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ERP: Critical Elements for Success. Janice Johnson Garry Sagert. Discussion Areas. Governance Organization Working Environment Project Management Vendor Management Communication Beyond the Tangibles . Governance. Decision making & issue escalation Core Team Leadership Team
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ERP: Critical Elements for Success Janice Johnson Garry Sagert
Discussion Areas • Governance • Organization • Working Environment • Project Management • Vendor Management • Communication • Beyond the Tangibles
Governance • Decision making & issue escalation • Core Team • Leadership Team • Sponsorship Team • Issue socialization • Faculty Forum
Organization • Adjust throughout project to address challenges faced at different times • Need to be flexible • Select roles based on aptitudes • Clearly define roles and responsibilities
Working Environment • Co-locate core project teams • Joint forum for complex issues • Build strong teams • Share offices • Bring food • Provide slippers • Celebrate success
Working Environment (Con’t) • Encourage people to grow • Work outside comfort zone • Start with areas of strong aptitude • Role of Leadership • Take responsibility for decisions • Remove obstacles • Support team • Mistakes are learning opportunities
Project Management • Means to an end, not an end in itself • Adapt methodologies that make sense • Need to remain flexible, pragmatic • Articulate vision carefully • Iterative development • Waterfall doesn’t work • Impossible to define all requirements • Keep it simple
Vendor Management • Important partners, but still earning money • Put arguments in context of revenue • Deadline-driven billing • Clear escalation path for issues • Disengage if not working • Keep your lever ready • Never pre-pay for anything
Communication • Use consistent messaging • Use multiple forums • University governance structures • Departmental meetings • Staple to pay stubs • Campus newspapers • Email • Cannot communicate too much
Beyond the Tangibles • Trust your instincts • Vendors are not always right • Keep it simple • Complex methodologies are difficult to use effectively