1 / 27

Oracle Fixed Assets - Implementation Tips and Strategies

Introduction. DARC CorporationApplication Implementation MethodologyInstallation and UpgradeDARC ProductsTechnical ConsultingFunctional ConsultingDARC AcademyCustomer Support ServicesUser Group Affiliations. Purpose. Overview of Oracle Fixed AssetsKeys to Successful ImplementationKey C

naif
Download Presentation

Oracle Fixed Assets - Implementation Tips and Strategies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Oracle Fixed Assets - Implementation Tips and Strategies North Central Oracle Applications Users Group Brian Bouchard - (312) 338-5120

    2. Introduction DARC Corporation Application Implementation Methodology Installation and Upgrade DARC Products Technical Consulting Functional Consulting DARC Academy Customer Support Services User Group Affiliations

    3. Purpose Overview of Oracle Fixed Assets Keys to Successful Implementation Key Concepts Implementation Tip Conversion Strategies Questions

    4. Overview of Oracle Fixed Assets Maintain Property & Equipment Inventory Rule Based Depreciation Flexible Structures (Category, Location, Asset Key, and Descriptive Flexfields) Asset Workbench Tax Accounting Integration with other Oracle Applications

    5. Keys to a Successful Implementation Early Planning Create Project Plan/Guidelines Complete Participation of all Users (Include Tax Department) Maintain Communication with other Application Teams Define Reporting Requirements Early Document Setup Decisions Continuous Feedback

    6. Key Concepts - Integration Oracle Fixed Assets Integration

    7. Key Concepts - Asset Category Flexfield Group Assets according to like depreciation rules Category flexfield serves as the holder of default rules (life, method, prorate & accounts) for each of your corporate and tax books One segment must serve as a ‘Major’ segment Usually Tax Driven - Consult tax department when defining Can have up to 7 segments, 30 characters each segment (recommend 2 or 3 segments) Combination of segment values plus separators must be 30 characters or less

    8. Key Concepts - Location Flexfield Group assets according to Physical Location Main function is for Property Tax as opposed to a true ‘Asset Tracker’ One segment must serve as ‘State’ segment Define structure that can be easily maintained Can have up to 7 segments, 30 characters each segments

    9. Key Concepts - Asset Key Flexfield Group like assets for enhanced reporting Specific to each implementation No financial impact on the system If not using, one segment required for setup (Define without validation) Can have up to 10 segments, 30 characters each segment

    10. Key Concepts - Key Flexfields Plan Flexfield Structure carefully - including all your segment information (segment order, field length, dependencies) Once you have started entering assets using a flexfield, you cannot change the flexfield Dynamic Insertion versus Greater Control Oracle Assets only displays a limited number of characters on its forms and reports - may wish to limit the number of segments per flexfield.

    11. Key Concepts - System Controls Company Name - Select a company name that will appear on all Oracle Assets reports Automatic Asset Numbering - If converting from a legacy system, select a starting number greater than the number of legacy assets Oldest Date Placed in Service - Required to enter the date of the oldest asset in your database

    12. Key Concepts - Calendars First Period - Must define all calendars from the period corresponding to the date placed in service of the oldest asset Integration to GL - Depreciation Calendar period names must be identical to the period names you have set up in your General Ledger (May force/determine GL calendar period naming convention) Tax Depreciation Calendar - Monthly versus Quarterly Depreciation and Prorate Calendars

    13. Key Concepts - Books Oracle Assets allows the creation of multiple sets of books within a single installation Can create multiple companies within one GL set of books, or multiple companies each with its own GL set of books Create Tax books for each Corporate Book Depreciation calculation Limitation: If you have multiple sets of books, assets must be retired from one book in order to transfer to another book (Cross depreciation books)

    14. Key Concepts - Acct Generator/Flexbuilder Oracle Assets uses Acct Generator/Flexbuilder to general accounting flexfield combinations for journal entries Allows you to designate a specific source for each segment in the accounting flexfield for which Oracle Assets creates a journal entry Flexibility to create journal entries according to your requirements Can specify to what level of detail to create journal entries for each book and account type

    15. Key Concepts - Mass Additions Table Create Assets from Oracle Payables using the Create Mass Additions Process Create Asset Additions from Another Payables system Convert Assets using the Mass Additions Interface Create Assets from Oracle Projects using the Interface Assets Process

    16. Conversion - Examine Existing Data Clean data before conversion - do not load poor quality data into Oracle Fixed Assets Are you confident your legacy system processes depreciation correctly? Yes - Load existing depreciation values No - Have Oracle Assets recalculate Map existing fields and data attributes to Oracle Assets. Include key flexfields (Asset Category, Location, Asset Key, Accounting Flexfield)

    17. Conversion - Accounting Flexfield Upon defining the Chart of Accounts for GL, make sure that the following Fixed Assets requirements are considered: Define Asset Accounts - Many standard reports in Fixed Assets sort by the account of each asset category Define Clearing Accounts - Ensure that one or more clearing accounts are defined - these accounts will hold any transactions which hit the GL but not FA Cost Center Qualifier - set the cost center qualifier in the Accounting Flexfield for Fixed Assets - Used by many standard reports

    18. Conversion - Questions What data is being converted? (Cost vs. NBV, YTD Depreciation, Reserve, DPIS, Method, and Life) What tax data being converted? (Cost, YTD Depreciation, Reserve, DPIS, Method, and Life) What is the first period in Oracle? How will assets be converted? Electronic (SQL scripts) ADI

    19. Conversion - Electronic Conversion Use the Mass Additions Interface table to load assets electronically Each asset loaded must be attached to an Asset Category, Location, Asset Key and Accounting Flexfield using Oracle internal identification numbers Create a file from your legacy data (csv, dat, txt) Define an Interim table in the Oracle Database Create a SQL*Loader control file (.ctl) - tells SQL*Loader how to import data into the interim table

    20. Conversion - Electronic Conversion Cont. Use SQL*Loader to import the information to your interim table (if data not already in an Oracle database) Verify the number of records in your interim table and compare to your legacy data Verify totals for your cost and depreciation reserve Use the interim table to convert legacy data fields to Oracle formatted fields (internal ids, dates, methods, lives, etc.) Verify that all assets have required ids Load the FA_MASS_ADDITIONS Table from your interim table using SQL*Plus

    21. Conversion - Electronic Conversion Cont. Use SQL*Plus to verify that all required fields have been populated (Consult the Oracle Open Interfaces Manual) Run the Mass Additions Status Report and the Unposted Mass Additions Report to check your data Post your mass additions using the Post Mass Additions Process Verify that all assets were posted. Correct any assets which did not post in the Mass Additions Prepare form and rerun Mass Additions Post

    22. Conversion - Tax Initial Mass Copy vs. Periodic Mass Copy - Use the Mass Copy Process to copy your assets into each tax book associated with your Corporate Book Depreciation Reserve - Let Oracle Fixed Assets Recalculate the reserve or use SQL*Plus to update the values from your legacy data Life, Method, Prorate - Use SQL*Plus to update the lives, methods and prorates for each asset in your tax books Verify any updates by using the Tax Additions Report

    23. Tip #1 - Implementation Date Beginning of Fiscal Year (Recommended) Year-End reporting (one database versus two) Ease of Data Conversion Tax Reconciliation Load assets into the last period of the last fiscal year (i.e. Calendar year 2003, load into Dec-02) Mid-Year Transactions from two databases Can opt to convert from prior year-end (enter all transactions through point of implementation)

    24. Tip #2 - Define Reporting Requirements Examine Oracle Assets Standard Reports (Standard reports usually do not meet most companies reporting requirements) Examine both Corporate and Tax Reports Design reports keeping the Key Flexfields in mind (Sort, total and page break by segments within key flexfields) Test - thoroughly test all custom reports before moving to Production

    25. Tip #3 - Loading Values Create Excel Macros to automate the loading of values into Oracle for system setup Asset Categories Depreciation & Prorate Calendars Value Sets for Flexfield segments Test for a few lines of data before loading a large group of values For large value sets, transfer values in smaller batches

    26. Tip #4 - Sizing Hardware & Database Oracle Fixed Assets uses a tremendous amount of tablespace for storing depreciation data Important to properly size the following tablespaces: Application tablespace (FAD, FA_DATA or some derivative) - Houses all fixed assets tables Indexes (FAI or FA_INDX) Rollback Segments - used to undo changes in the database when a database failure occurs FA Large Rollback Segment (Required) - Application profile option used to set rollback segment (could require up to 800 MB)

    27. Questions

More Related