Where Is ERP Headed (Or Better, Where Should It Be Headed)?
Part 1: Functional Scope and Vertical Focus
P.J. Jakovljevic -
4/18/2001
Part
1: Functional Scope and Vertical Focus
P.J.
Jakovljevic
-
April
18, 2001
Executive
Summary
A typical ERP system now offers broad functional coverage nearing the
best-of-breed capabilities; vertical industry extensions; a robust technical
architecture; training, documentation, implementation and process design
tools; product enhancements; global support and an extensive list of software,
services and technology partners. While it is not a system-in-a-box yet,
the gap between its desired and actual features is becoming smaller every
day.
ERP
vendors, on the other hand, are not doing so well, possibly because they
have been busy developing, acquiring, or bundling new functionality so
that their packages go beyond the traditional realms of finance, materials
planning & management, and human resources.
Users'
visions of ERP are evolving from tactical to strategic, and users are
no longer willing to choose between integration and function. Within the
next two years, ERP will be redefined as a platform for enabling e-business
globally.
Therefore,
users need to be aware of the trends within the ERP market so they can
take into account all the necessary factors when making an ERP software
selection: product functionality, product technology requirements, vendor
corporate strategy, and vendor corporate viability. Even more important,
however is that the users' need to understand their e-business requirements
and critical business processes can never be overemphasized. Not knowing
their present business state of affairs as well as their strategic intent
and direction will disqualify any future ERP system implementation from
being a success.
About
This Note
This is a four part note, which each part covering two of the eight trends
we have identified. Each part contains links to the preceding parts. The
trends covered in each part are:
| Part
1: |
- ERP
Functional Scope Expansion
-
Sharper Vertical Focus
|
| Part
2: |
- Flexibility,
Agility & Interoperability Enabled by Adaptable Architecture
- Web-Basing
of ERP Systems
|
| Part
3: |
- Provision
of e-Business Components
- Mid-Market
Shakeout
|
| Part
4: |
- Advent
of Application Hosting Services
- New
Pricing Models
|
Introduction
The growth and heydays of ERP throughout the most of the 90s has been
a direct result of the fierce global competition, short product life cycles,
highly distributed operations, and information-driven management that
characterize today's business environment. The vast majority of companies
have always hoped to purchase an information system as a product, not
as a collection of technologies, components and services. Leading ERP
vendors have been relatively successful so far because they have been
attempting to build such a product.
A
typical ERP system now offers broad functional coverage nearing the best-of-breed
capabilities; vertical industry extensions; a robust technical architecture;
training, documentation, implementation and process design tools; product
enhancements; global support and an extensive list of software, services
and technology partners. While it is not a system-in-a-box yet, the gap
between its desired and actual features is becoming smaller every day.
ERP
vendors, on the other hand, are not doing so well. The worsening plight
of most ERP vendors is mostly attributable to the Y2K-problem caused market
slowdown that started in the fourth quarter of 1998 and continued in full
force throughout 1999 and 2000. Indications of it winding down finally
surfaced late in 2000. Particularly affected was license revenue, and
the market (with some honorable exceptions) was dramatically less profitable
during 1999 and 2000 than in 1998, measured in the total raw $ net income.
We
believe that the continued ERP market slowdown during the last 24 months
was in part attributable to the following factors:
- The historical
growth in sales of ERP applications has come from large, Fortune 1000
multinational corporations. This market has been highly penetrated (over
70%), and new, large-scale back-office implementations in the F1000
customer base have all but stalled.
- The relatively
untapped Small-to-Medium Enterprises (SME) market has been cautious
about starting new projects due to the bad publicity caused by a large
number of unsuccessful ERP implementations in the past. This fear has
been additionally aggravated by the need to integrate disparate systems,
given that currently no single vendor can offer a complete end-to-end
solution (from supplier to end customer), despite some ERP vendors'
marketing rhetoric.
- The ongoing
technology paradigm shift from Client/Server to the Internet created
uncertainty about investing in traditional Client/Server technologies,
which are still present (however in an obfuscated manner) among leading
ERP players' offerings.
Consequently,
we believe that the eight outlined trends in the ERP market are the direct
consequence of vendors' attempts to:
- Resolve
current ERP functional and/or technological deficiencies,
- Expand
software sales both within their existing and potential customer bases,
particularly in the lower-end of the market, by allaying the ERP complexity
and costs perceptions, and/or
- Harness
the Internet, which has been reshaping the enterprise applications market
by making possible unprecedented visibility and information sharing
both within an enterprise and between business partners.
1
- ERP Functional Scope Expansion
ERP has entered another step in its evolution. While ERP packages traditionally
excelled at combining financial control with multi-plant manufacturing
& distribution coordination, they generally lacked extended supply-chain
planning (beyond the four walls of the enterprise) and flexible execution
functionalities that can enable one business process today but change
rapidly to handle tomorrow's new models. They were also often found lacking
when it comes to delivering special financial features such as robust
budgeting or international consolidation.
The
new ERP generation of products is more customer-focused and extends beyond
the enterprise through e-commerce interaction and collaboration with business
partners. The key to the Internet-driven, dynamic trade environment is
agility, which is where traditional ERP packages have stumbled in the
past.
Early
ERP adopters discovered to their dismay that implementing these systems
was only the first step toward creating a competitive information technology
infrastructure. They and new users alike are now looking for significantly
more comprehensive functionality - from advanced planning and scheduling
(APS) and manufacturing execution systems (MES), to sales force automation
(SFA) and customer relationship management (CRM), to business intelligence
(BI) and business-to-consumers (B2C) and business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce
tools - and demanding that they be integrated into their ERP backbone.
Users' visions of ERP are evolving from tactical to strategic, and users
are no longer willing to choose between integration and function. ERP
users who have gone live in the past three years have been making purchases
of extended ERP products (bolt-ons) to provide tangible ROI for their
multi-million-dollar investment.
Consequently,
during the last three years, the functional perimeter of ERP systems began
an expansion into its adjacent markets, such as supply chain management
(SCM), customer relationship management (CRM), product data management
(PDM), manufacturing executions systems (MES), business intelligence (BI)/data
warehousing (DW), and e-Business. The major ERP vendors have been busy
developing, acquiring, or bundling new functionality so that their packages
go beyond the traditional realms of finance, materials planning & management,
and human resources.
Implications
of This Trend
We
believe that, within the next two years, ERP will be redefined as a platform
for enabling e-business globally. Originally focused on automating internal
processes of an enterprise, ERP systems will include customer and supplier-centric
processes as well. The conclusive evidence of this redefinition is the
move of all major ERP players into CRM, e-commerce and SCM applications
(either through acquisitions, partnerships or internal development). As
a result of this trend, we predict that within the next three years, over
70% of the license revenue of the SCM market and over 50% of the license
revenue of the CRM market will come from current ERP vendors (70% probability).
Currently, these figures are estimated to be less than 30%.
Multi-national
financial capabilities (including support for the Euro), advanced planning
and scheduling (APS), product configurators via the Web, supply chain
management (SCM), customer relationship management (CRM), e-Commerce,
business intelligence (BI), document management, and component-based (object-oriented)
architecture will remain the order winners for the next two years. After
that period of time, we believe these functional and technological features
will be demoted into commodities (order qualifiers). During the same period
of time, the offerings of some leading ERP vendors will become so close
to best-of-breed capabilities that most users will not need to look for
multiple vendors' offering.
What
will differentiate the leaders from the rest of the ERP pack will be the
breadth, depth and diversity of plant-level and distribution centers requirements
(e.g., flow-based manufacturing, work instruction, dynamic dispatching,
etc.). Supply chain planning functionality will have to extend to the
shop floor and/or distribution center level, whereby manufacturing and
distribution functions will become intermingled.
2
- Sharper Vertical Focus
While competitive costs (low and flexible software license pricing and
implementation costs) and outstanding global service (proven fast implementations
and customer loyalty) will remain important requirements for success,
particularly in the lower end of the market, vertical focus will be the
key factor for survival.
Vendors
that will weather the next three years will have focused their business
and product on particular industries, preferably those with a current
low penetration (e.g., healthcare, insurance, utilities, transportation,
government institutions, food & beverage, chemicals, pharmaceuticals,
etc.), instead of a more generic, horizontal approach. Winning ERP products
will demonstrate deep industry functionality and tight integration with
best-of-bread 'bolt-on' products in a particular vertical. This also means
adding sector-specific, fine-grained front-office capabilities such as
billing for utility companies.
Verticalization
can be seen as part of a larger effort by ERP vendors to ease the implementation
of their products. By now, almost everyone in the IT industry has heard
horror stories of ERP implementations that took two or three years and
cost tens of millions of dollars. That happens, in part, because the ERP
packages usually arrive needing to be configured for the business and
the industry entirely from scratch. By configuring parts of the package
in advance for a given industry and circumventing functions not required
in that industry, vendors can shorten and ease the implementation process.
The pre-configuration may be based on the size of the company, the specific
hardware or the vertical market.
Rapid
implementation tools and industry-specific templates add value to the
ERP investment by streamlining the process-modeling phase for fast implementation
and time to return on investment. In fact, software implementation time
reduction is a key element of success in any enterprise-wide technology
project.
Users
have increasingly looked for an ERP system designed for a specific business.
Software that combines industry-specific functionality with the flexibility
to accommodate each company's unique processes goes a long way toward
improving the functional fit and the speed of implementation. This pragmatic
approach helps companies close the gap between system performance expectations
and final results achieved.
Another
advantage lies in the fact that industry-specific, global enterprise solutions
based on open architecture and proven technology standards facilitate
faster integration of companies being acquired as part of a corporate
growth strategy. Namely, while using implementation templates may provide
a company with the 'jump start', these endeavors only support common processes
that are likely emulated by the competition. For differentiation purposes,
however, customers must give advantage to vendors that provide strong
configuration & development tools and that have sound product interoperability
strategies.
Implications
of This Trend
In
addition to core ERP functions, integrated industry-specific applications
can add significant value. Vertical focus indicates that the software
contains industry-specific features and that ERP vendors have certain
industry expertise. Finally, in implementing an industry-specific application,
it is important to ensure that the application provider's implementation
team includes members with in-depth knowledge and experience in that industry.
Vendors geared toward certain industries should have solid integration
skills or strong relationships with systems integrators that have industry-related
expertise. This should significantly streamline implementation time by
eliminating a lengthy vendor or integrator learning curve.
Conclusion
of Part 1
This concludes Part 1 of a four part note on ERP applications trends.
This part covered two trends: ERP functional scope expansion and sharper
vertical focus.
Part
2 covers the challenge ERP vendors face in developing an adaptable
architecture that is flexible, agile, enabled for interoperability, as
well Web-basing ERP systems.
Part
3 covers provision for e-Business components and mid-market shakeout.
Part
4 covers the advent of application hosting services and new pricing
models.