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T.O. business adopts SAP Business All-in-One

T.O. business adopts SAP Business All-in-One

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 06 Nov 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Store fixtures vendor Wilson Display underwent a 90-day implementation of a new manufacturing system in what was an unusually complex business environment for a small enterprise. The risk of an accelerated implementation and why SMEs are resistant to technology change

A speedy implementation is key for any project that is time and materials-based, said Nir Orbach, CEO with Illumiti. “Really, the cost of the implementation is driven by how quickly we can get to the end result,” said Orbach.

The 90-day implementation period was met through a combination of ASAP Focus, an SAP methodology for fast deployment, and additional direction from Illumiti that focused attention on areas that will offer competitive differentiation and adoption of best practices on all other processes, said Orbach.

But the biggest challenge with any quick implementation is change management, and Wilson Display was no exception, noted Orbach.

A 12 to 14- week implementation is not a long time to absorb change “and the implications to the business of replacing multiple systems with one integrated solution,” he said.

Illumiti addressed change management at Wilson Display with pre- and post-implementation systems training.

But resistance to changing how an SME traditionally adopts technology is lessening, said Conrad Mandala, vice-president for small to medium enterprises with Toronto-based SAP Canada Inc.

The economy has a lot to do with that new push towards greater investment in IT infrastructures in order to compete, evidenced by an unexpected expansion in SAP’s customer pipelines this year, said Mandala. “Our pipeline is as big as it has ever been,” he said.

Part of the resistance up till now towards packaged IT offerings versus the dispersed and siloed systems approach, said Mandala, is the comfort in running a small business on Microsoft Office documents. 

“When I’m asked who my biggest competitor is in the ERP marketplace I say very quickly that it’s Microsoft Excel,” said Mandala.

But Mandala admits that SAP’s presence in the large enterprise space contributed to the image of the vendor only toiling in that space, causing many SMEs to turn away. But SAP has put effort into changing that in the past 18 months, he said.










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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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