I recently received an update from ERP software vendor Epicor, my first since it was acquired in May 2011 by Apax Partners, a private equity company, and simultaneously merged with Activant, an ERP and point-of-sale software company serving midsize retailers and distributors. In my view, taking the company private is a good idea since it will have to make ongoing investments that would not have been treated kindly by the stock market. Bringing Epicor and Activant together (and perhaps adding...
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Topics:
Big Data,
Microsoft,
Mobile,
SAP,
Social Media,
Supply Chain Performance,
ERP,
Dynamics,
Epicor,
Sage,
Operational Performance,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Collaboration,
Business Mobility,
Business Performance,
Cloud Computing,
Financial Performance,
Oracle,
Workforce Performance,
CRM,
Infor,
Social,
Financial Performance Management
I recently met with Infor’s management team, led by CEO Charles Phillips. Phillips joined Infor in October 2010 after leaving Oracle, taking several other executives with him, including Duncan Angove, now president of Infor, and Pam Murphy, now the COO. In addition to the changes in the executive suite, Soma Somasundaram, who had been at Infor and its predecessor companies since 1995, became EVP in charge of R&D. A private company, Infor had been keeping a low profile for the past several...
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Topics:
Sales Performance,
Salesforce.com,
Social Media,
Supply Chain Performance,
ERP,
Human Capital Management,
Marketing,
Epiphany,
expense management,
Lawson Software,
Operational Performance,
Business Analytics,
Business Collaboration,
Business Mobility,
Business Performance,
Cloud Computing,
Financial Performance,
Workforce Performance,
finance,
Infor,
Financial Performance Management
At its annual Influencer’s Summit in Boston, SAP offered multiple perspectives on where the company’s strategy and products are heading. Overall, I was struck by the essential similarities to its message on its strategic direction a decade ago. The overarching objective in its roadmap now, as then, is to have information technology increasingly adapt to the needs of individual users and how they choose to execute established/repetitive or ad-hoc processes, rather than forcing them to adapt to...
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Topics:
Performance Management,
Planning,
Predictive Analytics,
Sales Performance,
SAP,
Supply Chain Performance,
ERP,
GRC,
Office of Finance,
Operational Performance,
Business Analytics,
Business Collaboration,
Business Mobility,
Business Performance,
Cloud Computing,
Enterprise Software,
Financial Performance,
In-memory,
Mobility,
Workforce Performance,
finance,
Risk,
Financial Performance Management
ERP systems not only collect information about transactions, they also automate processes. The latter includes managing the handoffs between roles and enabling electronic document creation and management associated with that. Indeed, it was the promise of improving process management and process execution that spurred companies to adopt ERP in the 1990s.
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Topics:
Customer Experience,
ERP,
Office of Finance,
end-to-end,
Operational Performance,
Business Performance,
Financial Performance,
Business Process Management,
CFO,
business process execution
As Workday continues to expand and the likelihood of its IPO becomes a more frequent topic of discussion, so does the movement of ERP systems to the cloud. Thus far, only a minority of companies have chosen to put their ERP and accounting systems in the cloud, but the numbers are growing and there’s evidence of success. NetSuite, for example, reported a 26 percent increase in its revenues to $145 million in the nine months up to Sept. 30, 2011. To be sure, this is not close to Salesforce.com’s...
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Topics:
Microsoft,
Sales,
Supply Chain Performance,
ERP,
NetSuite,
Office of Finance,
Dynamics,
Epicor,
Lawson,
QAD,
Operational Performance,
Business Performance,
Cloud Computing,
Financial Performance,
IBM,
Oracle,
Workforce Performance,
Infor,
financial software,
Intacct,
PeopleSoft,
Software
Back in the old days (20 years ago or so) companies that wanted to expand or update their telephone systems had to do what was called a “forklift migration.” In other words, they had to remove big, heavy and very expensive boxes of electronics from an equipment room and replace them with newer big, heavy and very expensive boxes. The process of adding, deleting or changing people, offices and phone numbers was equally burdensome and costly. This all seems quaint now because digital telephony...
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Topics:
SAP,
ERP,
Office of Finance,
Business Performance,
Financial Performance,
Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC),
Oracle,
Infor
While Europeans have long had to adapt to working in many languages, currencies and legal jurisdictions, a generation ago most midsize companies in the United States did all their business in their home country and in U.S. dollars. Today, though, the relentless globalization of the world economy means that an increasing number of midsize companies in North America are functionally multinational and face the challenges of managing a more complex and demanding accounting and financial management...
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Topics:
ERP,
Office of Finance,
Sunsystems,
Business Performance,
Financial Performance,
CFO,
Financial Management,
Infor,
Corporate Finance,
FMS
SAP is in the process of acquiring certain financial disclosure management software assets from cundus, a German provider of BI and performance management software. SAP will be buying cundus’ Financial Statement Factory and informationCollector, which together manage the collaborative creation and editing of financial and management reports using both structured and unstructured information. SAP expects to complete the deal by the end of 2010.
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Topics:
ERP,
Financial Applications,
Uncategorized,
CFO,
finance,
Financial Performance Management
One of the prominent salesforce.com partners on display at the recent Dreamforce in San Francisco was FinancialForce.com. It’s one of a growing list of providers of in-the-cloud accounting and finance packages built on the Force.com platform. Like other of these accounting vendors (such as Compiere, Intacct, Netsuite and - to some extent and eventually– Workday), it aims principally at companies that have outgrown entry-level accounting software such as Intuit’s QuickBooks. (I covered the...
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Topics:
ERP,
Financial Applications,
Business Performance,
Cloud Computing,
Financial Performance,
CFO,
finance