SAP & ERP Consulting from the Customer Point of View

SAP implementation ROI, SAP architecture, & SAP business solutions

SAP IT Convergence is About Business Focused Integration

August 15th, 2011
SAP IT Convergence for ROI

SAP IT Convergence

The problems with Enterprise SAP IT organizations are they are focused on SAP and IT.  They lose sight of their purpose which is to support and promote the broader objectives of the enterprise.  In an SAP centered IT organization this means your whole existence is about ensuring business benefit, focusing on enterprise goals, strategies, and objectives.

Somewhere between the SAP sales cycle and the SAP go-live the concept of business benefit gets lost and is never found again.  By the time you go live with the SAP application the entire IT organization becomes narrowly focused on the care and feeding of the new system.  Everything is all about the “new” ERP application and the business is left holding an empty bag –, the money is gone but the business now has to struggle through getting their operations stabilized just to continue doing business.

The entire IT organization’s existence must focus on enabling business.

Today’s enterprises will no longer pay the premium prices for SAP or IT organizations which exist in a silo.  To continue with this old way of doing SAP or IT support will turn those internal services into very expensive commodities to be outsourced to the lowest cost provider(s).  If you want to do more than survive, but rather to thrive, you must build a converged SAP or IT organization.  Without IT convergence you can expect budget cuts and more outsourcing pressures.

Research Shows a Business Focus Produces SAP Results Needed for IT Convergence

Successful SAP projects require the management and measurement of expected benefits and the purpose for the project throughout the entire SAP life-cycle (Holland and Light, pg. 1630-1636, 1999).  To gain business benefits from an ERP package like SAP you will need serious discussion of goals, direction, objectives, and what the business software can do in those areas.  After that, coordination of key resources from both business and IT is also required to create business to IT alignment (Willcocks and Sykes, pg. 33-38, 2000).  This business to IT alignment produces some great results but is just the beginning.

[F]irms that invested more heavily in business process redesign and devoted more of their IT resources to increasing customer value (e.g. quality, timeliness, convenience) had greater productivity and business performance (Hitt, Wu, and Zhou, pg. 3, 2004 citing Brynolfsson and Hitt)…   [A 1999 study on] the impact of ERP systems on self-reported company performance based on a survey of 101 US implementers of SAP R/3 packages [showed]… companies reported substantial performance improvement in several areas as a result of their ERP implementation, including their ability to provide information to customers, cycle times, and on-time completion rates (Hitt, Wu, and Zhou, pg. 5-6, 2004).

In the 2004 study just cited they also referenced compiled research by Gattiker and Goodhue (2000) which identified four broad categories of ERP benefits including (1) better information flows, standardization, integration, communication and coordination; (2) centralization of administration activities like, AP, payroll, etc. (i.e. “shared services”); (3) reduced IS maintenance costs and improved ability to deploy new IS functionality; (4) a move to “best business practices” around business processes.

Some of the additional and very interesting findings (Hitt, Wu, and Zhou, pg. 18, 2004) include:

  • Greater sales employee performance
  • Higher profit margins
  • Better return on assets including greater asset utilization
  • Higher inventory turns
  • Greater receivables management (including better “cash to cash” cycles)
  • More revenue generated per unit of input

This is impressive but notice these benefits are nearly all operational business performance results.  They certainly appeal to the CFO and improve market valuation making them meaningful. However, as operational benefits they are nearly all focused on lagging indicators of business success.  Shareholders like them with the valuations of companies who implement ERP systems like SAP being “worth approximately 13% more than their non-adopting counterparts, controlling for assets, time and industry” (Hitt, Wu, and Zhou, pg. 20, 2004).  So implementing SAP has a positive impact on stock values.

Today’s SAP Enterprise Can Realize Even More Through SAP IT Convergence

All of these benefits and gains from roughly a decade ago are not enough today.  While the study from Hitt, Wu, and Zhou (as well as the others reviewed here) showed tremendous benefits for SAP they were based on studies at least 10 years old.

In the last decade the entire global landscape has dramatically changed –, the Internet and the pace of technology change has disrupted every value proposition model relied upon by business.  No area of the enterprise is off limits–, business is in the midst of a global and dynamic transformation of operations, innovation, and customer focus.  To thrive in our modern business era we will all have to move past the IT to business alignment model and push into IT convergence.

Your SAP Enterprise Can No Longer Avoid Full Business to IT Integration (i.e. “Convergence”)

The business benefit focus has been difficult for SAP or IT leaders trying to quantify returns from their investments.  Even though SAP has been at the forefront of addressing this message it is slow to catch on.  Over a year ago I highlighted SAP’s “value delivery” and value focus to implementing their software:

Studies have shown that there is a critical disconnect between projected benefits in business cases for IT investments and actual value achieved, because so many firms focus on going live with a project rather than its value delivery. An SAP / ASUG best-practice survey on the ability to capture the projected benefits of an IT project found that 73% of companies do not quantitatively measure value post-implementation (SAP Executive Insight Series, pg. 7, 2009)…  Critical business benefits for an SAP project require taking a hard look at the enterprise and its goals or direction…  (see A New SAP Implementation Methodology and Implementation Steps).

And while all of this is critical for realizing SAP ROI from your investment there is still more to do.  With this groundwork focusing on the need for business benefit, or measurable ROI, we can take the next step and start to explore full IT convergence around your SAP endeavors.

Next week we will look at some methods to create SAP IT convergence.

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Gattiker, T., and Goodhue, D. Understanding the plant level costs and benefits of ERP: Will the ugly ducking always turn into a swan? In: R. Sprague, Jr. (Ed.), Proceedings of the 33rd Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences ( CD-ROM), Los Alamitos, CA: IEEE Computer Society Press, 2000.

Hitt, L., Wu, D.J., and Zhou, X. ERP Investment: Business Impact and Productivity Measures.  Wharton School at U of P (2004).

Holland, C. and Light, B. Critical Success Factors Model for ERP Implementation.  IEEE Software. May / June (1999).

Willcocks, L. P. and Sykes, R. The Role of the CIO and IT Function in ERP.  Communications of the ACM, Vol. 43, Iss. 4 (2000).

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3 Keys to Reduce SAP TCO & Move to SAP ROI

June 26th, 2011
Building an SAP Center of Excellence

SAP Business Convergence

I only have a couple more posts in my series on overcoming vendor sales tactics so I thought I would provide a brief distraction and look at a few key areas for SAP organizations to move to “excellence.”  This post focuses on some of the considerations for SAP Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and SAP Return on Investment (ROI).

One key to achieving SAP ROI is through convergence or integration of the SAP staff into the business.  I’ve started down this path as part of a follow-up to the recent ASUG Atlanta conference presentation I did on “Beyond Business to IT Alignment – Creating Convergence in the SAP Enterprise.”  Those materials are now available online.  The first part of them consists of a two-piece resource kit, and the Roadmap Builder, can help to transform your enterprise and business prospects.

Preparing the SAP and IT Organization for a Center of Excellence

This post will provide an overview of ways to achieve business benefit, reduce costs, and achieve ROI.  While I would like to go into detail for each of these components it is best to leave them in a list format.  To expand on them would create a 20 or 30 page document.

Your goal is to drive business innovation and marketplace differentiation

So, to keep things simple I will condense this down into a bullet-point list covering the 3 key topic areas of

1) Engaging the Business,

2) Reducing Complexity, and

3) Delivering Excellence.

The SAP Organization Must Engage the Business

  • Converge IT and Business efforts
    • Regularly convene a senior business representative steering committee
    • Facilitate business and IT planning sessions
    • Use business resources to help manage the project
  • Develop dotted line IT staff to business organization relationships
    • Assign one or more IT staff to each business area
    • Have IT / SAP resources work in the business areas on a regular basis
    • Ensure they perform some of the routine tasks in the business area
    • Develop improvements, solutions, or ideas in conjunction with business users
  • Create Service Level Agreements (SLAs) for post production activities
    • New feature or functionality requests
    • System performance and uptime
    • Issue escalation and resolution
  • Build Technology Solution Roadmaps
    • Define and prioritize technology requests
      • Need
      • Want
      • Market impact
      • Strategy impact
      • Business area(s) impacted
    • Perform cost / benefit analysis
    • Evaluate alternatives

The IT and SAP Staff Must Reduce Complexity

  • Consolidate
    • Hardware
    • Applications
    • Network infrastructure
    • Application delivery infrastructure
    • Interfaces
  • Decommission legacy systems
    • Reduce license management
    • Reduce technical support costs
    • Reduce interfaces
    • Improve data consistency
  • Reduce custom solutions – clear custom development

The SAP and IT Organization Need to Deliver Excellence

  • Lean implementation
    • Use SAP Solution Composer
    • Use SAP Solution Manager
    • Employ ASAP methodology
    • Leverage vendor templates where they are useful
  • Optimize performance
    • Make use of automated batch jobs for repetitive transaction tasks
    • Use performance and monitoring tools
    • Create additional database indexes where useful
  • Use QA processes to ensure Quality results
    • Ensure all project code is QA checked
    • Perform project QA’s at key milestones
    • Ensure deliverables are complete and useful (if they are not value added they are a waste of time)
      • An example of a wasted deliverable is something that serves only administrative “reporting” functions.
    • Ensure testing is thorough and challenge testing is performed
  • Employ proper IT Governance Principles
    • Ensure proper standards are created and then followed
    • Evaluate, review, and escalate as necessary
    • Ensure key decisions are time bound
    • Be prepared to transition to support at go-live
    • Create issue and risk management processes
  • Ensure knowledge transfer
    • Make sure that company IT or business staff can support the solution
    • Ensure end user training is thorough
    • Send IT or business support staff to SAP courses (pay now or you will pay far more later)
    • Use post production learning and improvement sessions

Conclusion on Reducing SAP TCO While Realizing SAP ROI

Customers who are either considering or undergoing an SAP project must perform due diligence to ensure they get what they are paying for.  Not only do you have to evaluate cost savings, but the cost of ownership (software, ongoing support, and maintenance costs).  Together with that it is important to ensure you get some business value from your SAP investment.  More than just promises it is important to define, develop, and then measure success criteria after the SAP implementation.

To make things even more complicated your SAP and IT support staff must work to become directly integrated into the business.  Your goal is to drive business innovation and marketplace differentiation.

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Industry Specific SAP Consulting vs Deep SAP Application Experience

March 21st, 2011
SAP project success requires business and consulting experience

SAP project success

The “need” for industry-specific SAP configuration experience is probably one of the most over-rated ideas in the SAP consulting field.

The most successful SAP implementations require integration of the business requirements with application functionality.  To do this well requires three separate domains of expertise–, industry expertise, application expertise and consulting skills.  One of those domains — consulting skills — requires a skill with change management, communication, process engineering, people skills, and other factors.

The need for industry specific SAP consulting is often oversold

In a single domain of expertise, rather than 3 separate domains (industry, SAP application, and consulting), research indicates it takes at least 10 years to achieve “expert performance” levels.  For more background on the expertise required see Successful SAP Project Team Composition – Technicians or Experts? where this extract was taken from:

“[E]ven the most ‘talented’ need 10 years or more of intense involvement before they reach a level where they can consistently demonstrate superior performance in international adult competitions in sports, sciences and the arts… Even in cases of famous legends, such as prodigies like Bobby Fischer, the required time to reach grandmaster status was still around nine years, and it took another two decades before Fischer played for the world championship.  In many domains of expertise, most elite individuals take considerably longer than 10 years of intensive practice to win international competitions consistently.  Further, outstanding scientists and authors normally publish their first work at around age 25 after an extended preparation, and their best work takes an additional 10 years…[E]ngaging in particular practice activities produces dramatically elevated levels of performance over an extended period of time.” (Ericsson, K., et. al. 2007, ppg. 16, 17)

Just how talented is someone who has to understand an industry AND the SAP software AND solid consulting skills?  Put this in context of Chess Master Bobby Fisher’s game.  The Chess set has a board with 64 squares and each person plays with 16 pieces (32 pieces total).  SAP software settings combined with master data options provides more possibilities than that for a single stage of a business process chain with multiple stages.  Is an “industry specific” consultant with 3 or 4 years, and possibly 2 or 3 SAP implementations going to make much of a difference for your business?

Then there are the critical consulting skills necessary for a successful project, see Expert SAP Consulting to Reduce SAP TCO and Improve SAP ROI.  These skills can take several years and several SAP projects to gain competence with as well.  Long before I started doing SAP consulting I had numerous corporate training and education courses on managing conflict, facilitation, project planning, negotiation, communication, managing people, organizational change, etc.  Along with this training I had several years to put this training into practice before ever being exposed to SAP.  The expectation that you are going to see significant business-centered results from a “consultant” with a few years of SAP experience is optimistic at best but disastrous in practice.

As an SAP software customer what can you do to ensure the greatest possibility of success?  Focus on bringing in those with deep SAP business software experience and strong consulting skills.  That should be the key focus of your search for a consultant or for a system integrator.

Where does the industry experience come from then?

Integration of Industry and Business Experience in the SAP Software

Industry experience comes from you as a customer.  That is why it is so important to bring the best you can from the ranks of your business to the SAP project.  These are usually the people in departments or organizations that are depended on or have the answers for the difficult issues that arise.

The key to success in your SAP project is to combine your business and industry experience with the most seasoned SAP consultants you can budget for.

Those within your own company know that is usually takes 8-10 years to really start to know the industry.  Often it may take 15-20 years or more to become skilled within a particular industry. You need industry expertise from within your own company when you are trying to decide on strategic corporate direction, plan for the future, or determine new marketing and sales opportunities.

An SAP consultant with many years of SAP configuration can successfully translate your business requirements into more of the standard application functionality. What I have personally discovered is my broad industry and solution exposure in SAP has provided me insight into new ways to solve nagging industry problems in unrelated industries.

The Ivey Business Journal recently offered a great, insightful post about gaining value from consultants noting:

Clearly, a key ingredient in enabling a consultant to meet or exceed expectations is to avoid diluting value-adding expertise with the consulting firm’s unskilled or inexperienced resources. Consulting firms are too quick to dismiss the capabilities of client personnel, when in fact such personnel can orient the consultants, navigate political minefields, get to the data more quickly (as they understand the company and the industry), and facilitate the buy-in process. Companies must demonstrate leadership not by simply accepting a consulting firm’s proposal, but by applying their own considered perspective as to the best approach for embedding maximum, value-adding expertise in the project, while cost-effectively filling non-expert roles with resources from other sources…

Assessing whether a consulting firm can deliver the necessary expertise can be difficult if the company itself does not already have the particular expertise. Consultant credentials and resumes are carefully crafted to make the consultant appear to be the perfect fit for the role called for in the proposal.  But just because assessing consultants’ capabilities can be challenging, companies should not simply take refuge in a favorite or familiar brand.  Rather they need to invest the time to verify that the proposed team can deliver.

http://www.iveybusinessjournal.com/article.asp?intArticle_ID=927

Many of the larger consulting firms recruit smart graduates directly form college.  How much business experience do these smart grads have?  How much practical work experience do they have?  What do they have to draw upon?  The extent of their industry experience usually consists of the 1, 2, or 3 SAP projects they participated in.

To gain real value from your SAP implementation project hire the best possible SAP consultants you can find and bring the strongest employees you have to the project.  Set the expectation that the consultants are supposed to help the employees learn the software setup, and that the employees are to be relied upon for key business direction.  Let the employees know that they have been empowered to make the key decisions.  After this have weekly meetings with your internal employees to talk about lessons learned on dealing with consultants and how to ensure the company gets what they need from the SAP vendor.

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