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Enterprise resource planning

Enterprise Resource Planning as a term derives from Material Resource Planning. Enterprise resource planning systems (ERP) are management information systems that integrate and automate many of the business practices associated with the operations or production aspects of a company. These typically include manufacturing, logistics, distribution, inventory, shipping, invoicing, and accounting. Enterprise Resource Planning or ERP software can aid in the control of many business activities, like sales, delivery, billing, production, inventory Management, and Human Resource Management.

They are often called back office systems indicating that customers and the general public are not directly involved. This is contrasted with front office systems like customer relationship management systems that deal directly with the customer.

ERPs are cross-functional and enterprise wide. All functional departments that are involved in operations or production are integrated in one system. In addition to manufacturing, warehousing, and shipping, this would include accounting, human resources, marketing, and strategic management.

In the early days of business computing, companies used to write their own software to control their business processes. This is an expensive approach. Since many of these processes occur in common across various types of businesses, common reusable software may provide cost-effective alternatives to custom sotware. Thus some ERP software caters to a wide range of industries from service sectors like software vendors and hospitals to manufacturing industries and even to government departments.

Implementation

Because of their wide scope of application within the firm, ERP software systems rely on some of the largest bodies of software ever written. Implementing such a complex and huge software system in a company usually involves an army of analysts, programmers, and users, and often comprises a multi-million dollar/yen/euro project in itself for bigger companies, especially transnationals.

Enterprise resource planning systems are often closely tied to supply chain management systems. Supply chain management software can extend the ERP system to include links with suppliers.

To implement ERP systems, companies often seek the help of an ERP vendor or of third-party consulting companies. Consulting in ERP involves two levels, namely business consulting and technical consulting. A business consultant studies an organisation's current business processes and matches them to the corresponding processes in the ERP system, thus 'configuring' the ERP system to the organisation's needs. Technical consulting often involves programming. Most ERP vendors allow changing their software to suit the business needs of their customer.

Advantages

The benefits from enterprise resource planning are claimed to include:

Disadvantages

The limitations and pitfalls of the enterprise resource planing are claimed to be:

If the ERP system is integrated with a supply chain management system, other potential problems include:

ERP vendors

Vendors of popular ERP software include : J.D. Edwards, SAP R/3, Baan, Oracle Applications, PeopleSoft, Lawson.

For over a year (since when?) several ERP Systems are available for free as Open Source Systems under a royalty-free Open Source License. The packages currently available in stable productionized versions include Compiere and SQL Ledger. A new ERP System ZERP is also in rapid development. As in the case of software from vendors, end-users can customize these systems to suit their own needs. ERP5 http://www.erp5.org is yet another GPL'd system worth considering.

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