SAP ROI - Increasing Revenue and Profitability

For years, CIOs have been under pressure to cut costs, improve operational efficiencies, and automate the enterprise. CIOs who implement SAP have largely been effective at streamlining the back office. They have also succeeded at optimizing the extended supply chain because SAP supports execution activities well, therefore reducing costs. However, times are changing.

For IT and SAP to successfully grow revenue and profitability, a business needs to understand where technology fits into the puzzle. When you think as SAP as a “change enabler” or “change lever” rather than a “change driver,” you can more easily understand how and where it can properly fit into a revenue and profitability context. In other words, technology works best when you understand and define the rules, metrics, criteria, and means to acquire, process, or analyze information which supports revenue and profitability. Organizations take on large projects like SAP to achieve several business benefits. Those might include the following:

* Revenue growth
* Profit margins
* Customer acquisition and retention
* Sales conversion
* Customer profitability
* Product / product line profitability
* Incentive programs and monitoring
* Market penetration / market share
* Marketing program performance
* “Smart” growth (i.e. “good” customers vs. “bad” customers)
* Time to market

Even though these are the expectations companies have for their ERP or SAP implementation, upgrade, or other applications, they rarely achieve these goals because they are looking at the application and technology investment incorrectly. They are looking at the technology as if it will somehow make the needed changes automatically, rather than providing the key insights and information that management needs to enable those changes. Even though companies do not explicitly state this, when they invest millions in SAP, they are making the underlying assumption that the technology will automatically cause profitably and revenue.

For example, no amount of technology will make your salespeople sell more if they do not have commission, objective sales targets, and other performance measures. This comes back to the old adage of “what gets measured gets done,” and it is no different with the salesforce. However, depending on how you structure your sales and marketing programs, SAP contains a number of tools, reports, resources, and other data analysis methods as well as bolt-ons like CRM to facilitate a change in marketing programs and strategies.

In other words, ERP, SAP, CRM, APO, BI, and all of the other technology tools must be driven by business needs, along with providing key information relevant to business decisions and processes to ensure success. Even though that seems self-evident, many organizations who implement these technologies struggle to apply these concepts. They often start out with that ideal; however, they usually get caught up in the technology and lose sight of the business drivers.

Throughout my time doing SAP project work, I can only recall a couple of projects where the client spelled out the business drivers, and then communicated and reinforced them to the project team and the larger organization throughout the project. If the project team performing the implementation does not know the underlying business drivers, or the reasons for the investment, how will they build those expectations into the technology?

What Are the CIO and SAP Roles in Revenue and Profitability?

C-Level sponsors are beginning to press IT in the direction of supporting revenue growth and profitability–which is good. However, SAP by its nature is part of the execution processing and post-execution analysis process. As a result, the expectation of driving revenue and profitability with SAP has to be decoupled from corporate planning and execution. The business side of the equation must be defined first. This supports the business case, which in turn drives the technology towards enabling necessary change.

Senior management need to discuss what information and processes the organization needs to make the right management decisions, to be more competitive, and to focus on the wider marketplace.

In many implementations, SAP reduces costs because the reductions are based primarily on improving and integrating operational and accounting execution activities. Using SAP to drive revenue and profitability growth requires building another layer of data collection, data analysis, tools, and processes on top of the operational data that is processed. To work correctly, the team must build this new revenue and sales support layer on well-defined sales/marketing programs and strategies that they can then convert into processes with clear performance metrics and KPIs. A focus on process improvement, business process automation, efficiency gains, cycle-time reductions, and other business process management related issues is not enough.

Sales and marketing must do their part to integrate their strategies into clearer plans, programs, metrics, KPIs, and other measurable criteria that they can then execute with IT / SAP supporting these processes. ERP systems like SAP do not exist in a vacuum; they are dependent on data from plans, strategies, and historical analysis based on some concrete or perceived KPIs and business metrics. Until a company’s customer touch points (sales, marketing, customer service, shipping, etc.) can provide quantifiable plans, goals, metrics, and KPIs for what is important, SAP initiatives are not likely to directly affect revenue and profit.

Even C-Level executives may not know that the ERP application contains standard functionality to integrate sales planning, sales forecasting, marketing expenditures, and product or service execution with financial budgeting and multiple dimensions of profitability. For example, over the years I have worked with clients that have used one or more of the following methods from standard or enhanced SAP functionality (and there are many more possibilities):

· Points loyalty program (ERP pricing and SIS or CRM)
· Trade Promotions Programs (CRM, bolt-on, or custom ERP app)
· Marketing Effectiveness (CRM, custom reporting, BI/BW)
· E-sales with catalogs and configurable products (R3 Internet Sales or CRM – they use the same backend)
· Sales or Marketing program budgeting (ERP CO and internal orders with SD user exits)
· Sales forecast to actual (ERP Sales and Operations planning, CRM, BI/BW)
· Order templates (Generic quotes as templates, ERP, R3 Internet sales, CRM)
· Potential Planning (customer potential buying and planning against marketing plan – ERP, CRM)
· Ticklers, Marketing, Sales activities, and campaigns (limited ERP functionality or with CRM)
· Customer churn (standard ERP functionality, custom report, BI/BW, or CRM)
· Customer $$ sales growth, month over month, year over year (SAP ERP functionality, custom report, BI/BW, or CRM)
· Order frequency trends (standard SAP functionality, custom report, or with CRM)
· Upselling, cross-selling, product allocation, substitutions, free goods (standard SAP ERP functionality).
· Web based reports and mobile device sales support (ERP mobile device functionality or CRM)
· Commissions and incentives (SAP ERP functionality or CRM).

Generally, companies that have implemented these solutions already had reasonably well-defined sales and marketing processes in place. As a result, they used SAP technology as a change lever to enhance and improve those existing processes and programs, so they could achieve a measure of revenue growth, profitability, and competitive advantage.

Where to begin with a business and market centered approach to SAP?

  1. Develop your long-term business plans. Define marketing and competitive pressures along with current and future value proposition(s).
  2. Define the business strategies to support them.
  3. Determine the goals that support those strategies.
  4. Derive your KPIs for those goals. To be successful, these KPIs must include both lagging indicators (financial) and leading indicators (pointing to growth).
  5. From those metrics and KPIs, determine which business processes and departments will be affected: sales, customer service, shipping, marketing, etc.
  6. Define the necessary reports that you need to report on those goals and KPIs. These reports should use both leading and lagging indicators.
  7. Operationalize the strategy by defining the processes that will support them.
  8. Assign responsibility for the reporting requirements to the proper department heads.
  9. Create an internal progress communication process.
  10. Implement the necessary technology solution(s) to support the new paradigm (SAP BI, SAP CRM, SAP ERP functionality, etc.).

By following these steps you will see business-centered results that technology empowers, not the other way around. Below are some examples of key ideas for defining strategy, processes, and technology to help with revenue growth and profitability. While in no way comprehensive, the following outline provides some steps to begin on this journey. Some type of plan to produce metrics which can be turned into an IT and CIO supported system strategy for revenue and profitability growth is also listed.

1. Use senior executive sponsorship to drive integration of sales, marketing, and customer service processes. Many processes can be very difficult to pin down on key measures for sales and marketing drivers.

2. Set clear expectations of cooperation between those processes which impact the customer.

3. Determine how baselines and benchmarks for KPIs will be determined. The best baselines, benchmarks, metrics, and KPIs will require interdepartmental support. Some of the KPIs, though not all, should be outside of the silo. For example, some of the KPIs should cross over sales and marketing together. Some should cross over sales and customer service, or shipping, etc. The more the KPIs are structured within a silo, the more possibility there is for finger-pointing and deflection. Everyone needs to do their part in promoting revenue and profitability.

4. Senior-level sales and marketing managers must set specific KPI’s, strategies, and plans around customer touch points as they relate to revenue generation and profitability. For example:
a. What processes or sales functions require your sales force to be in the office rather than in the field? How can these be automated or delivered remotely?
i. Web based?
ii. Hand held?
iii. E-delivery through automated e-mail notices or text messages?
b. What are important new markets, and how do you conduct pilots or rollouts to those markets?
i. Do you have preferred customers as partners who would be willing to pilot new product or market rollouts?
c. What about new products?
i. Do you know what your concept to engineering to market to customer cycle times are?
ii. Where are the bottlenecks in each of these sub-processes?
iii. How can they be streamlined?

5. How will you measure customer retention, customer loyalty, and most of all, conversion of retained or loyal customers to actual sales? (After all, what difference does retaining loyal customers make if they don’t buy more of your products, or pay for premium services or products?)
a. Do you have (or need) metrics around defining quality customers (high revenue or sales compared to the cost of doing business) vs. customers to avoid (low revenue or sales compared to the cost of doing business).
b. How do you measure customer churn or attrition of good customers?
c. How do you measure sales growth into the existing customer base?
i. How do you segment or stratify that data: by product line, by geography, or by customer sales volume?
d. How do you target new customer acquisition?
i. In spite of what some salesmen may say, companies do not sell everything to everyone, so what are your target markets?
ii. What are your key criteria to focus your sales efforts on your target markets?
iii. Where are your invest opportunities for sales growth, and how do you measure the effectiveness of those investments?
iv. How do you integrate marketing, sales, and customer service into customer acquisition?

6. Define processes and reporting points for each of the key customer touch points, whether it is sales, marketing, service and support, or new product / new market entry.

7. What is your strategy for bringing company knowledge about products or services closer to the customer?
a. Are you tracking service or repair trends?
i. Do you have standard defect codes or service delivery categories?
ii. Do you have a solution database?
b. How is engineering, R&D, or new product development integrated into the sales, marketing, and support feedback cycle?

8. What tools do you need to capture customer intelligence based on contacts, visits, and other information traditionally maintained in CRM systems?

9. What external data sources and information do you need for customer acquisition?

You need to answer these and many more questions within your sales, marketing, and customer service organizations to drive strategies, plans, programs, and ERP investment opportunities for increasing revenue and profitability.

Once you define your revenue and growth plans and strategies, determine the key metric for how you will measure performance by developing a set of KPIs. From this set of KPIs, and from the plans and strategies that are developed, take the time to prioritize them based on a simple cost / benefit analysis. What costs the least (in terms of time, cash, resources, etc.) and has the biggest payback? Depending on your business, you may weigh some of the cost factors differently, but try to keep the priority process as objective and clear as possible through a scoring protocol. An objective method of prioritization helps remove the politics, personalities, and emotion out of the process. The approach may not produce a perfect result, but it will be focused on results rather than personalities.

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Please see the article on Screening Methods to Find the Right SAP Consultant. This type of process analysis, business strategy, and help with development of the best possible plans for implementing your SAP solution is exactly why you need SAP consultants with real experience.