Alcan IT Management Systems Analysis
Alcan's growth as a global conglomerate in the aluminum and metal fabrication industry follows a similar trajectory of many companies whose business models forced rapid, highly distributed business models at the expense Information Technologies (IT) management systems consistency and performance. Alcan's IT management systems and underlying infrastructure have become balkanized as the company has grown into four separately functioning and highly autonomous business units. In evaluating the key success factors of successful Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) implementations in multisite locations, the most critical factor overall is creating a unified, well synchronized system of record across all ERP instances (Hanafizadeh, Gholami, Dadbin, Standage, 2010). A second key success factor for multisite ERP implementations is the ability to negotiate a very low level of maintenance pricing with ERP vendors in the form of multisite or use-based pricing instead of the traditional per-seat model (Law, Chen, Wu, 2010). A third key success factor in the implementing multisite ERP systems is the ability to create a shared set of analytics, financial reporting metrics and measured of shared collaboration performance across all sites (Nour, Mouakket, 2011). Alcan has none of these best practices in effect during the time periods of the case study. They are conversely creating very high costs of maintenance for themselves, paying $500M in software costs and fees to SAP, tolerating up to 400 systems dedicated to just pricing alone, and attempting to manage well over 1,000 systems throughout the four divisions. As the company continues to grow and attempts to move into new markets where unifying all four divisions is necessary, they will find their IT systems are more of a liability than an asset in their current configuration. Coupled with the escalating costs of keeping each of the four divisions under maintenance with SAP, the ongoing high costs of integration, there is the threat of compliance violations to industry safety and quality requirements in addition to Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) financial reporting requirements. All of these factors taken together point to the need for more effective IT management strategy that takes into account the critical success factors for ERP system integration in a highly decentralized organizational structure. The intent of this analysis is to evaluate the pros and cons of the current Alcan IT management system, in addition to evaluating the pros and cons of the new Alcan IT enterprise architecture as proposed by Robert Ouelette. The final section of the paper discusses if moving from the current Alcan IT management system to a new structure is advisable or not.
What are the pros and cons of the current Alcan IT management system?
Throughout the case analysis of Alcan, it is apparent that Robert Ouelette is vitally concerned about the performance of procurement and strategic sourcing across each of the four divisions. He is concerned there is massive duplication of effort and this is costing the company significantly both in dollars and lost opportunity cost. The consolidation of ERP instances to gain economies of scale in shared resource areas including supply chain management, sourcing and procurement has consistently shown to also increase quality and performance levels across manufacturing (Seddon, 2009). Quality and cost performance are the arguments for typically consolidating the purchasing, procurement and supply chain functions of a company with a distributed structure. Yet when the advantages or pros of having a highly distributed IT management structure are taken into account for Alcan, this differentiated approach to purchasing and procurement is actually a strength. Each of the Alcan divisions has significantly different sourcing and supply chain requirements, in addition to drastically different phases and speeds of product lifecycles. Given how diverse the product, service and new product development needs are across each of the four divisions, it is defensible to have a separate supply chain and sourcing system for each (Venugopal, Rao, 2011). This strategy of segregating sourcing and supply chain management is most likely the catalyst of the myriad of pricing systems, 400 at last count. It's an advantage to have the separate procurement and supply chain management systems, yet Alcan is paying a heavy price in terms of software maintenance costs and potential economies of scale.
A second key advantage or argument in favor of keeping the existing Alcan IT management system is the ability to more precisely align analytics, metrics and key performance indicators to the specific needs of each business unit. The continual investment in division-specific analytics, key performance indicators (KPIs) and metrics of performance on a divisional basis leads to greater overall tacit and implicit knowledge...
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