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ERP at the University of Florida: Selection, Implementation and Implications

ERP at the University of Florida: Selection, Implementation and Implications. Mike Conlon Director of Data Infrastructure October 5, 2005. Three reasons to implement ERP. Must replace finance systems (SAMAS/FLAIR) and payroll system provided by the state

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ERP at the University of Florida: Selection, Implementation and Implications

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  1. ERP at the University of Florida: Selection, Implementation and Implications Mike Conlon Director of Data Infrastructure October 5, 2005

  2. Three reasons to implement ERP • Must replace finance systems (SAMAS/FLAIR) and payroll system provided by the state • Should improve operations – reduce administrative time and effort • Should Reduce operating costs

  3. University Vision • Integrated, on-line, secure, self-service processes for university business • Eliminate dependence on State of Florida Systems • Implement Vanilla – adopt the PeopleSoft processes • Eliminate costly mainframe technologies • Implement Finance, Human Resource, Student, Portal and Data Warehouse

  4. Selection Process • Eleven evaluation teams – 2 technical, 1 support, 8 functional • Four vendors – SAP, Oracle, PeopleSoft and SCT/Banner (now SunGard SCT) • Four Schools – FAMU, FSU, UF, UNF • Eleven months • 150 page RFI • Three 80 hour presentations – 40 hours technical, 40 hours functional • Eleven reports, 120 people for the read backs

  5. From Selection to Contract • PeopleSoft selected July 2002 • “Conference Room Pilot” – six weeks in Tallahassee mid-Aug to end of Sept 2002 • Contract with PeopleSoft September 30, 2002 • Project staffing Oct, Nov, Dec 2002 • Development and portal Infrastructure in place, Dec 2002

  6. From Contract to Go-Live • Portal launched March 31, 2003 • Data warehouse and Enterprise Reporting Cognos Business Intelligence launched August 8, 2003 • HR and Finance pre-launch June 18, 2004 • HR and Finance full-launch July 1, 2004 • Eighteen PeopleSoft modules. Largest single launch in higher ed.

  7. Implementation • UF Bridges, a new organization to create new services, created off-site in October 2002. • Three-way staffing model: • Existing UF staff: 60% • Temporary UF staff 25% • Hourly Consultants 15% • Project Management Office – Fred Cantrell, Mike Conlon, Mike Corwin, Warren Curry • Matrixed teams

  8. Project Organization -- Matrix

  9. Methodology Overview • Fit/Gap • What must be done? What does PeopleSoft do? • Design • How to address gaps? Business Process? Mod? Bolt-on? Product? • Development / Data Conversion • All UF data must be accounted for; Millions of records; thousands of tables; paper documents; 100% accuracy expected • Testing • Unit, Integration, Load, Legacy • Training • Core users, end users. Modalities • Deployment • Conversion, stabilization

  10. Implementation Challenges Before Go-Live • Product Knowledge • Consultants know the product, or claim to know the product. UF staffers do not know the product • UF Knowledge • UF staffers know UF, or claim to know UF. Consultants do not know UF • “Keep it Vanilla” • Changing UF business processes. How much change can we handle? • Decision Making • Advisory committees, stakeholders, deans, vice presidents, executive sponsors

  11. Implementation Challenges After Go-Live • Some facts about UF • Very distributed processes. Ten times the number of Finance users expected by PeopleSoft • Very low staff turn over. Staff had no experience with other systems or processes • Very low management overhead. Staff members work independently. Managers are typically academic with other responsibilities

  12. Implementation ChallengesAfter Go-Live: Training • Difficult to get people to training before launch. 48,000 seat-hours filled • Multiple modalities. In class, on-line, readings, web videos • Training environment and pilot environment • Discrepancies between training materials, environment and production

  13. Implementation ChallengesAfter Go-Live: Change Management • PI needs to pay person from a grant • Staff not familiar with chart fields • Chart fields not populated for grant • Grant money not in appropriate accounts • Staff not familiar with payroll distribution • Administrators not authorized to perform functions • Bottom line – person does not get paid from the grant, person gets paid from other funds, must do transfers, sponsors not billed appropriately • Effort throughout each process to enable payroll distribution from grants. Improving each pay period

  14. Implementation – The Good News • On-time and On-budget • Project costs ($29 mill) were 1/6 that of peer schools, saving UF over $150 mill • All modules implemented • Payroll has run smoothly • Effort remains in grants, reporting

  15. Implications • Operational improvements • Payroll, grants, finance, hiring, benefits, self-service, portal, purchasing, expense, warehouse • Operational savings • Budget, warehouse, “shadow systems”, staff • Savings could be $50 mill per year • Position for future • E-commerce, system integration, scalable, supported platform

  16. Additional Info • Bridges Web Site • Status reports, presentations, AUC/Stakeholder minutes, training registration • http://www.bridges.ufl.edu • Web Portal • News, PeopleBooks • http://my.ufl.edu • PeopleSoft Customer Connection • Webcasts, white papers, technical docs • http://www.peoplesoft.com/cc

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