Enterprise Applications--The Genesis and Future, Revisited
Part Two: 1990s--Enterprise Resource Planning
P.J. Jakovljevic -
4/1/2004
Enterprise
Applications—The Genesis and Future, Revisited
Part Two: 1990s—Enterprise Resource Planning
P.J.
Jakovljevic
- April 1, 2004
1990s—Enterprise Resource Planning
Integrated enterprise resource planning (ERP) software solutions became synonymous with competitive advantage, particularly throughout the 1990's. The idea behind ERP systems was to replace "islands of information" with a single, packaged software solution that integrates all traditional enterprise management functions like financials; accounting; payroll; human resource (HR) management; and manufacturing and distribution, and thereby ensure enterprise-wide transaction system coherency. Knowing the history and evolution of ERP within the broader enterprise applications concept is essential to understanding its current use and its future developments. The following is the genesis of enterprise applications by era.
By
the time each functional area of a company had developed its integrated software
program, the need for tightly integrating them became obvious. The next major
shift during the late 1980s and early 1990s was that "time to market" was becoming
increasingly short, as the shift from Fordist' mass production to
nowadays' prevailing mass-customization (see Glossary*)
principles and mindset has irreversibly changed the society and economy standards.
Lead times expected by the market continued to shorten and customers were no
longer satisfied with the service level that was considered world class only
a few years earlier. Also, by the 1980s, competition from Japanese manufacturers
and their philosophy has caused US and West European enterprises to look for
new efficiencies using information technology.
Namely,
customers were demanding to have their products delivered when, where, and how
they wanted them. Companies were therefore compelled to develop and embrace
the philosophies of just in time (JIT) and closer supplier partnerships
as a way to remain competitive. During the same time frame, the cost of
goods sold (COGS) was shifting drastically from labor to purchased materials.
Consequently, planners needed to know materials allocations or finished goods'
available-to-promise (ATP) values, immediately after customer order
entry. On the other hand, buyers needed to know the sales plan several months
in advance in order to negotiate prices for individual materials. Empowerment
of employees was needed to provide the agility that was required to compete
in the market.
Hence,
the need to develop a system with tightly integrated programs that would use
data stored on one common database and would be used enterprise-wide (such as,
actions in one department's program driving actions elsewhere), became the highest
priority for IT professionals. No longer was it tolerable to submit a request
to the IT department and wait several "man-months" of programming time to obtain
this critical information. This common-database, company-wide integrated system
was named enterprise resource planning (ERP), as companies realized
the need to see the entire picture.
This
is Part Two of a six-part note.
Part
One covered developments from the 1960s through the 1980s.
Part
Three will discuss the 2000s.
Parts
Four and Five will discuss ERP evolution.
Part
Six will look at the future.
*There
is a Glossary
for the terms italicized throughout this article.
ERP Defined
APICS
still defines ERP as follows:
"1)
An accounting-oriented information system for identifying and planning the
enterprise-wide resources needed to take, make, ship, and account for customer
orders. An ERP system differs from the typical MRPII system in technical requirements
such as graphical user interface (GUI), relational database management system
(RDBMS), use of fourth-generation language (4GL), and computer-aided software
engineering (CASE) tools in development, client/server architecture, and open-system
portability;
2)
More generally, a method for the effective planning and control of all resources
needed to take, make, ship, and account for customer orders in a manufacturing,
distribution, or service company."
Given many new very recent functional and technological developments, which will be analyzed in other upcoming articles, many may rightly consider certain parts of the above definition as somewhat outdated or not all encompassing. In general, the second part of the definition holds true, given traditional ERP involves software packages that by and large automate and support the processes of the administrative, production, inventory, and product development aspects of an enterprise.
Impact of the PC
Further
on, the cost of technology continued to plummet and the advent of the personal
computer (PC) revolutionized once again the face of business management systems.
At a fast pace, the large inflexible mainframes were replaced by new client/server
technology. The power of these small PCs exceeded the power of the large mainframes
that were routine only a few years earlier. It became possible to run a fully
integrated MRPII system on a small PC. Still, these systems have trickled down
slowly from large to smaller enterprises. Many manufacturing enterprises were
not computerized in the 1980s, which is largely true even nowadays in the segment
consisting of a great number of small workshops that still go by with little
or no computerization at all.
IT, however, gained momentum in the 1990s, when PCs become even cheaper, software more sophisticated, and companies become more amenable to using technology. The changing pace of technology had once again leveraged forward the planning and control systems in recognition of a real business need. In addition, unlike previous evolutions, the ERP software vendors offered these critical business applications also to non-manufacturing companies, which sell "know-how" rather than physical products.
ERP
is far more than just MRPII which runs on a client/server architecture,
given it encompasses all the resource planning for the enterprise including
product design, inventory management, material planning, capacity planning,
quality control, forecasting, budgeting, purchasing, distribution, reporting
tools, and communication systems, to name but a few. These critical business
issues affect not only manufacturing companies but also all companies that desire
to achieve competitiveness by best utilizing their assets, including information.
In other words, ERP systems should help companies become leaner by integrating
the basic transaction programs for all departments, allowing quick access to
timely information. However, ERP inherited MRPII's basic drawbacks, which are
the assumption of infinite capacity and the inflexibility of scheduling dates,
preventing companies from taking full advantage of speedy information flow.
This
concludes Part Two of a six-part note.
Part
One covered developments from the 1960s through the 1980s.
Part
Three will discuss the 2000s.
Parts
Four and Five will discuss ERP evolution.
Part
Six will look at the future.
Sources
and Recommended Further Readings
- ERP:
Tools, Techniques, and Applications for Integrating the Supply Chain. Second
Edition;
Carol A. Ptak, CFPIM, CIRM, and Eli Schragenheim; The St. Lucie Press/APICS
Series on Resource Management; 2nd Edition, 2003
- Selected
Readings in ERP;
APICS Complex Industries SIG, 1999
- Maximizing
Your ERP System: A Practical Guide for Managers;
Dr. Scott Hamilton; McGraw-Hill Trade, 2002
- APICS
Dictionary;
10th Edition