Comments by "Hassan Maje" (@hassanmaje5849) on "Digital Transformation with Eric Kimberling"
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If I were to ask the following how would it be addressed?
As an end user or HOD or staff, or project team member I do a million and one things and I have a million and one cases, situations, scenarios etc and currently I am operating in a particular way, doing things in a certain way, checking and verifying things in a certain way, making enquiries and generating reports in a certain way, responding to people in a certain way, and interacting with people, processes, functions , features in the systems in a certain way.
Question:
How will the new system (after the software solutions have been signed off from day zero or day one of the implementation when the ”Vendors”, ”Consultants” walk in, come on the table and start their work) impact how I do things? How differently will I do things in the new system? How and where will I find my old data and information on the new system? How will I do things differently right at the wire level - at the level of every mouse click, keystroke, pen tick..?
There are inevitably a million and one nuances and questions the end user would have. Training is one thing but how one uses the system in everyday situations is quite another. UAT, although very important, does not address the above concerns. It's like forcing a square peg in a round hole.
How is the above answered then? Who answers it (the end user (go figure), the HOD, the Vendor, the Consultants..)? When is it answered - at product selection phase, or at implementation phase after sign-off? Or is it that if the Digital Transformation project is sound the above gets resolved well before the start up or live date?
These are some of the questions and concerns I'd had in the past.
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What if a senior tenured employee who has thrived over broken systems and processes simply through heroics, tribal knowledge and by undertaking smaller digital transformations that have been simple to use, easy to learn and which he has become champion at and has spearheaded, is now left at the prospect of major ERP rollout that he feels is going awry?
And add to that the worry that he can't properly learn or understand the ERP and the impact it may have or its consequences in his (Accounting/Finance) department he is the head of.
Add to that the ambiguity on the roles, processes or vision, assuming that those have even been provided.
Add to that emerging evidence of rushed rollout, lack of clarity and things messing up (configuration issues, missing functionality, wrong data mapping, data migration issues, data entry errors, errors in fixing errors, data integrity and system control issues, unreconciled items, lack of quality control, etc).
And add to that the worry whether the employee will be valued or be competent at any new roles.
All these issues can cause ambiguity, stress and this often results in a fall out and friction with project core teams, project sponsors, executives, etc ultimately resulting in his roles chopped and changed after he becomes stranded in the current role. I have seen this happen.
How do you reassure and address this? I think the root cause would be the project inception/definition stage, ERP selection level, internal quality issues, etc
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As a non-technical individual involved in transitioning a small organization to cloud-based solutions, I'd like to offer my perspective based on my own experience without divulging into details.
In my case, opting for cloud-based solutions proved to be more cost-effective compared to on-premise alternatives. My strategic approach focused on leveraging the cloud to enhance efficiency, compliance, and accessibility while minimizing risk and ensuring business continuity.
By migrating the operations to the cloud, we avoided substantial upfront investments in hardware, software licenses, infrastructure setup, managed IT services and ongoing maintenance that would have been required for on-premise systems.
Furthermore, the inherent advantages of cloud computing, such as seamless collaboration, concurrent and anytime, anywhere access, and reduced reliance on physical infrastructure, contributed to cost savings and operational efficiencies.
When comparing the cloud and on-premise systems I found that the benefits and cost savings in the former outweighed in the latter. Of course, I recognized certain trade-offs, such as the loss of ownership of software and databases, the inability to be in control and maintain native backups, and the loss of other capabilities, such as maintaining live, test, and production databases as would be possible in an ERP environment.
While cloud was the best fit and most cost-effective option for this organization, it's possible that as it grows and needs evolve, the equation may change in future.
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If, on go-live day and all along the project, some of my questions are and have been:
– How does the new system work?
– I used to do A, B, C, D.. in the old system, how do I do that now?
– The old system had certain features and functionalities— does the new one have them, and how do I use them?
– Data migration and mapping concerns and questions...evident in data migration errors, data migrated wrongly, misunderstandings in what data from the old system means in the new system... and also evident in inability to invoice, process transactions, etc resulting in stopped work, disruption for a month post start up date?
With the above concerns and issues I think something is off.
Are these signs of poor change management, lack of system readiness, absence of a competent ERP consultant, flawed project execution — or all of the above?
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As a non-technical individual involved in transitioning a small organization to cloud-based solutions, I'd like to offer my perspective based on my own experience without divulging into details.
In my case, opting for cloud-based solutions proved to be more cost-effective compared to on-premise alternatives. My strategic approach focused on leveraging the cloud to enhance efficiency, compliance, and accessibility while minimizing risk and ensuring business continuity.
By migrating the operations to the cloud, we avoided substantial upfront investments in hardware, software licenses, infrastructure setup, managed IT services and ongoing maintenance that would have been required for on-premise systems.
Furthermore, the inherent advantages of cloud computing, such as seamless collaboration, concurrent and anytime, anywhere access, and reduced reliance on physical infrastructure, contributed to cost savings and operational efficiencies.
When comparing the cloud and on-premise systems I found that the benefits and cost savings in the former outweighed in the latter. Of course, I recognized certain trade-offs, such as the loss of ownership of software and databases, the inability to maintain native backups, and the loss of other capabilities, such as maintaining live, test, and production databases as would be possible in an ERP environment.
While cloud was the most cost-effective option for this organization it's possible that as it grows and needs evolve, the equation may change in future.
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