Enterprise Resource Computing: M P Sebastian Professor IIM Kozhikode
Enterprise Resource Computing: M P Sebastian Professor IIM Kozhikode
Enterprise Resource Computing: M P Sebastian Professor IIM Kozhikode
General Instructions
All schedules and report formats (for projects/ case discussion, etc) are expected to be followed. Be in the class in time (in any case, not later than 5 minutes). Beverages, use of mobile phones, etc are discouraged in the class room. Laptops/ tablets are allowed in the class for case/ project presentations only (presentation slides would be shared). Every student is expected to take part proactively in the class sessions/ presentations. Non-compliance may have performance implications.
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Business Software challenges Basic concepts of ERP Risks and Benefits with ERP ERP Architecture ERP Market Place ERP Vendor selection ERP Implementation ERP Maintenance ERP Project Management eSCM, eCRM On-demand ERP.
Course Plan
Components Class Participation Quizzes (2) Case discussion Project End Term Exam Weightage (%) 10% 15% 15% 20% 40%
Text Book 1. Motiwalla L.F., and Thompson J. 2009. Enterprise Systems for Management, Pearson Education, New Delhi. Additional Readings 1. Alexis Leon, Enterprise Resource Planning, 2/e, Tata McGraw-Hill, New Delhi, 2008. 2. Monk and Wagner., Concepts in Enterprise Resource Planning, 3/e, Cengage, Boston, 2009.
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Evaluation Components
Class Participation: 10%
Attendance- 5% Class discussion- 5%
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Project: 20%
The project (group of 5 members, total 12 groups) involves in the analysis of the existing information management/ERP solution of a company based on the learning from this course. The project is expected to identify the merits, limitations and risks of the existing information management/ERP system and propose strategies and solutions to meet the current and future challenges for the company (the topic to be finalized latest by 20th June, 2013). The project requires an interim report (deadline: 1st July 2013 in softcopy), a final report (draft hard copy to be submitted at least 1 day before the presentation), and a presentation (for 30 minutes). 21st August 2013 is the deadline for submitting the corrected final report (in hard copy & softcopy - about 20 pages, follow the format of a standard project report).
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Group members could be assigned broad perspectives to represent, or asked to speak for the various stake-holders in the case study
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Session Plan
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Session Plan
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Class Schedule
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Class Schedule
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Class Schedule
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Class Schedule
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The IS role is to process data into information using information technology, business processes, and people resources. Information Technology is a component of Information Systems.
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Role of IS In an Enterprise
Business organizations today are very complex.
This is due to an increased layer of management hierarchy and an increased level of coordination across departments.
Management Pyramid
Three levels: strategic, middle or mid management, and operational.
At the strategic level, functions are highly unstructured and resources are undefined At the operational level, functions are highly structured and resources are predefined. The mid-management level is somewhere in between depending on the hierarchy and organizational size.
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Information needs
The quantitative requirements are much less at the strategic level than they are at the operational level; The quality of information needed at the top requires sophisticated processing and presentation.
The CEO of a company may need a report that quickly states how a particular product is performing in the market vis-a-vis other company products over a period of time and in different geographical regions. Such a report is not useful to an operations manager, who is more interested in the detailed sales report of all products he or she is responsible for in the last month.
The pyramid therefore suggests that managers at the higher level require a smaller quantity of information, but that it is a very high quality of information. On the other hand, the operational-level manager requires more detailed information and does not require a high-level of analysis or aggregation as do their strategic counterparts. Todays information systems are designed to serve these varied organizational requirements.
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Enterprise Software
Enterprise level software aims to improve the enterprise's productivity and efficiency by providing business logic support functionality. Normally, large enterprises attempt to implement enterprise software that models the entire business enterprise
Due to the cost of building or buying the software
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Insourced
Outsourced
On demand
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Enterprise Software
Software used in enterprises
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online shopping and online payment processing interactive product catalogue automated billing systems security, content management IT service management customer relationship management resource planning business intelligence HR management manufacturing application integration
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Human resources
payroll, training, benefits, recruiting, diversity management
Manufacturing
Engineering, bill of materials, work orders, scheduling, capacity, workflow management, quality control, cost management, manufacturing process, manufacturing projects, manufacturing flow, activity based costing, Product lifecycle management
Project management
Costing, billing, time and expense, performance units, activity management
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