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'We’re not ogres,’ Canadian ERP user insists

'We’re not ogres,’ Canadian ERP user insists

By:  Briony Smith  On: 13 Mar 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Local firms attending Microsoft’s annual Convergence conference discuss efforts to improve the user experience around Dymanics GP and other tools. Tips to describe the business, not the system

ORLANDO—A Canadian panel of Dynamics GP users and partners gathered at the Microsoft Convergence conference this week to discuss how the company’s ease of use and integrated application suite strategies have been playing out in their companies.

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Catherine Bennetto, the IT director of Canada’s biggest hearing aid distributor, the Victoria-based Island Hearing, said that she went with the Dynamics GP for its ease of use. “We wanted to enable and empower users to make their jobs enjoyable,” she said.

“It’s always mostly about user experience,” said Brad Bushell, president of Western Canada’s largest Microsoft business solutions partner, the Vancouver-based RSC Group. “Microsoft balances sophistication with ease of use consistently here.”

Ray Wang, a principal analyst with Forrester Research, agrees, saying, “Microsoft’s business applications are some of the best user experiences, including different personas (RoleTailored design). It’s really engaging for beginners, as it doesn’t matter. GP, NAV, AX—they all look the same (and similar to the other Microsoft products as well) with the ribbons, etc. It’s really easy to change a workflow or process or personalize a screen. They’re really getting down to the user level.”

Then there’s the integration with other Microsoft business applications, such as SharePoint, a tie-in that Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer stressed heavily during his Convergence keynote. “(Dynamics and SharePoint) complement each other, so it cuts down on the learning time. You can use the teamwork, sharing, and document collaboration capabilities and it’s so simple. Getting used to a different look-and-feel is difficult—these are health-care professionals who just want to get up to speed and get back to work,” said Bennetto.

This cross-application capability is a major selling point for his customers, said Bushell. He said that almost all new customers (and most of the existing ones) already have SharePoint installed, anyway. “They can start on GP and then stretch it out, which you couldn’t do with the (other business application companies),” he said. “Especially at the beginning of learning ERP technology, they respond to it as a unified thing. It’s not just ERP or SharePoint—they describe the business, not the system.”

Focusing on the task, business goal, or customer makes tackling a new ERP application less stressful for users, according to Bennetto who said, “We focus on the customer, not the volume of information we have. We were careful in implementing SharePoint and the project-discussing blogs, and had the full support of operations and were careful not to overload the users. An implementation needs the support of the company, so it doesn’t just seem pushed down from IT.”


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Briony Smith Briony Smith is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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