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SAP: Pepsi's software for a new generation
By Robert Westervelt
Source:
SearchSAP.com
PepsiCo Inc. has selected SAP's full mySAP Business
Suite to streamline its distribution and delivery processes, improve
planning and forecasting, and give better visibility to its global
supply chain.
PepsiCo, which manufactures, distributes and
markets Frito-Lay snacks, Pepsi-Cola beverages, Gatorade sports drinks,
Tropicana juices and Quaker foods, is aiming to better link its supply
chain and inventory data with its customer data.
SAP and Oracle have been in intense competition for
customers in recent years. Welch Foods Inc. picked Oracle to be its
global ERP provider in an agreement announced late last year. Now SAP
has stolen some Oracle busines from beverage giant PepsiCo, which had
been one of Oracle's premier customers since 1997.
Pepsi North America, one of PepsiCo's
divisions, will drop Oracle, adding SAP's entire business suite,
including its enterprise resource planning (ERP) software. (Read
more...)
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SAPlanning
by Exception
Source: Supply
& Demand Chain Executive
Demand planners at
glove manufacturer Wells Lamont have put their finger on a way to bring
new value to the company by leveraging technology that allows them to
plan by exception.
Once a company has a uniform forecasting process in place, how does it
take its demand planning to the next level of efficiency and
effectiveness? That was the challenge facing Wells Lamont Corp. in 2003
when the Chicago-based glove manufacturer began looking for a tool that
could move its planners out of the data gathering business and into a
more strategic role at the company.
Founded in 1907, Wells Lamont today is the world's largest glovemaker.
Its retail division's product can be found at home improvement centers,
supermarkets, discount stores and hardware chains, as well as specialty
retailers such as outdoor outfitter and sporting goods stores, while the
industrial division sells its gloves through safety distributors into
the industrial marketplace.
Aside from forecasting on the order of 5,000 stock-keeping units (SKUs)
between the two divisions, Wells Lamont faces planning challenges
typical of the two sectors in which it operates. On the retail side, the
company offers products with high seasonality, while demand for its
industrial gloves runs in up-and-down cycles that reflect trends for the
various product lines on this side of the business. As a result, the
company's planners cannot take a “cookie-cutter” approach to how they
look at demand, performance and forecast adjustments for Wells Lamont's
different product lines. (Read
more...)
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Open source on offense in ERP and business applications market
By Jay Lyman
Source:
NewsForge
Flexibility, cost
savings, and efficiency have been driving enterprise users away from
proprietary technology to Linux and open source. Now a recent IDC study
shows that one of the last holdouts, the big-vendor-dominated market of
enterprise resource planning (ERP) applications, is also poised to start
taking off for non-proprietary technology.
The top ERP vendors
-- SAP, PeopleSoft, Oracle, Microsoft, and Sage -- are likely to hold
onto their 46 percent of the anticipated $26.7 billion ERP applications
market, but the desire to avoid vendor lock-in, more support for Linux
as an underlying platform, and ability to gain cost savings are all
coalescing to boost open source in this market, estimated to hit $36
billion by 2008, according to IDC research director Albert Pang. (Read
more...)
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Rebound seen for resource management software
By Dawn Kawamoto
Source:
CNET News.com
Sales of applications
for managing enterprise resources are expected to grow 7 percent this year to
$26.7 billion, with the top vendors taking a larger share, according to a
report released Monday by IDC.
Midsize customers,
government agencies and industries such as health care are helping to drive
the rebound in enterprise resource planning, or ERP, software, which IDC
attributed to an increase in spending on information technology and a pent-up
demand for new applications to increase productivity. The market is expected
to grow to about $37 billion by 2008.
"It's become more
apparent in the past six to nine months we're ready for a rebound," said
Albert Pang, enterprise applications research director at IDC. "Last year, it
was a getting-ready year for some of these ERP users. And in 2004, it's the
contract signing and implementation years for them." (Read
more...)
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Getting IT Spending Right This Time
Source:
Forbes.com
Who can blame
executives if half a decade of overspending on information technology
now makes them obsessed with costs? Companies in much of the world are
capping their IT expenditures. Some even peg the performance bonuses of
chief information officers to how much money they cut from technology
budgets.
Yet companies
underinvest in technology at their peril--even in lean times. New
technology, deployed intelligently, can help organizations make dramatic
leaps in productivity and redefine competition within whole sectors, as
Wal-Mart and Dell Computer, among others, have shown. (Read
more...)
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Finding The Right Fit
By Doug Bartholomew
Source:
Industry Week
Software responds to different industries, sizes of manufacturers.
When 3M went
looking for a software package to help standardize and automate its
far-flung and disparate methods of barcoding and packaging products, it
found there was nothing on the market that fit the bill.
Faced with that
problem, many manufacturers, assuming they have the information systems
expertise, will create their own application. And that's exactly what 3M
did. The only difference is, the new software worked so well, the
company decided to offer it to other manufacturers of industrial
products that had similar packaging needs. (Read
more...)
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Supply Chain management for really smart people
By Robert Westervelt
Source:
SearchSAP.com
When Malvern,
Pa.-based MG Industries tried to forecast its demand schedule several
years ago, the company could look barely five days ahead.
Using dated
delivery schedules, scribbled on notebook paper and attached to clip
boards, managers were having a difficult time calculating demand and
often wrote insufficient reports, said Matt Brown, vice president of
supply chain management at MG Industries. (Read
more...)
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Security in an ERP World
By Mark Van Holsbeck and Jeffrey Z. Johnson
Source:
Help Net Security
Every good hacker
story ends with the line: "and then he's got root access to your network
and can do whatever he wants." But the story really doesn't end there.
This is just the beginning of the real damage that the hacker can
inflict.
While most
information security initiatives focus on perimeter security to keep
outsiders from gaining access to the internal network, the potential for
real financial loss comes from the risk of outsiders acting as
authorized users to generate damaging transactions within business
systems.
The continued
integration of enterprise resource planning software only increases the
risk of both hackers who break through perimeter security and insiders
who abuse system privileges to misappropriate assets
—
namely cash
—
through acts of fraud. (Read
more...)
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Business Process Modeling: A Model Student
By Debra D'Agostino
Source: CIO Insight
The goal is to get all the benefits from
automation—improved efficiency, reduced costs, greater speed — without becoming
inflexible. But how? For some, business process modeling does the trick.
Automating business
processes is essential to keeping a competitive edge, but can make your
company inflexible.
In his 2001 book, Jack:
Straight from the Gut, former General Electric Co. chief executive Jack Welch
wrote, "The most valuable opportunities for establishing competitive
differentiation are in how a product or service is created, sold, delivered
and supported." Few would disagree. Every effective business has processes
that monitor the "how" of creating and getting products and services to
market, and the efficiency of those processes can mean success or failure.
The need to manage
business processes has been around ever since people began trading bushels of
maize for buffalo hides. But it wasn't until the rise of information
technologies, and especially enterprise-wide systems such as ERP, CRM and
supply-chain management, that the effort to automate these processes began in
earnest. (Read
more...)
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Wal-Mart tests RFID in Texas stores
Source:
ComputerWeekly.com
Retailer Wal-Mart has
begun testing the use of RFID (radio frequency identification) tagging at
seven US stores and a regional distribution centre in Texas, in anticipation
of a wider rollout of the technology which the company hoped will eventually
replace bar codes.
The trial includes
participation from eight manufacturers, which have agreed to implement case
and pallet-level tagging on a total of 21 products.
The much-anticipated test
comes after Wal-Mart threw down the gauntlet to its top 100 suppliers last
year, setting a January 2005 deadline for them to place RFID tags on all cases
and pallets destined for its Wal-Mart and Sam's Club stores in the Dallas and
Fort Worth area.
The trial is intended to
start the RFID tag migration in anticipation of the January deadline, said
Simon Langford, manager of RFID strategy at Wal-Mart. According to Langford,
all of its top 100 suppliers except two are on track to meet the deadline,
with many planning to join the trial earlier. (Read
more...)
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Send Jobs to India? Some Find It's Not Always Best
By Eduardo Porter
Source: The New York
Times
Even as the prospect of
high-skilled American jobs moving to low-wage countries like India ignites hot
political debate, some entrepreneurs are finding that
India's vaunted high-technology work force is not always as effective as
advertised.
"For three years we tried
all kinds of models, but nothing has worked so far," said the co-founder and
chief technology officer of Storability Software in Southborough, Mass. After
trying to reduce costs by contracting out software programming tasks to India,
Storability brought back most of the work to the United States, where it costs
four times as much, and hired more programmers here. The "depth of knowledge
in the area we want to build software is not good enough" among Indian
programmers, the executive said. (Read
more...)
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Majority of IT and Business Plans Still Not Linked
By Allen Bernard
Source:
InternetNews
Businesses that align
information technology (IT) strategies with business strategies are
significantly more likely to achieve a high return on IT investment, according
to a survey of senior financial officers conducted by Computer Sciences
Corporation (CSC) and Financial Executives International (FEI).
"Only by linking IT and
business strategy can companies really assess the ultimate ROI of information
technology investments," said Rebecca Segal, vice president, Worldwide
Services and Solutions Integration Strategies Research. "This survey is a
wake-up call for financial executives to take action given the potential
benefits to be gained."
The sixth annual
Technology Issues for Financial Executives survey that looked at the IT trends
most critical for chief financial officers (CFOs) and other senior finance
executives also found that only 10 percent of companies achieve a high rate of
return on investment for IT projects. Among those companies with a
business-aligned IT plan, however, that percentage more than doubles to 24
percent. (Read
more...)
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Going the cross ERP way
By Ashish Gupta
Source:
Express Computer
Over the next three to four years we will see cross ERP products
as customers demand more from enterprise applications.
All businesses are wired and most
software companies accept that their products must talk to each other.
The Net is both omnipresent and a still highly attractive environment
for applying technology to business processes and problems. Finally,
even the most hardened competitors in the software world now accept that
it is in their self interest to share previously secret application
programming interfaces (APIs) to ensure different companies products
work easily and effectively.
Easy sharing of data and
applications will happen, but the business world, already questioning
the ROI of previous technology investments, will not do business with
technology companies that make unrealistic claims and then fail to
deliver. Finally, software companies with mature management and a
realistic understanding of their market can and will prosper — neither
Rome nor the Taj Mahal were built in one day, but built they were.
(Read
more...)
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Secret CIO: Another Outsourcing Done Him Wrong Song
By Herbert W. Lovelace
Source:
InformationWeek
Over the years, I've
found there's real value in talking to other CIOs about their problems and
tribulations. It isn't just the pleasure of commiserating about the unfair
burdens heaped upon us. What makes these discussions essential is the ability
to learn from their experiences. It's far better to have knowledge of where a
specific technology or vendor is weak than it is to go blindly into what can
be a career-threatening decision (aren't they all today?). So it was with
anticipation that I met my friend Glenn after work.
Glenn is one of the more
innovative CIOs in our city. He was the first among us to try voice over IP
and to provide executive education in IT when the rest of us were complaining
that our business leaders didn't have a clue as to what we did for a living.
Recently, he decided to outsource his global help desk for internal users and
business customers. Since his company depends heavily on Web-enabled
transactions, this step wasn't a trivial one. Glenn had told us that although
other industries were using outsourced customer support with mixed results, he
felt that he could make it a success, even though his business requires some
specialized knowledge of regulated products.
When I got to the hotel
bar, Glenn was ensconced at a corner table with a drink in front of him. This
behavior was unusual for him. The man limits himself to one adult beverage and
never orders before I arrive. I figured that I already had some insight into
how his great leap forward was progressing.
(Read
more...) |