Title: Functional and Enterprise Systems
1Chapter 7
- Functional and Enterprise Systems
2CustomerRelationship Management
- Customer Relationship Management
- The philosophy that an organization should focus
on the customer
3Reasons Why Companies Implement a CRM Strategy
- Develop one view of the customer for more
successful sales, marketing, and service - Improve customer satisfaction
- Improve retention by rewarding loyalty
4Reasons Why Companies Implement a CRM Strategy
- Increase up-selling and cross-selling of products
and services - Target markets more accurately
- Improve sales leads
- Increase sales closing rates
5Reasons Why Companies Implement a CRM Strategy
- Increase margin on goods and services
- Increase revenue and profits
- Respond to competitors implementation of CRM
6CustomerRelationship Management
- Sales Force Automation
- Replaces manual systems of tracking leads, sales,
service requests, and other sales-related
information with computerized systems that use
sophisticated database software and mobile
computers
7CustomerRelationship Management
- Order Handling
- Point-of-Sale System (POS)
- Records the sale of a product or service and
updates company records related to the sale - Order Entry Systems
- Record and process the taking of an order
8CustomerRelationship Management
- Electronic Bill Presentment and Payment (EBPP)
- Satisfies customers by reducing paperwork and
mailing costs - Post-Sales Support
- CRM support for call centers provides management
of contact with customer
9CustomerRelationship Management
- Managing Distributors
- Partner relationship management (PRM)
- A philosophy of coordinating with distributors
and other channel partners in the sale and
distribution of a product or service
10Managing Design, Engineering, and Production
- Computer-Aided Design (CAD)
- Helps designers translate their mental images
into physical drawings and specifications - Rapid prototyping can convert a CAD model into a
solid physical model.
11Managing Design, Engineering, and Production
- Computer-Aided Manufacturing (CAM)
- The use of computers to control equipment in the
manufacturing process - Flexible manufacturing provides multiple uses for
computer-controlled machinery - Robots are computer-controlled machinery that
exhibit human-like features
12Managing Design, Engineering, and Production
- CAD/CAM
- Integrates CAD and CAM software so that
engineering drawings are processed in such a way
that their output can be downloaded directly to
manufacturing equipment to produce a final
product - Automated Guided Vehicles (AGVs)
- Computer-controlled vehicles improve
manufacturing flexibility
13Managing Design, Engineering, and Production
- Computer Integrated Manufacturing
- The integration of product design, manufacturing
planning, manufacturing execution, and shop floor
control, as well as the integration of these
production functions with the other functions of
an organization
14Managing Design, Engineering, and Production
Figure 7-10
15Managing Design, Engineering, and Production
- Mass Customization
- The competitive advantage a company would have if
it could produce the exact product that each
customer wanted as cheaply and efficiently as if
it were mass-produced
16Managing Design, Engineering, and Production
Figure 7-11
17Managing Supplier Relationships
- Electronic Procurement
- Automates processes relating to procurement
- Qualifying
- Bidding
- Ordering
- Receiving
- Paying
18Managing Supplier Relationships
- Just-in-Time Inventory
- The practice of receiving supplies just as a
company requires it, neither too early nor too
late
19Managing Supplier Relationships
- Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI)
- A process in which a supplier manages the
inventory in its customers facilities - Vendor improves knowledge of product demand and
ability to time deliveries - Company usually doesnt pay for product until it
is sold
20Managing Warehousing and Transportation
- Warehouse Management Systems
- Support activities inside the warehouse and at
its shipping and receiving docks
21Managing Warehousing and Transportation
- Warehouse Management System Features
- Receiving
- Warehouse Management Systems help schedule pickup
and deliveries to the warehouse - Shipping
- Systems schedule outbound vehicles at docks
22Managing Warehousing and Transportation
- Warehouse Management System Features
- Picking
- Systems support automated picking and conveyor
systems - Storage
- Systems help lay out the storage so that size and
weight restrictions are observed and frequently
used items are accessed most easily
23Managing Warehousing and Transportation
- Warehouse Management System Features
- Reporting
- Warehouse management systems identify the number
and value of items in stock
24Managing Warehousing and Transportation
- Cross-docking systems
- Load goods received at a distribution point
immediately onto outgoing trucks without entering
them into inventory - Auto-ID Systems
- Tags merchandise with radio-frequency tags that
can be tracked at a distance
25Support Systems
- Human Resource Management Systems
- Streamline the processes relating to employee
recruitment, development, retention, assessment,
and compensation
26Support Systems
- Accounting Systems
- Accounts receivable
- Accounts payable
- General ledger
- Budgeting, cash management, fixed asset
accounting, investment tracking, and other
functions
27Enterprise and Cross-Enterprise Systems
- Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Software
- Integrates all functional systems in a single
package - Can be purchased in modules that address only
specific functional needs
28Enterprise and Cross-Enterprise Systems
- Enterprise Application Integration (EAI)
- The process of integrating the functional systems
of an organization - One solution is pair-wise matching of inputs and
outputs among applications - Another solution is middleware, software that
provides and manages inter-application interface
29Enterprise and Cross-Enterprise Systems
Figure 7-15
30Enterprise and Cross-Enterprise Systems
- Supply Chain Management
- The manner by which a company and its supply
chain partners analyze, optimize, and control the
acquisition and delivery of raw materials
necessary for the creation of the goods and
services that an organization produces - Requires cross-enterprise integration
31End of Chapter 7
- Functional and Enterprise Systems