Erp Project Management And Monitoring.pdf

  • Uploaded by: puneet thapar
  • 0
  • 0
  • February 2021
  • PDF

This document was uploaded by user and they confirmed that they have the permission to share it. If you are author or own the copyright of this book, please report to us by using this DMCA report form. Report DMCA


Overview

Download & View Erp Project Management And Monitoring.pdf as PDF for free.

More details

  • Words: 1,157
  • Pages: 27
Loading documents preview...
ERP and project Management

1

Enterprise Systems

2

ERP Project management 1 Project Integration Management

2 Project Scope Management

3 Project Time Management

1.1 Project Plan Development

2.1 Initiation

3.1 Activity Definition

1.2 Project Plan Execution

2.2 Scope Planning

3.2 Activity Sequencing

1.3 Integrated Change Control

2.3 Scope Definition

3.3 Activity Duration Estimating

2.4 Scope Verification

3.4 Schedule Development

2.5 Scope Change Control

3.5 Schedule Control

4 Project Cost Management

5 Project Quality Management

6 Project Human Resource Management

4.1 Resource Planning

5.1 Quality Planning

6.1 Organisational Planning

4.2 Cost Estimating

5.2 Quality Assurance

6.2 Staff Acquisition

4.3 Cost Budgeting

5.3 Quality Control

6.3 Team Development

4.4 Cost Control

7 Project Communications Management

8 Project Risk Management

9 Project Procurement Management

7.1 Communications Planning

8.1 Risk Identification

9.1 Procurement Planning

7.2 Information Distribution

8.2 Quantitative Risk Analysis

9.2 Solicitation Planning

7.3 Performance Reporting

8.3 Risk Response Planning

9.3 Solicitation

7.4 Administrative

8.4 Risk Monitoring and Control

9.4 Source Selection 9.5 Contract Administration

3



A number of factors will effect the success or failure of a systems project





Operational methods and techniques



Business management and style



Leadership and communications

Risk factors 

Organizational factors, management support, software design, the levels of user involvement, and the scope and size of the project itself



Implementation risks for technologies, the organization, and human resource

4

Factors Influencing Information Systems Project Success



Number of modifications



Effective communications



Authority for project implementation



Business management



Ability to generate additional funds to cover implementation

5

Factors Causing ERP Project Failures



Poor technical methods



Communication failures



Poor leadership



Initial evaluation of project

6

ERP Systems

7

8

Risk Factors 





Organizational factors 

Changes in scope



Sufficiency of resources



Magnitude of potential loss



Departmental conflicts



User experience

Management support 

Changing requirements and scope



Lack of commitment

Software design 

Developing wrong functions, wrong user interface



Problems with outsourced components

9

Risk Factors, 





cont………….inued

User involvement 

Lack of commitment



Ineffective communication



Conflicts



Inadequate familiarity with technologies

Project management 

Size and structure



Control functions

Project escalation 

Societal norms



Continue pouring resources into sinking ships 10

Implementation Risks 

Technology 





Organizational 

Customization increases risks



Redesign of business processes to fit package decreases risk

Human resource factors 



Consistencies with current infrastructure

IT staff skills and expertise

Project size 11

Managing Large-Scale Projects 

MRP or ERP 



Package implementation differs from custom implementation 

Vendor participation



User skills and capabilities

Management commitment 

Project champion



Communication with stakeholders



Training in MRP



Good project management

12

Managing ERP Projects 

Implementation factors 

Re-engineering business processes



Changing corporate culture



Project team 



Include business analysts on project team



Management support



Commitment to change

Risk management 13

14

Factors in Successful ERP Projects 





Customization 

Increases time and cost



BPR advantage from “best practices” adoptions lost

Use of external consultants 

Offer expertise in cross-functional business processes



Problems arise when internal IT department not involved

Supplier relationship management 



Need effective relationships to facilitate and monitor contracts

Change management 

People are resistant to change



Organizational culture fostering open communications

15

Project-Related Factors



Project division into subprojects



Project leader with proven track record



Project focus on user needs instead of technology



Project champion



Slack time in project schedule

16

Additional Factors in the Success of a Project





User training 

Focus on business, not just technical



Critical

Management reporting requirements 



May need to add query and reporting tools

Technological challenges 

Data conversion



Interface development 17

18

CASE

19

FoxMeyer versus Dow Chemical 



FoxMeyer 

Project went over budget because of new client



Implemented two new systems at same time



Technical issues with the ERP software



No open communications



Unrealistic expectations on ROI

Dow 

Had project implementation problems



Dow had strong leadership and project champion



Was able to adjust scope and maintain control



Fostered open communications 20

Featured Article: FoxMeyer’s Project Was a Disaster. Was the Company Too Aggressive or Was It Misled?



Was FoxMeyer misled?



What strategies could have been put into place to avoid the project disaster?



What business misjudgments occurred?



Was FoxMeyer’s failure due to technology failure or business failure?

21

Featured Article: FoxMeyer’s Project Was a Disaster. Was the Company Too Aggressive or Was It Misled?, continued



Nation’s fourth largest pharmaceutical distributor 

1990s engaged in enterprise-wide software and warehouse automation project



Filed Chapter 11 in 1996 

Claimed to be misled by SAP, Anderson Consulting, Pinnacle Automation 

Claimed vendors oversold capabilities



Computer integration problems topped $100 million



Vendors blame management

22

Featured Article: FoxMeyer’s Project Was a Disaster. Was the Company Too Aggressive or Was It Misled?, continued



Background 

FoxMeyer had orders for over 300,000 items per day, anticipated much growth 

Processing hundreds of thousands of transactions each day



Old system was Unisys mainframe



Wanted scalable client/server system



Tested SAP’s software on both DEC and HP against benchmarks



Implementations scheduled by Andersen for 18 months 

Modules to be implemented in 2-3 months 

Unrealistic – could take up to 12 months



All modules fast-tracked 23

Featured Article: FoxMeyer’s Project Was a Disaster. Was the Company Too Aggressive or Was It Misled?, continued



Two systems for most important business systems 

SAP supplied the accounting and manufacturing software 



Claims volume was issue

Warehouse system from McHugh Software International 

Purchased through Pinnacle 

Pinnacle also supplied some hardware



Added complexities to project



Functional holes in systems

24

Featured Article: FoxMeyer’s Project Was a Disaster. Was the Company Too Aggressive or Was It Misled?, continued



FoxMeyer strategies 

High volume



Low price



Anticipated savings from new computer system



Wanted to win market share by further price-cutting



Hoped new system would be more efficient, but did not improve processes

25

Featured Article: FoxMeyer’s Project Was a Disaster. Was the Company Too Aggressive or Was It Misled?, continued



FoxMeyer got major new client 

Out of capacity of mainframe



Issues on balancing system traffic



Unisys-based management system eventually failed



Information wasn’t being received timely



FoxMeyer suffered losses in transferring inventory to new centers



Customers received incorrect shipments



New customer didn’t deliver expected volume



FoxMeyer overspent 26

Summary, continued  Success 

 

in ERP projects includes factoring in

Consideration of customizations, use of external consultants, management of supplier relationships, establishing metrics, and change management Project-related concerns Technological changes, user training, and management requirements

27

Related Documents


More Documents from "premdyl"