¶ … Small & Medium Enterprises (SME)
Can Gain the Strategic Benefits of ERP
Agility, time-to-market and insights into market dynamics are a few of the many benefits of standardizing the operations of an organization on an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system. Up until about a decade ago, the economics of enterprise software relegated these systems to larger, more diverse and well-capitalized enterprises, with the majority of ERP systems being installed and customized in Fortune 1,000 corporations (Velcu, 2010). These ERP implementations began to be pervasively supported by Service Oriented Architectures (SOA) during the later 1990s and continue throughout today. As SOA architectures have permeated organizations, the lessons learned from a business process re-engineering (BPR), distributed order management and software engineering gains have contributed to the success of Cloud computing in general and Software-as-a-Service specifically (Moore, 2002). In addition, Open Source Software (OSS), Cloud- and SaaS-based ERP systems (Passion for Research, 2012b) and a complete redefining of the economics of enterprise software have taken place. All of these many determinants of enterprise software economics have in turn changed the ERP landscape significantly over the last decade. Today, Small & Medium Enterprises (SME) can afford, via the economics of Cloud computing, to have the same level of functionality enterprise had in the past. SMEs can now can gain the same benefits that Fortune 1,000 companies could only afford in the past. The intent of this analysis is to evaluate these underlying economics of cloud computing, specifically looking at how Open Source Software (OSS) and Cloud computing are re-ordering the economics of enterprise software in addition to discussing the limitations, advantages and disadvantages for SMEs interested in gaining the benefits of ERP systems. Finally, strategies for implementing ERP in SMEs is analyzed and presented including an assessment of a successful Cloud implementation.
How OSS and Cloud Computing Are Making ERP Systems
Accessible to SMEs
The economic foundations of enterprise software are going through a disruptive level of change due to the impact of OSS technologies and their associated pricing models, combined with the myriad of pricing models of Cloud-based and Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) technologies. For purposes of this analysis, Cloud-based technologies will refer to the entire technology stack of Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS), Platform-as-a-Service (Paas) and at the presentation or application layer of the Cloud Model, Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) (Wolfe, 2005). Many of the components in the Cloud technology stack described are based on OSS components and software, which significantly drops the overall cost of launching a company offering SaaS-based applications. The foundations of the very profitable Amazon Web Services (AWS) initiative is predicated on the integration of the IaaS, PaaS and SaaS components into a cohesive, enterprise-ready technology stack capable of supporting globally-deployed applications including ERP systems. NetSuite initially launched its core applications on the AWS platform as a means to test how this SaaS-based ERP system would perform (Koslowski, Struker, 2011).
The combining of OSS-based components in the Cloud-based technology stack, rapid development of SaaS-based, enterprise-level applications and the continual pace of innovation in SaaS-based ERP systems are together drastically re-ordering the economics of enterprise software sales and service cycles. In the past, when only licensed ERP systems were sold, the purchasing cycles were very lengthy and complex. As ERP systems when sold in licensed configurations only would average well over $2M (Moore, 2002), typically companies would need to pay for them as part of their Capital Expense (CAPEX) budget (Moore, 2002). CAPEX expenditures often had to be approved by a company board of directors, and would often go through very lengthy review cycles. The result is that a typical ERP system, while budgeted for $2M in software alone, would end up costing up to 10 times that in services and customization fees (Nah, Delgado, 2006). The costs and time constraints of system integration, along with a lack of senior management commitment in many implementations would lead to these large-scale implementations often failing (Rothenberger, Srite, 2009). Licensed, on-site software was a business model that was very vulnerable to disruptive innovation. Its many limitations made it a perfect target for the economics of Cloud computing in general and the exceptional versatility of pricing and costing that SaaS-based application delivery provides. The greatest impact OSS-based technologies have had as part of the Cloud computing technology stack is to force a completely different set of purchasing dynamics into enterprises. No longer do companies have to pay for software using CAPEX-based expenses. The advent of the SaaS-based model of delivering enterprise systems in general and...
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