Title: A Primer on Upgrading to 11i
1A Primer on Upgrading to 11i
New York Metro Area User Group Day
Heidi Zee, Director of Service Quality
New York, NY September 21, 2004
2Contents
- Background
- 11i Upgrade Considerations
- 11i Upgrade Approach
- Case Studies
3Background
- Heidi Zee
- Director of Service Quality methodology, risk
mitigation, project troubleshooting - 10 years experience implementing Oracle
Applications at PWC and IBM - Global implementations and rollouts, business
process improvement - ThoughtDigital
- Oracle E-Business Suite focused consultancy
- Offices in New York, Redbank NJ, Reston VA,
Pittsburgh PA - 40 consultants with an average 10 years
E-Business Suite experience - 70 Full-lifecycle implementations
- 30 re-implementation/upgrades
- Certified Oracle Partner
411i Upgrade Business Drivers
- Newer release of Oracle has enhanced
functionality which can - Automate additional business processes
- Eliminate cost and maintenance of custom
functionality - Change in business model
- Chart of accounts redesign
- MA activity
- Centralized business systems
- Oracle no longer supporting current version of
module or application - Instance consolidation
- Sarbanes-Oxley requirements
511i Upgrade vs. Re-implementation?
- Whats the difference?
- Upgrade
- Same platform
- Apply patches
- Run through upgrade checklist
- Validate customizations still apply
- No changes to flexfield structures
- Re-implementation
- Different platform
- Similar to implementation
- Validate customizations still apply
611i Upgrade vs. Re-implementation? (contd)
- Upgrade if possible
- Re-implementation is necessary when
- Business
- Significant change in business model
- Consolidation of business units
- Opportunity to change business process
- How important is transaction history? if hasnt
changed much, then just upgrade - Evaluate timing of initial implementation
business changes - System
- Change key flexfields
- Take advantage of certain functionality which
requires very different configuration - Turn on average daily balance
- Encumbrance accounting (budgetary control)
- Intercompany adding a new segment
7Preparing for the Upgrade
- When to start planning for the 11i upgrade
- Business drivers
- Experienced user base, looking to leverage new
functionality - Typically assess 3-5 years after initial
implementation - How to build internal support for the 11i Upgrade
- Executive sponsorship
- Business improvement project not an IT project
- Executive sponsor from the business side
- Gain input from the user base, get initial buy-in
from those who are most affected
8Developing an Effective Upgrade Plan
- Important planning considerations
- Treat all activities like a new implementation
- Resources who understand both releases
- Understand the customizations
- Full catalog make sure you dont leave anything
behind - 11i functionality eliminate need to carry over
- Training
- Testing, testing, testing
- Strong database administration skills (upgrade,
not re-imp) - Key components of an effective plan
- Enough time to assess business processes and
confirm business requirements - Enough time for testing of functional upgrade,
technical customizations, and integration testing - A minimum of three iterations of the upgrade
cycle (upgrade, not re-imp)
9Upgrade Risks
- Identifying risks means understanding your
environment - be honest - People
- Time commitment - is the staff able to support
and contribute to an upgrade? - Oracle fluency are they ready to take on more
functionality and potential complexity? - Processes
- Effectiveness of current business processes - are
things working properly? - Timing for the business is this going to
coincide with a particularly busy time of year
for sales? - Technology
- Current issues with functionality or user
performance - does the current system support the
business needs? - Database and operating system growth - can it
handle changes required by an upgrade?
10Upgrade Risks (contd)
- Production outages - upgrades require production
outages during cutover - Oracle patches upgrades rely heavily on patches
and potentially Oracle Support - Risk mitigation strategies
- Track risks upfront before they become issues
- Communicate expectations and timing sooner rather
than later - Be clear about TARs management and Oracle
Support relationship - Budget enough trials to accurately estimate
Production cutover timeline - Budget enough resources and time to migrate
complex customizations if necessary
11Implementation Approach
12Implementation Approach
13Upgrade Approach
14Case Studies
- Comcast Cable
- Webster Bank
- New Line Cinema
15Case Study - Comcast Cable
- Client
- Largest cable company in the world with
approximately 22 million subscribers - Key Business Driver - Oracle de-supporting 10.7
character - Over 1200 users
- Timeline
- 2003 initial upgrade planning, prototype
developed as upgrade proof of concept (sample of
each business unit, re-implemented) - 2004 upgrade from 10.7 to 11.5.9
- Project Highlights
- Reimplementation
- GL, AP, PO, INV, PA, FA
- 8 months, 5 people
16Case Study - Comcast Cable (contd)
- Challenges
- Buy 4 billion in capital expenditures, no
systematic process to track/control - 130 billion assets managed by spreadsheet
conversion, design FA process - Conversion volumes tuning, rewrote standard
imports - 18 million journal lines
- 300,000 PO lines
- 1 million inventory items
- 3 million AP invoices processed annually
maintain controls, seamless transition - Results
- Streamline capital purchase process
- Eliminated custom application (10.7) leveraging
standard 11i functionality - Considerably improved conversion metrics (e.g.
item import 80 hours ? 16 hours) minimal break
in production during cutover
17Case Study - Webster Bank
- Client
- Webster Bank regional commercial and retailing
banking institution in CT - 16 billion in assets
- Key Business Driver - leveraging New Release 11i
Functionality - Timeline
- Late 1990s initial Implementation
- 2003 upgrade from Release 11 to 11.5.9
- Project Highlights
- Upgrade not reimplementation
- Extensive User Workshops
- GL, AP, FA, iExpenses
- 10 weeks, average 3 consultants
18Case Study - Webster Bank (contd)
- Challenges
- Lack of formal documentation
- Data corruption problems - required resolution by
ThoughtDigital before the upgrade could be
performed - Redesign i-Expense workflow process for over 1500
users - Results
- Upgrade performed without disruption to Websters
ongoing operations - Effectively implemented many new Release 11i
features and processes - Eliminated customizations to simplify Websters
new environment
19Case Study - New Line Cinema
- Client
- NewLineCinema distributor and producer of
theatrical films, division of Time Warner - New Line Cinema Home Video, Marketing business
units - Key Business Driver - staying current with
technology - Timeline
- 2000 initial implementation 11.0.3
- 2004 upgrade 11.5.9
- Project Highlights
- Upgrade not re-implementation
- GL, AP, CM, PO, FA, PA
- 20 week project, average 3.5 TD resource
- 4 upgrade iterations
20Case Study - New Line Cinema (contd)
- Challenges
- Windows NT platform limited documentation or
troubleshooting support - 170 systems for imaging (scanned/attached AP
invoices) highly customized - Rapid PO customization complex custom user
interface not migrated, but recreated to leverage
new 11i functionality and maintain simplicity of
use - Results
- Users found Rapid PO more user friendly and
intuitive than before - Upgraded to more stable 11.5.9 environment
allows to expand the Oracle footprint to include
additional business processes and business units
21Question and Answers
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22Thank You
- Heidi Zee
- ThoughtDigital
- Director of Service Quality
- (212) 590-2553
- heidi.zee_at_thoughtdigital.com