Recognizing that these principles along with their accompanying desired outcomes were created almost six years ago, I started to think what if anything would be changed, added, or deleted if they were written for an ERP implementation today? I would welcome your thoughts, ideas, and suggestions as to how they might be enhanced for the ERP challenges of today.
I. PRINCIPLE: This is a business realignment project with the focus on providing 21st century services to students, faculty and staff as well as providing the technological infrastructure upon which the educational tools and services of tomorrow can be built. Today’s students expect an environment that enables them to find information and to self-manage their experiences with our institutions. Desired outcomes:
- Flexibility in course offerings and scheduling.
- Improved planning and decision making capabilities for classes, HR/Payroll, finance, financial aid, marketing, and program offerings.
- Enhanced reputation for student centric support (24x7 access to virtual business services, their faculty, and essential learning tools).
- Ability to reach benefits, budgets, expenditures, revenue, etc. on-line.
- Ability to quickly adapt to future needs.
- Enable information from data.
- Financial savings in the reduction of existing customization where possible and the elimination of the creation and maintenance of shadow systems.
- An understanding of the real costs versus the perceived value of shadow systems and other third party software.
- Significant reduction in the time to take advantage of features in new software releases.
- Greatly reduced risk in the installation of new software releases.
- Elimination of errors and inconsistencies in reporting brought about by shadow systems.
- Cost analysis of the true cost of ownership.
- An understanding that there isn’t any competitive advantage for any TBR institution to continue to operate its own administrative systems in a silo.
- An understanding of the tremendous competitive advantage in redirecting any cost savings we can realize into expanding our academic programs, research, and outreach services.
- Better understanding of the risks through their analysis.
- Better network management and proactive monitoring.
- Historical perspective of current business practices.
- Willingness to seek out best practices and to improve present practices, with a goal not be to replicate the way business has been done in the past nor to modify the new system to sustain our historical business practices.
- Adoption of a rapid implementation methodology.
- Creation of a rapid decision making processes with 24 hour turnaround on every issue.
- Accountability and senior level reporting.
- Management of the change process and not allowing significant changes to either the software or the calendar.
- Adoption of common chart of account, data dictionary and “best practices.”
- Creation of a formal and informal technical knowledge transfer network.
- Technical training programs which can be used across all campuses.
- Better trained work force that can support other campuses when the need arises.
- The establishment of a common data warehouse and consistent reporting requirements to populate that warehouse.
- Adoption of functional “best practices” (learn from within, learn from others outside TBR).
- Create a formal and informal functional knowledge transfer network.
- Functional training programs which can be used across all campuses.
- Better trained work force that can support other campuses when the need arises.
- Shifting staff time to problem solving and higher priority concerns rather than transactional and “heads down” activities.
- Staff focusing on value added functions with high touch and high customer service rather than on low value and invisible back office data entry.
- Higher skilled workforce where decisions and accountability can be pushed down to the operational levels.
- Professional growth and advancement opportunities for staff.
- Constituents developing a better appreciation for the project and its objectives.
- Valuable feedback giveing project management another pulse of how the project is progressing, thus enabling them to head off problems before they have a serious impact.
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