How The Enterprise System Works
How The Enterprise System Works
If a sales representative places an order for tire rims, for example, the system verifies the
customer’s credit limit, schedules the shipment, identifies the best shipping route, and reserves
the necessary items from inventory. If inventory stock were insufficient to fill the order, the
system schedules the manufacture of more rims, ordering the needed materials and components
from suppliers. Sales and production forecasts are immediately updated. General ledger and
corporate cash levels are automatically updated with the revenue and cost information from the
order. Users could tap into the system and find out where that particular order was at any minute.
Management could obtain information at any point in time about how the business was
operating. The system could also generate enterprise-wide data for management analyses of
product cost and profitability.
Enterprise Software
Enterprise software is built around thousands of predefined business processes that reflect best
practices. Table 9.1 describes some of the major business processes supported by enterprise
software.
Companies implementing this software would have to first select the functions of the system they
wished to use and then map their business processes to the predefined business processes in the
software. (One of our Learning Tracks shows how SAP enterprise software handles the
procurement process for a new piece of equipment.)
A firm would use configuration tables provided by the software manufacturer to tailor a
particular aspect of the system to the way it does business. For example, the firm could use these
tables to select whether it wants to track revenue by product line, geographical unit, or
distribution channel. If the enterprise software does not support the way the organization does
business, companies can rewrite some of the software to support the way their business processes
work.
However, enterprise software is unusually complex, and extensive customization may degrade
system performance, compromising the information and process integration that are the main
benefits of the system. If companies want to reap the maximum benefits from enterprise
software, they must change the way they work to conform to the business processes defined by
the software.
To implement a new enterprise system, Tasty Baking Company identified its existing business
processes and then translated them into the business processes built into the SAP ERP software it
had selected. To ensure it obtained the maximum benefits from the enterprise software, Tasty
Baking Company deliberately planned for customizing less than 5 percent of the system and
made very few changes to the SAP software itself. It used as many tools and features that were
already built into the SAP software as it could. SAP has more than 3,000 configuration tables for
its enterprise software.