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SAP Canada executives reflect on 20th anniversary

SAP Canada executives reflect on 20th anniversary

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 25 May 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

SAP Canada's top executives discuss business strategies and solutions in a roundtable discussion with media yesterday.

Economic downturns also expose problems that need to be changed, according to Raihan. “The good times mask a lot of process issues, so now when the good times have evaporated and times are tough, companies are looking at what I call ‘non-traditional’ ways of driving value,” he said.

Canadian cargo airline Cargojet Inc. is SAP Canada’s latest client. The company, which started in 2001, reports $205.7 million in revenue and transports 750,000 lbs. of cargo every business night.

Cargojet had financial software that worked, but with increased regulatory requirements, the company needed a platform that would shorten the amount of time to do financial reporting, said Anju Virmani, CIO of Cargojet.

One of the attractions to SAP’s solution was the availability of best practices, she said. “With fast growth, we didn’t have time to put best practices into place.”

Cargojet is a typical example of an SME business that has a relatively small IT infrastructure, but needs almost the exact same services and solutions as a large enterprise, said Mandala.

Key aspects of SAP software currently include functionality for 24 industries, the ability to implement the software in a modular fashion and high configurability, Aboud pointed out.

One of the most “innovative and revolutionary” products SAP has ever announced, according to Aboud, is SAP BusinessObjects Explorer.

“You can type in a Google-like natural language query and within a sub-second you get a response whether you have one million records or 100 million records or 500 million records,” he said.

One benefit is the ability to quickly solve boardroom debates. “All they have is reports that were done weeks ago. This thing you can bring into the boardroom, ask the question and get the answer,” he said.

According to a recent business magazine survey, most executives make business decisions based on gut feel and when they make bad decisions, 75 per cent of the time those bad decisions were based on insufficient information, said Andreas Hofer, solution advisor with SAP.

With Explorer, executives can ask for information instantly and not bother IT for a report, Hofer pointed out.

More than half the world’s business transactions occur on SAP systems, said Aboud.

SAP systems are used to conduct transactions for 40 million barrels of oil per day, $330 million in retail goods per day, 50 million bank accounts, defense forces across 107 countries, 54 million annual healthcare patients in the U.S., 80 per cent of large utilities in Canada, 75 per cent of beer production worldwide and 65 per cent of annual worldwide chocolate production.

SAP is “in the business of being responsible,” he said.










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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.
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