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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

Said Dave Root, CFO with the Guelph-based training company Eagle’s Flight: “They don’t want ‘systems’—they want to help their customers.” When it comes to a successful ERP implementation, introducing such a nitty-gritty application requires a well-rounded IT professional and an IT-professional-friendly user.

To make sure that the implementation goes smoothly, Bennetto had her users and staff almost switch places. IT staff were required to go on the floor and in the field to tinker with the hearing aids, sell batteries, and interact with the customers so as to understand the setting in which the users would be using the application. She said, “This way, they don’t just think it’s usable. My IT staff become like system integrators that work together with developers and customers.” They are also trained in how to speak so that users will understand.

(Language definitely comes into play during an ERP implementation, said Bushell: “You don’t talk collaboration and business intelligence. They want, ‘How do I find stuff? How do I get customer information?’”)

And, in order to understand their IT support during the implementation and develop a healthier relationship, viewing parties of the IT-based sitcom The IT Crowd were hosted (with beer and food) at Island Hearing. Said Bennetto: “This shows that we’re not scary—we’re not ogres!”

Even with these ERP implementations under their belt, they’re already looking to the future. Quentin Martin, a strategic account manager with the Burlington, Ontario-based Microsoft partner and Dynamics GP consultancy Tectura, for one, is excited about the integration of Microsoft Office Word capabilities built into the “software plus service” offering, Microsoft Dynamics CRM Live.

He said, “We’ve been seeing separate systems for years, but the more they do (integrate their applications with one another), the better it gets.”










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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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