Enterprise resource planning (ERP) is a category of business-management software—typically a suite of integrated applications

Enterprise resource planning (ERP)

It is a category of business-management software—typically a suite of integrated applications—that an organization can use to collect, store, manage and interpret data from many business activities

ERP Major Consisting

Enterprise resource planning (ERP)including Product Planning (PP), Cost Planning (CP), Manufacturing Product (MP) or Service Delivery, Marketing and Sales, Inventory Management (MSI), Shipping and Payment (SP)

Business process management (BPM)

Business process management (BPM) is a field in operations management that focuses on improving corporate performance by managing and optimising a company's business processes.[1] It can therefore be described as a "process optimization process." It is argued that BPM enables organizations to be more efficient, more effective and more capable of change than a functionally focused, traditional hierarchical management approach.[2] These processes can impact the cost and revenue generation of an organization.

Business activity monitoring (BAM)

Business activity monitoring (BAM) is software that aids in monitoring of business activities, as those activities are implemented in computer systems. The term was originally coined by analysts at Gartner, Inc.[1] and refers to the aggregation, analysis, and presentation of real-time information about activities inside organizations and involving customers and partners.

Core Business Processes

ERP provides an integrated view of core business processes, often in real-time, using common databases maintained by a database management system. ERP systems track business resources—cash, raw materials, production capacity—and the status of business commitments: orders, purchase orders, and payroll. The applications that make up the system share data across various departments (manufacturing, purchasing, sales, accounting, etc.) that provide the data.ERP facilitates information flow between all business functions, and manages connections to outside stakeholders.

Saturday, 23 January 2016

Enterprise Planning System


An enterprise planning system covers the methods of planning for the internal and external factors that affect an enterprise.
These factors generally fall under PESTLE. PESTLE refers to political, economic, social, technological, legal and environmental factors. Regularly addressing PESTLE factors falls under operations management. Meanwhile, addressing any event, opportunity or challenge in any one or many factors for the first time will involve project management.
As opposed to enterprise resource planning (ERP), enterprise planning systems have broader coverage. Enterprise planning systems address the resources that are available ornot available to an enterprise and its ability to produce products or resources and/or provide services. It also considers those factors that will positively or negatively affect the firm's ability to run these actions.
Enterprise planning systems will tend to vary and are flexible. These are due to the periodic and adaptive nature of strategy formation. These will also have tactical aspects. Typically, enterprise planning systems are part of a firm's knowledge base or corporate structure whether it formally identified and structured or simply executed these when the need appeared.

Purposes[edit]

An enterprise planning system will address at least three basic purposes to help the enterprise:
  • survive
  • compete
  • thrive

Survival[edit]

An enterprise will plan for tactical moves for quick reaction to the PESTLE threats that affect its survival. For instance, right after Japan's Fukushima nuclear power plant has experienced explosions due to the earthquake and the tsunami that followed, several enterprises (within and outside Japan) have publicly announced their course of actions to address the emergency.

Competition[edit]

Meanwhile, an enterprise will plan for longer term strategic actions to address its competition or improve its competitiveness. For instance, enterprises will plan for, set budgets, implement and use strategic information systems as “information systems or information technology investments can be a source of competitive advantage”.

Opportunities[edit]

Most significantly, an enterprise will plan for using the PESTLE opportunities that are available to it. The profit and benefit motives justify most enterprise planning systems.[3]

Vulnerabilities[edit]

A fourth noteworthy purpose for enterprise planning systems is preparedness against terrorist attacks. As noted in the US Presidential Directive for Critical infrastructure protection, terrorist groups are likely to attack commercial infrastructure for economic sabotage. Enterprises that are providing products or services that are critical to the economic system of a nation are potential targets of extremists.

Strategic planning[edit]

Two major characteristics of EPSs are (1) variety and (2) flexibility. For instance, technological risks abound as even enterprise software are prone to obsolescence and disruptive innovations. Technology is not stagnant. Thus, variety and flexibility work to the advantage of a strategically adaptive or agile enterprise as PESTLE conditions change.
To illustrate this some more, ERP software prescribes processes to realize its promised benefits. However, compliance to these rigid, prescribed processes is often assumed rather than real. In many cases, the ERP software is accepted but the practices within the enterprise reflect inconsistencies with the prescribed processes of the software. In a sense, variety and flexibility in a standard ERP implementation will still manifest in many ways such as "workarounds, shadow systems, various forms of unintended improvisations, and organizational 'drift'" as the knowledge workers in the enterprise adapt to the realities of daily activities.
With changing real world conditions, at least three components can structure enterprise strategy. These are:
  • analytical frameworks for the evaluation of PESTLE data at a given time
  • geographic coverage of operations to manage risks or maximize benefits from macroeconomic forces or government regulations
  • projects integration to efficiently support enterprise operations

Strategy via analysis[edit]

Frameworks of analysis usually drive a firm's strategy. These enable the firm to cope with the actions of its competitors, demands of its consumers or clients, nature of its operating environments, effects of government regulations in the places where it does business, or opportunities that are available among other factors. Here, team planning is crucial. One group will normally specialize in one aspect like operations or government regulations. Managing the interrelation of PESTLE factors requires teamwork in the enterprise planning process.
A sample framework for general analysis is the SWOT analysis. Another is the Balanced Scorecard for performance measurement analysis.

Strategy via geography[edit]

Enterprise strategy can also refer to the mix of structured actions that address the political, economic, social, technological, legal and environmental factors that affect a business or firm. These structured actions can be local, transnational, global or combination of local, transnational or global.[7] Hence, enterprises can have any of the following geographic strategies in their plans:
  • local strategy
  • regional strategy (Europe, North America, Asia-Pacific, etc.)
  • international strategy
  • global strategy
  • global and local strategy

Strategy via projects integration[edit]

Moreover, since management actions occur simultaneously in an enterprise, strategic planners can consider operations or project portfolio management (PPM) as crucial elements in an enterprise's strategic planning guide.
For instance, the need to have strategic priorities across many projects in companies with multiple product development projects have made executives borrow principles from investment portfolio management to better manage the distribution of resources compared with the assessed risks for each project.
Thus, PESTLE factors lead to strategy formation that will enable the enterprise to adapt to changing conditions. Meanwhile, the strategies that have been formed from the analytical framework processes of evaluating an enterprise's condition will lead to detailed plans which could be part of a firm's manual of operations or projects portfolio thrusts for funding and execution across the units or geographic coverage of the enterprise.

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Business process management


Business process management

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Business process management (BPM) is a field in operations management that focuses on improving corporate performance by managing and optimising a company's business processes. It can therefore be described as a "process optimization process." It is argued that BPM enables organizations to be more efficient, more effective and more capable of change than a functionally focused, traditional hierarchical management approach These processes can impact the cost and revenue generation of an organization.
As a policy-making approach, BPM sees processes as important assets of an organization that must be understood, managed, and developed to announce value-added products and services to clients or customers. This approach closely resembles other total quality management or continual improvement process methodologies and BPM proponents also claim that this approach can be supported, or enabled, through technology. As such, many BPM articles and scholars frequently discuss BPM from one of two viewpoints: people and/or technology
Business process management activities can be arbitrarily grouped into categories such as design, modeling, execution, monitoring, and optimization.

Design[edit]

File:Business Process Management Life-Cycle.svg
Process design encompasses both the identification of existing processes and the design of "to-be" processes. Areas of focus include representation of the process flow, the factors within it, alerts and notifications, escalations, standard operating procedures, service level agreements, and task hand-over mechanisms.

Whether or not existing processes are considered, the aim of this step is to ensure that a correct and efficient theoretical design is prepared.
The proposed improvement could be in human-to-human, human-to-system or system-to-system workflows, and might target regulatory, market, or competitive challenges faced by the businesses.
The existing process and the design of new process for various applications will have to synchronise and not cause major outage or process interruption.

Modeling[edit]

Modeling takes the theoretical design and introduces combinations of variables (e.g., changes in rent or materials costs, which determine how the process might operate under different circumstances).
It may also involve running "what-if analysis"(Conditions-when, if, else) on the processes: "What if I have 75% of resources to do the same task?" "What if I want to do the same job for 80% of the current cost?".
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ERP Types & Using Countries


ree and open-source ERP software[edit]


NamePlatform technologySoftware licenseDescriptionCountries of originLast stable release date
Adaxa SuiteJavaGPLIntegrated ERP built on Adempiere/iDempiereAustralia
AdempiereJavaGPLBegan as a fork of CompiereWorldwide2015 (3.8 LTS)
Apache OFBizJavaApache License2.0Business Solutions and Applications Framework from the Apache Software FoundationWorldwide2014 (12.04.04)
CompiereJavaGPL/CommercialAcquired by Consona Corporation in June 2010USA2010 (3.3.0)
DolibarrJavaScriptPHPMySQL orPostgreSQLGPLv3Web application (LAMP based system) to manage small and medium companies, foundations or freelancersWorldwide2016 (3.8.3)
EpesiPHPMySQLMIT licenseA framework for building ERP/CRM applications. Business Information Manager.PolandUSA2015 (1.7.0)
ERP5PythonJavaScriptZope, or MySQLGPLBased on unified model for mid to large size organizationsWorldwide2014 (5.5)
ERPNEXTPython, JavaScript,MariaDBGPLERP for small and medium-size businessesIndia2014 (4.1.0)
FrontAccountingPHP, MySQLGPLv3Web application?2014 (2.3.21)
GNU EnterprisePythonGPLv3Tools to develop interactive database applications?2010
HeliumVJavaAGPLERP for small and medium-size businesses (initial focus has been electronic manufacturing)Austria,Germany ?
iDempiereJavaGPLv2OSGI + AdempiereWorldwide2015 (3.1)
ino erpPHP, JavaScript, MySQLMPLFirst Dynamic Pull Based ERP System;Designed to provide better Inventory TurnSingapore2015 (0.3.1)
JFireJavaEclipseLGPLERP and CRM systemGermany2011 (1.2.0)
KualiERP for higher education institutionsUSA
LedgerSMBPerl, PostgreSQLGPLDouble entry accounting and ERP system (fork of SQL-Ledger)Worldwide2014 (1.4.7)
OpenbravoJavaPostgreSQLOracleOBPL1ERP and Point of Sale (POS) softwareSpain2013 (3.0)
OdooPython, Javascript,PostgreSQLAGPLv3Renamed from OpenERP to reflect that is more than just ERPWorldwide2015 (9.0)
PhreedomPHP, Javascript, MySQLGPLv3Expanded from Phreebooks accounting engineUSA2012 (3.4)
PostbooksC++, JavaScript, PostgreSQLCPALAccounting, CRM and ERPUSA2014 (4.5.0)
SQL-LedgerPerl, PostgreSQLGPLDouble entry accounting and ERP systemCanada2014 (3.0.6)
TrytonPythonGTK+GPLv3Originally forked from TinyERP, cleaned-up code base with continuous update/migration path?2015 (3.8)
WebERPPHP, MySQLGPLv2LAMP-based systemPakistan2015 (4.12.2)
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Accounting software


Accounting software describes a type of application software that records and processes accounting transactions within functional modules such as accounts payableaccounts receivablepayroll, and trial balance. It functions as an accounting information system. It may be developed in-house by the organization using it, may be purchased from a third party, or may be a combination of a third-party application software package with local modifications. Accounting software may be on-line based, accessed anywhere at anytime with any device which is Internet enabled, or may be desktop based. It varies greatly in its complexity and cost.[1]
The market has been undergoing considerable consolidation since the mid-1990s, with many suppliers ceasing to trade or being bought by larger groups.

Modules[edit]

Accounting software is typically composed of various modules, different sections dealing with particular areas of accounting. Among the most common are:[citation needed]
Core modules
Non-core modules[citation needed]
  • Debt collection—where the company tracks attempts to collect overdue bills (sometimes part of accounts receivable)
  • Electronic payment processing
  • Expense—where employee business-related expenses are entered
  • Inquiries—where the company looks up information on screen without any edits or additions
  • Payroll—where the company tracks salary, wages, and related taxes
  • Reports—where the company prints out data
  • Timesheet—where professionals (such as attorneys and consultants) record time worked so that it can be billed to clients
  • Purchase requisition—where requests for purchase orders are made, approved and tracked
  • Reconciliation—compares records from parties at both sides of transactions for consistency
  • Drill down
  • Journals
  • Departmental accounting
  • Support for value added taxation
  • Calculation of statutory holdback
Note that vendors may use differing names for these modules.

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Enterprise resource planning (ERP)


Enterprise resource planning (ERP) is a category of business-management software—typically a suite of integrated applications—that an organization can use to collect, store, manage and interpret data from many business activities, including:
ERP provides an integrated view of core business processes, often in real-time, using common databases maintained by a database management system. ERP systems track business resources—cash, raw materialsproduction capacity—and the status of business commitments: orders, purchase orders, and payroll. The applications that make up the system share data across various departments (manufacturing, purchasing, sales, accounting, etc.) that provide the data.[1] ERP facilitates information flow between all business functions, and manages connections to outside stakeholders.[2]
Enterprise system software is a multibillion-dollar industry that produces components that support a variety of business functions. IT investments have become the largest category of capital expenditure in United States-based businesses over the past[which?] decade. Though early ERP systems focused on large enterprises, smaller enterprises increasingly use ERP systems.[3][need quotation to verify]
The ERP system is considered a vital organizational tool[by whom?] because it integrates varied organizational systems and facilitates error-free transactions and production. However, developing an ERP system differs from traditional system development.[4] ERP systems run on a variety of computer hardware and network configurations, typically using a database as an information repository
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