Showing posts with label ERP structure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ERP structure. Show all posts

Monday, June 13, 2016

What is the ROI potential for eresource ERP system?


What is the ROI potential for eresource ERP system?

If your business is suffering due to customer complaints about poor service or finding difficulty in expanding the business due to your outdated information system it is time you must go for implementation of eresource ERP.

eresource ERP system will help deliver solid customer satisfaction by automating clerical tasks, improving on-time shipments, reducing inventory and providing information to make quick decisions.

eresource ERP offers the functionality, technology platform and implementation expertise to help you realize the full benefits of an ERP solution.

What is more exciting about eresource ERP is, it not only addresses all your day to day business challenges, you will also get a healthy return on your investment quickly and faster than you probably thought. eresource ERP can yield higher net profits by:


Streamlining your supply chain
Improving customer relationship
Reducing operational cost
Allowing real-time access to information
Providing foundation to growth


Middle East
UAE
eresource Middle East FZE, P.O Box: 513071, Sharjah,
United Arab Emirates.
Contact Person: Sudheer Soman Nair, CEO
Mob: 00 97155 9018499
email: sudheer.nair@eresourceinfotech.com


TMA House, 1st Floor,
Road No 16, Plot No. 6
Wagle Industrial Estate,
Thane (West) 400 604, Maharashtra
Tel: +91 22 41118000 / 8049 (50 lines)
+91 22 25828775
e-mail (Sales): sales@eresourceerp.com

What does the term 'Best Practice' mean in ERP context?


What does the term 'Best Practice' mean in ERP context?

The best practice in ERP can be defined as the utilization of fundamental set-ups to the maximum possible to produce the desired performance in terms of 'customer focus, zero waste of all the resources and value creation'. Tangibly, it leads to increase in quality and service, and reduction of cost and response time.

ERP enjoys having a strong skeleton based on these best practices. All the workflows in ERP are so thoughtfully maintained that it ensures that the user automatically follows the best practice. It won't allow the user to bypass or modify the predetermined course of action that may create 'non-value added activity



Middle East
UAE
eresource Middle East FZE, P.O Box: 513071, Sharjah,
United Arab Emirates.
Contact Person: Sudheer Soman Nair, CEO
Mob: 00 97155 9018499
email: sudheer.nair@eresourceinfotech.com


TMA House, 1st Floor,
Road No 16, Plot No. 6
Wagle Industrial Estate,
Thane (West) 400 604, Maharashtra
Tel: +91 22 41118000 / 8049 (50 lines)
+91 22 25828775
e-mail (Sales): sales@eresourceerp.com



How accurate are sales forecasts?


How accurate are sales forecasts?

ONE should understand that the sales forecast is not exact but should be as accurate as one could reasonably expect for the business he/she is in and that, through measurement and correction of errors, the sales forecast accuracy is improving on a product by product basis.

It is mainly the job of planning, purchasing and production departments to be able to meet the sales forecast given this expected level of accuracy. However, it is not necessary to have an accurate forecast to plan and control your business; you do need everyone to work to an agreed forecast that is updated regularly with any significant changes.

Forecast accuracy also will depend on the historical business background you are in. If you are in a mature and stable business you should expect a reasonably accurate forecast. If the business is new and growing, the forecast will be less accurate. In either case the way to determine what your forecast accuracy should be is to start with the accuracy you have achieved in the past. This is the minimum starting point for forecast accuracy. If you do not have a formal forecasting process at the moment, you should start now.

Forecast accuracy should be measured in units of production not value unless there is no sensible unit of production (a company selling a service for instance). An important reason to measure forecast accuracy is to be better able to plan the future supply chain and value adds in factors such as selling price and even exchange rates into the forecast accuracy which do not affect the supply chain. Average selling price and exchange rate should be forecast as a separate exercise for financial planning.

Once you are measuring sales forecast accuracy, the next stage is to improve it. This is achieved by investigating any forecast errors outside the historical accuracy of the forecast.

Finally, the sales plan should be the date and quantity of shipments you expect your customer may require. If your customer requests products in line with the plan, but you are unable to ship that product, it is still a hit as far as plan accuracy is concerned. On the other hand, if your customer requests shipments on a different date from the plan it is a miss even if you could have shipped it according to the forecast plan.
Web site : www.eresourceerp.com

Middle East

UAE
eresource Middle East FZE, P.O Box: 513071, Sharjah,
United Arab Emirates.
Contact Person: Sudheer Soman Nair, CEO
Mob: 00 97155 9018499
email: sudheer.nair@eresourceinfotech.com

TMA House, 1st Floor,
Road No 16, Plot No. 6
Wagle Industrial Estate,
Thane (West) 400 604, Maharashtra
Tel: +91 22 41118000 / 8049 (50 lines)
+91 22 25828775
e-mail (Sales): sales@eresourceerp.com



Is the 'flexible' attitude of users hampering ERP success in India?


Is the 'flexible' attitude of users hampering ERP success in India?

Success of ERP performance is directly proportional to the adherence to standard operating procedures. However, we find that very common complaint against ERP is its rigid structure and disciplined standard operating procedures. Often there are ridiculous demands and expectations from users, which are conflicting with standard operating procedures. Hence ERP is either blamed or made to fail. When the user says he wants flexibility in ERP, actually he wants the official allowance to deviate from standards set for value generation. The repercussions of such flexibility are tremendous, including the loss of value.

For example, here goes a typical style of customer negotiations. The sales people of a manufacturing company arbitrarily fixed unit price and raised sales orders against customers. After physical material dispatches, suddenly the customer started negotiating with sales and the rates were changed. The sales person then wanted to pass these entries in ERP. No good system will support such incongruous requirements. Here, the user wants flexibility in addressing these issues from ERP and also expected that everything should happen automatically. To settle and account for such changes, one has to pass a number of reverse entries in ERP.

Unfortunately, some consulting companies charge extra from clients for automating such absurd provisions. The same thing happened with the above company also and they landed up with 'auto reverse entry module' supporting the existing system. More ironically, this feature of ERP soon became so popular that the company asked a similar module for purchase transactions. The ultimate chaos is always observed in finance and costing modules where multiple figures of profits, inventory values, sales income, taxes, etc. linked to the same transaction are found. Nobody could really gather any meaningful information from such sets of data over a period of time. At the end the user gets flexibility and the organization gets punishment.

There are also some cases where flexibility going to the extent of unethical business practices and in such cases illegal transactions can also be carried out.

Here is one peculiar requirement that once observed from a user. He asked for various options of selecting report sizes (A3 or A4) to use with different printers for printing the same reports. ERP was expected to be flexible enough to accommodate multiple report sizes based on printer selection. The same user never used in his earlier tenure any computerized output and did not even know how to load paper into printer.

The major flexibility expected by Indian ERP users can be summarized as "I want to do transactions any way, later on it should get corrected." Hence we find demand of provisional entries, temporary databases, notional requirements, etc. The fundamental principle of ERP is doing right things right at first time is not understood and deviations are expected to be regularized. We find many of such cases, ultimately making ERP as unused ornament lying in the bank locker.

Web site : www.eresourceerp.com

Middle East
UAE
eresource Middle East FZE, P.O Box: 513071, Sharjah,
United Arab Emirates.
Contact Person: Sudheer Soman Nair, CEO
Mob: 00 97155 9018499
email: sudheer.nair@eresourceinfotech.com


TMA House, 1st Floor,
Road No 16, Plot No. 6
Wagle Industrial Estate,
Thane (West) 400 604, Maharashtra
Tel: +91 22 41118000 / 8049 (50 lines)
+91 22 25828775
e-mail (Sales): sales@eresourceerp.com







Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Is the 'flexible' attitude of users hampering ERP success in India?



Is the 'flexible' attitude of users hampering ERP success in India?




Success of ERP performance is directly proportional to the adherence to standard operating procedures. However, we find that very common complaint against ERP is its rigid structure and disciplined standard operating procedures. Often there are ridiculous demands and expectations from users, which are conflicting with standard operating procedures. Hence ERP is either blamed or made to fail. When the user says he wants flexibility in ERP, actually he wants the official allowance to deviate from standards set for value generation. The repercussions of such flexibility are tremendous, including the loss of value.

For example, here goes a typical style of customer negotiations. The sales people of a manufacturing company arbitrarily fixed unit price and raised sales orders against customers. After physical material dispatches, suddenly the customer started negotiating with sales and the rates were changed. The sales person then wanted to pass these entries in ERP. No good system will support such incongruous requirements. Here, the user wants flexibility in addressing these issues from ERP and also expected that everything should happen automatically. To settle and account for such changes, one has to pass a number of reverse entries in ERP.

Unfortunately, some consulting companies charge extra from clients for automating such absurd provisions. The same thing happened with the above company also and they landed up with 'auto reverse entry module' supporting the existing system. More ironically, this feature of ERP soon became so popular that the company asked a similar module for purchase transactions. The ultimate chaos is always observed in finance and costing modules where multiple figures of profits, inventory values, sales income, taxes, etc. linked to the same transaction are found. Nobody could really gather any meaningful information from such sets of data over a period of time. At the end the user gets flexibility and the organization gets punishment.

There are also some cases where flexibility going to the extent of unethical business practices and in such cases illegal transactions can also be carried out.

Here is one peculiar requirement that once observed from a user. He asked for various options of selecting report sizes (A3 or A4) to use with different printers for printing the same reports. ERP was expected to be flexible enough to accommodate multiple report sizes based on printer selection. The same user never used in his earlier tenure any computerized output and did not even know how to load paper into printer.

The major flexibility expected by Indian ERP users can be summarized as "I want to do transactions any way, later on it should get corrected." Hence we find demand of provisional entries, temporary databases, notional requirements, etc. The fundamental principle of ERP is doing right things right at first time is not understood and deviations are expected to be regularized. We find many of such cases, ultimately making ERP as unused ornament lying in the bank locker.


http://www.eresourceerp.com

Contact Us

TMA House, 1st Floor,
Road No 16, Plot No. 6,
Wagle Industrial Estate,
Thane (West) 400 604, Maharashtra
Tel: +91 22 41118000 / 8049 (50 lines)
+91 22 25828775
e-mail (Sales): sales@eresourceerp.com


Middle East UAE
eresource Middle East FZE
P.O Box: 513071, Sharjah,
United Arab Emirates
Contact Person: Sudheer Soman Nair, CEO
Mob: 00 97155 9018499
email: sudheer.nair@eresourceinfotech.com





Friday, May 6, 2016

ERP Implementation Life Cycle

ERP Implementation Life Cycle



THE process of ERP implementation is referred as d as "ERP Implementation Life Cycle". The following are the steps concerned in finishing the lifecycle. 

Shortlist on the basis of observation 
Assessing the chosen packages 
Preparing for the venture 
Gap Analysis 
Business process reengineering 
Designing the System 
In-house Guidance 
Checking 
Preparing the staff to use ERP 
Post Implementation process 
Rectifying errors in ERP implementation


MUMBAI

TMA House, 1st Floor,Road No 16, Plot No. 6,Wagle Industrial Estate,Thane (West) 400 604, Maharashtra Tel: +91 22 41118000 / 8049 (50 lines),   +91 22 25828775

UAE
eresource Middle East FZE,P.O Box: 513071, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates ,Contact Person: Sudheer Soman Nair, CEO,
Mob: 00 97155 9018499 eresource Middle East FZE,P.O Box: 513071, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates
email: sudheer.nair@eresourceinfotech.com

OMAN
eresource,P.O BOX No 1046, PC-130, CPO,Al-Azaiba, Muscat, Oman
Tel + 968 2 459 7226/7/8  Mob: + 968 90157499 Contact Mr. Sudheer Nair / Mr. R. Ramesh
email: sudheer.nair@eresourceinfotech.com


Customization of ERP Software

Customization of ERP



Customization of ERP software package becomes necessary in each half of the technology and since of this technology development most of the organizations tend to customise their software as per their demand. Customization is the process of fitting the chosen ERP software package to the requirements of a selected organization.

Whenever the processes represented in the ERP software package disagree considerably from the processes utilized by the firm one has two choices. First is to build the structure method into the ERP software package through customization. The second one is to alter the practice followed by the firm to suit the method native to the ERP software package


MUMBAI

TMA House, 1st Floor,Road No 16, Plot No. 6,Wagle Industrial Estate,Thane (West) 400 604, Maharashtra Tel: +91 22 41118000 / 8049 (50 lines), +91 22 25828775

UAE
eresource Middle East FZE,P.O Box: 513071, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates ,Contact Person: SudherSoman Nair, CEO,
Mob: 00 97155 9018499 eresource Middle East FZE,P.O Box: 513071, 
Sharjah, United Arab Emirates
email: sudheer.nair@eresourceinfotech.com

OMAN
eresource,P.O BOX No 1046, PC-130, CPO,Al-Azaiba, Muscat, Oman
Tel + 968 2 459 7226/7/8  Mob: + 968 90157499 Contact Mr. Sudheer Nair / Mr. R. Ramesh
email: sudheer.nair@eresourceinfotech.com


Friday, April 29, 2016

ERP success in India



ERP success in India

Is the 'flexible' attitude of users hampering ERP success in India

ERP in India.Success of ERP performance is directly proportional to the  adherence to standard operating procedures. However,we find that very common complaint against ERP is its rigid structure and disciplined standard operating procedures. Often there are ridiculous demands and expectations from users, which are conflicting with standard operating procedures. Hence ERP is either blamed or made to fail. When the user says he wants flexibility in ERP, actually he wants the official allowance to deviate from standards set for value generation. The repercussions of such flexibility are tremendous, including the loss of value.

For example, here goes a typical style of customer negotiations. The sales people of a manufacturing company arbitrarily fixed unit price and raised sales orders against customers. After physical material dispatches, suddenly the customer started negotiating with sales and the rates were changed. The sales person then wanted to pass these entries in ERP. No good system will support such incongruous requirements. Here, the user wants flexibility in addressing these issues from ERP and also expected that everything should happen automatically. To settle and account for such changes, one has to pass a number of reverse entries in ERP.

Unfortunately, some consulting companies charge extra from clients for automating such absurd provisions. The same thing happened with the above company also and they landed up with 'auto reverse entry module' supporting the existing system. More ironically, this feature of ERP soon became so popular that the company asked a similar module for purchase transactions. The ultimate chaos is always observed in finance and costing modules where multiple figures of profits, inventory values, sales income, taxes, etc. linked to the same transaction are found. Nobody could really gather any meaningful information from such sets of data over a period of time. At the end the user gets flexibility and the organization gets punishment.

There are also some cases where flexibility going to the extent of unethical business practices and in such cases illegal transactions can also be carried out.

Here is one peculiar requirement that once observed from a user. He asked for various options of selecting report sizes (A3 or A4) to use with different printers for printing the same reports. ERP was expected to be flexible enough to accommodate multiple report sizes based on printer selection. The same user never used in his earlier tenure any computerized output and did not even know how to load paper into printer.

The major flexibility expected by Indian ERP users can be summarized as "I want to do transactions any way, later on it should get corrected." Hence we find demand of provisional entries, temporary databases, notional requirements, etc. The fundamental principle of ERP is doing right things right at first time is not understood and deviations are expected to be regularized. We find many of such cases, ultimately making ERP as unused ornament lying in the bank locker.
For More Information Check This Link :http://ow.ly/4neygl

Contact Us

MUMBAI
TMA House, 1st Floor,Road No 16, Plot No. 6,Wagle Industrial Estate,Thane (West) 400 604 Maharashtra 
Tel: +91 22 41118000 / 8049 (50 lines),+91 22 25828775

UAE
eresource Middle East FZE ,P.O Box: 513071, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates   
Contact Person: Sudheer Soman Nair, CEO, 
Mob: 00 97155 9018499 email: sudheer.nair@eresourceinfotech.com

OMAN
eresource,P.O BOX No 1046, PC-130, CPO, Al-Azaiba, Muscat, Oman  Tel + 968 2 459