Title: Enterprise Business Processes and Applications (IS 6006)
1Enterprise Business Processes and
Applications(IS 6006)
- Masters in Business Information Systems
- 24th Mar 2009
Fergal Carton Business Information Systems
2Course Objective
-
- To understand the key processes underlying modern
organisations and how enterprise wide systems
support these processes
3Topics from course outline
- What are business processes?
- Key demand and supply processes
- Integration and standardisation
- Different aims of organisational functions
- Key information resources shared by those
functions - What are enterprise applications (ERP / CRM)?
- Historical perspectives on enterprise
applications - Single instance implementations and data
integrity - Project management (Gap analysis, resources, )
- Reporting and data access in the enterprise
430 Sept
- What is a business process?
- Exercise getting a loan, document the process
- Meaning of integration
- Use of examples in assessed work
57 Oct
- Characteristics of a process
- Sustainability
- Efficiency
- Quality versus quantity
- How does it react under duress (eg. school run)
- Exercise getting a loan
- Current crisis related to inter-bank dealings
- Issues in loan process
- Cost / efficiency of credit checking?
- Relationship with bank manager?
- Risk assessment relies on non-structured
information - Process relies on data integrity
- Eg. purpose of loan often not validated
614 Oct
- Exercise bank loan process comments
- Purpose is communication
- There is no right answer
- Can over simplify
- Doesnt take into account human error
- Can be inflexible not matching reality
- Flags / metrics in place to monitor performance
- What does integration mean?
721 Oct
- Feedback on process mapping exercise
- Process map tells you what is being done, by
whom, in what order - Differentiates between flow of physical goods and
virtual information - Visual presentation is flexible, allows
identification of bottlenecks - Operational versus informational
- ERP captures transactions (SO, PO) at most
granular level - Managers need aggregated information (MIS) to
support decision making - Comparing plan to actual is critical to decision
making - Purchase Price Variance example
- ERP hardwires processes
- Ownership of data (as dear to you as your leave
days)
828 Oct
- Discussion of Dearden / Vizard
- Examples of issues with OVOTT
- Wastage / discrepancies in inventory
- Plan, Buy, Make, Deliver model
- Bill of Materials links raw materials to finished
goods
94 Nov
- MRP principles
- BOM crystallises connection between supply and
demand - Build process takes account of space, yield,
time, cost, labour, equipment - Outsource or not for sub-components, influence on
BOM - Lead time for customer and commit time for
production - MRP reduces buffer stocks
- Look up examples of Bills of Materials
- What is so difficult about connecting supply and
demand? - Why cant actual demand be forecasted?
- Dell, Aer Lingus, Glaxo SmithKline
- Fiat car design 18 months because of
sub-contracting parts - Work orders / process orders allow inventory to
be consumed - Mirror image of the sales order
- Drives customer demand through to batches in the
production process - Additional Reading
- Look at paper titles for relevance to this course
(eg. Supply Chain) - We focus on reality of using integrated systems
and issues arising
1011 Nov
- BOM example iPhone
- Product names (sales) versus model s (Mfg)
- Build to plan model
- Process versus discrete manufacturing
- Process manufacturing produces batches in larger
volumes that are undifferentiated (eg. Coke,
milk, oil, ) - Discreet manufacturing is characterised by
separate unit production from outset of process
(eg. toys, medical equipment, computers, cars) - ERP modules (Sales, Finance, Logistics,
Procurement, Manufacturing) - ERP is single instance
- Key benefit for IT is common platform
- simplifies skills required (development and
support) - simplifies operations (release management,
interfaces, security, ) - Production planning iPhone production planning
- Many sources of demand
- How can production be planned?
1118 Nov
- SIT case discussion
- Hockey stick effect and causes (pricing strategy)
- Other causes of unplanned hikes in sales (new
products hitting market, competitors products,
natural or man-made disasters, ) - Configure to order model / assemble to order
- MRP principles can be applied without ERP
- Postponement strategies (delay configuration till
latest possible time) - Planning is about thinking ahead, managing
business relationships - If planning is well done, emergencies can be
catered for - Solutions to planning at SIT
- Incentivise early quarter sales
- product price most effective way to influence
sale - early payment incentives
- customer discounts
- commission payments
-
- Move towards a build to order model?
- Customers can only order what is currently being
built - Smart phone sales example (O2, Spectra and
Vodaphone) - Sample BOMs
127 Jan
- Review of topics covered in first term
- Integration how far IS supports decisions
- Decoupling point where IS stop
- Because it doesnt work / has broken down / is
too slow (technical problem) - Because human judgement necessary (decision
complexity problem) - Because people want some room for manoeuvre
(behavioural problem) - RICE development work for ERP projects
- Cost is in person days
- Comes in addition to software licence costs
- If it touches ERD, vendors wont do it or make it
exorbitantly expensive - Gap analysis (UCC example)
- Expense claim processing demo significance
- No power users, no training, frosty reception to
change among depts - Difference between package and requirements
- Highly detailed, relies on good faith of vendor,
difficult to test in anger - Difficult to identify in advance unique ways of
doing things - No sales orders at UCC for revenue
- Line item independence at EMC
- Shipping discounted line items instead of
standard price
1313 Jan
- Openings for graduates in ERP projects
- Catch-22 of application experience
- Business analysis role
- Data analysis role
- Moving away from systems based decisions
- Integration increases reliance on data
- In reality data integrity difficult to ensure
- Single instance ERP systems
- Hardwiring processes
- Impact for subsidiaries
- Finance and IS benefit
- Operationally, ERP often seen as an imposition
- Data integrity issues
- GSK / EMC / UCC
1420 Jan
- Data integrity
- UCC revenue clarity
- EMC price updates
- GSK and uncertainty in demand and supply
- Scope definitions
- UCC Finance scope
- CRM is about awareness / communication
- WiFi charge for telephone call (Muiris)
- Good and bad customer stories (homework)
1527 Jan
- What is CRM
- CRM principles
- Main CRM modules
- Check out vendor web-sites for modules
- Good / bad customer stories
- Stephen, Garry, Sinead, Chris, Ed, Ray, James
163 Feb
- Lessons from customer stories
- Call center technology
- Call center visit?
- CRM strategy assignment (7th March)
- Apple Exercise as homework
1710 Feb
- Marketing
- Sales force automation
- Apple Exercise homework
1817 Feb
- Managing demand complexity
- Apple Exercise
- Modelling customers and channels
1924 Feb
- Apple Exercise
- Customers / channels
- On-line / not on-line
- Registered / not registered
- Products
- Hardware
- Software
- Service
- Talk from Miguel Lioittier, Institut Superieur de
Commerce, Paris - The current financial crisis and its causes
- CRM implementations
- eCRM
- Questions on strategy proposal for 9th March
203 Mar
- Apple fulfilment process and ERP impact
- View by stage in the process (Requirement, Sales
Order, Distribution, Invoicing, CS) - And by type of product
- Where is commonality in process?
- Where could ERP provide support?
- Where would an interface be required?
21Enterprise Business Processes and Applications
- First term production planning processes
(Supply) - Process mapping exercises
- Approaches to production planning
- Uncertainty of demand
- Functional goals and integration
- Data integrity and role of enterprise systems
- Single instance systems
- Second term customer processes (Demand)
- CRM
-
- Meeting of the two is what businesses struggle
with
22Its about planning for demand
- Planners try to guess what to produce
- Build to plan / Build to stock
- Push approach
- In some markets this might be OK
- However, forecasts can be wrong
- Companies try to be lean
- Build to order
- Kanban
- Pull approach
23Be analysts
- Why do we describe what companies do as
processes? - Why do companies use processes?
- What are the basic supply and demand processes?
- What happens to processes when the unexpected
occurs?
24Why is business unpredictable?
- Customers dont behave the way we think
- Seasonality
- Trends
- Competitors
- Hockey stick
- Sales are over / under stating demand
- Quality issues result in long lead times
- Labour issues affect yield
- Plant and machinery is getting old
-
25Analysts use processes to understand what is
going on
- Organisations think and act in silos
- Upstream and downstream effects of their actions
not always understood - Analysts try to see the big picture
- Processes are a way of knitting together
activities involving different functions - At the end of the day, customer satisfaction is
what keeps us in business
26Sales order and fulfilment
Manufacturing
Finance
Sales / CS
HR
Plan
Bill and collect
Recruit
Market
Buy
Approve Pay
Sell
Manage
Make
Report results
Install
Reward
Deliver
Maintain
Develop
Budget
Management information
Products
Cash
Customers
People
- Whats complicated about this?
- Why is it complicated?
- In what way can integration help?
27In-class work and homework
- Process mapping, lending process
- SAP and Oracle for documentation on Production
Planning and Sales Order Processing - iPhone Bill of Materials
- SIT production planning process and bottlenecks
- Customer service stories (Bad and good)
- Gap analysis
- UCC Finance office (Oracle implementation)
- Apple exercise (SOP and fulfilment)
28Sample questions
- SIT assignment Nov 08 (Production planning, MRP,
hockey stick) - PCB Feb 09 (CRM)
-
29SIT Ltd (Nov 08)
- Prepare a process map of production planning in
the SIT case study. - distinguish between the physical flow of
inventory (both raw materials and finished
goods), and the virtual flow of information. - Describe areas of inefficiency or bottlenecks in
the current process. - Comment on how you would use this diagram in the
meeting. - What is your understanding of Material
Requirements Planning, and why does it not work
for SIT? - Discuss how push-pull models apply to SIT,
highlighting the problems that SIT planners must
deal with in achieving their objectives.
30Feedback on assessment
- Difference between Kellogs and SIT?
- Other companies like Kellogs
- Other companies like SIT?
- How would we represent a framework for both?
- Is it OK to say no to a customer?
- Large order hits late in the quarter
- Separate flows for production at SIT
- Standard configurations
- Specific deals with particular configurations
- Why cant people use generic reports?
- Because its not saying what it should say
- Biggest problem of quarter end is resources
- Thats why we design processes, isnt it?
31PCB (Mar 09)
- What is CRM, and how would it alleviate the
problems raised by current processes? - What would a CRM project involve, and how much
would it cost? - In what order should PCB go about implementing a
CRM approach?
32Apple Exercise
- SAP manages complexity in the demand fulfilment
cycle, map out the demand fulfilment process - Apple stores
- Apple.com
- Major accounts
- Retailer
- Indirect distributor
Products
Channels
Customers
Sales order fulfilment process
Services
33In your answers
- Use examples to illustrate your ideas
- Show that you can see past what happens to the
customer and imagine the process issues behind
the scenes - You dont need to know how to fix things
- Be able to show how you would approach a problem
34Look for case studies
- ERP systems dont always work well
- Companies end up using spreadsheets
- Look for evidence of where
- ERP worked well (case studies, white papers, )
- ERP didnt work well (case studies, )
- What is the difference?
- Look at ERP vendor sites (SAP, Oracle, )
- Look at EBSCO, Google Scholar,
- Look at discussion forums regarding ERP, Supply
Chain Management, CRM,
35MIS Reading
- Integration articles
- Dearden 72
- Chiasson 06
- Vizard 06
- Yarde 06
- IT and the value chain
- Porter Millar, 85
36CRM Reading
- A taxonomy for selecting global supply chain
strategies - Christopher, Peck Towill (2006)
- Customer Relationship Management Emerging
Practice, Process, and Discipline - Parvatiyar Sheth (2001)
- Using e-CRM for a unified view of the customer
- Pan and Lee (2003)
37ERP reading
- Sumner (2005), Chapters 4 and 6
- http//wps.prenhall.com/bp_sumner_erp_1
- Student resources
- Ellen Monk and Bret Wagner (2006)
- Concepts in Enterprise Resource Planning, 2nd ed,
Thomson - Davenport (1998)
- Boersma Kingma (2005)
- Ross (1998)
- Carton, Adam Sammon (2008)
- Bhattacherjee (1999)
38Sumner material
- http//wps.prenhall.com/bp_sumner_erp_1/25/6543/16
75175.cw/index.html
39Your own research
- EBSCO, Google Scholar
- Vendor websites
- SAP, Oracle, Siebel, SalesForce.com
- Consulting web-sites
- EY, Accenture, Deloitte,
40Start with keywords
41Full article not available but
42Full article is available!
43Full article is available!
44Articles provide examples