay structure for your SAP skills.  Your SAP staff is likely paid equivalent salaries to very senior level employees at your company.  In some cases they may make as much as some of the junior executives.  And then remind yourself, this pay range is for non-management positions.  So we have to consider what it will take to change the organization to achieve convergence.

From the last few posts, as well as my own experience, here is my “short list” of important things to do to achieve convergence:

  • Steering Committee Engagement and Roadmap Management
  • Pursue business executive sponsorship but don’t wait for it to get started
  • Engage at all levels of the organization
  • MBA in the IT organization
  • Conduct one or more pilot programs and capture lessons learned

Start a communication program

Exchange staff program to integrate the IT organization into the business

Hold IT staff accountable for participation

Don’t let available tools stifle participation or innovation

  • Invest in NON-TECHNICAL IT training

Public speaking

Presentation skills

Meeting skills

Facilitation skills

Questioning and Negotiation

Conflict management and resolution

Managerial skills

There are two other areas that I will offer some insight on.  As a result of the explosion in mobile devices (literally hundreds of millions of them) there is a need to ensure that technology solutions are “device agnostic.”  In other words, as employees begin to provide their own smartphones be ready to support them.  If your organization is tasked with the cost for the plans and hardware, supporting employee provided mobile devices is cheaper even with the additional support overhead.  On the second front there are business direct buy purchases of technology.  As last week’s post pointed out, because of what the business perceives as a lack of responsiveness to their needs they are making more of their own direct technology purchases.  Learn to live with this and to engage in more of an internal consulting role so that the solutions are a better fit for the business and the SAP or IT organization.

How you approach the future for your technology organization–, isolation, alignment, or convergence; will determine how valuable you are to the business in the future.  And with today’s competitive landscape combined with the economic struggles it is more important than ever to demonstrate business value.

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Integrating Business Stakeholders as Part of SAP IT Convergence

August 29th, 2011
Business to IT Convergence with an SAP Center of Excellence

IT Convergence

The other day I was having a conversation with an IT executive from one of America’s largest companies.  I was really interested in his perspective as a hard working senior level IT insider.  We started talking about the role of IT and business as well as the future of business and technology while I relayed my passion for how IT needs to integrate with the business and how the future was going to change significantly (see e.g. What is the Proper Relationship for the CIO, CEO, and CFO?).

I gained a new appreciation for how difficult an IT executive’s job can be when the economy is in turmoil.  I’m sure my comments and perspective were challenging but here is part of what I gained from that conversation (my assumptions and my “read” may be wrong)…

The wider global technology discussion (inside and outside of the company) is putting real pressure on IT return on investment, IT Convergence, and full integration with the business (see Steps to Achieve SAP IT Convergence).  Even while all of this takes place there is still a critical need to stay on top of technology trends and be sure the organization does not stagnate.  To stay competitive what does he do with “cloud” processing, do they need different applications for some of their processes (CRM, APO,SRM, etc.), what about social media (does it even fit), virtualization, shared services, service excellence, outsourcing, in-sourcing, etc., etc., etc.

This executive’s IT organization is being challenged to do more with less.  As a result of cost-cutting pressures his organization is having to look at outsourcing while he also has to maintain a positive and upbeat appearance in the face of working through difficult cuts.  He has to continue encouraging and rallying the troops while some of them will not be there.

A Simple Response to the Nagging Problem of Business IT Convergence

With all of this background in mind one of his responses to me set me back a moment for its simplicity, candor, and most of all the underlying frustration.  It is certainly one of those very difficult struggles that many corporate technology leaders today face:

“What is the business responsibility for this?”

The business not only has responsibility but they have to help drive solutions and delivery. The various business stakeholders must see, understand, and then accept their role in developing the technology roadmap. And once it is developed they must help ensure its execution.

The Business to IT Convergence Solution That Was There All Along

The IT Convergence approach in the SAP enterprise is partially based on best practices around IT Governance.  By creating a governance structure that involves and integrates both the business and IT stakeholders you gain business buy-in and involvement.  I have written a solution brief on this approach and provide a free, no-obligation MS Access application to build technology roadmaps (see the Solution Brief, governance process, and application overview here:  Beyond Technology Alignment )

The basic takeaway here is that business involvement is critical.  They are already making technology investments, with, or without your involvement. So it is critical to gain that convergence so that technology investments are performed as a partnership and not in isolation.  As a recent Harvard Business Review post by Ray Wang notes:

“[O]verall corporate tech spending is up by 17 to 20% in our latest data, spending by IT departments is flat at best. It’s business leaders, not their IT colleagues, who are driving purchasing decisions.”

Coming to Terms with the Consumerization of IT, http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2011/07/coming_to_terms_with_the_consu.html and a followup with more details on his site at:  http://blog.softwareinsider.org/2011/08/22/mondays-musings-balancing-the-six-ss-in-consumerization-of-it/ (both retrieved 8/23/2011)

So the key here is to integrate the business into the IT and application infrastructure.  One way to do that is through leveraging SAP steering committee skills and business connections to ensure meaningful involvement by IT.

Additional Steps to SAP IT Convergence – Creating the Center of Excellence

Last week’s post provided a few high level steps to achieve SAP IT Convergence, and this week I am adding to that list the following items.

  • Pursue business executive sponsorship but don’t wait for it to get started.
  • Start a communication program
  • Engage at all levels of the organization
  • Conduct one or more pilot programs and capture lessons learned
  • Hold IT staff accountable for participation
  • Don’t let available tools stifle participation or innovation

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