Introduction
to ERP
Managing
and automating the business processes is one of the core errands of any given
enterprise. Conventionally enterprises created their own software packages to
manage their automation needs and the software used to be strict to their own
business functions; until the concept of standard customize-able software came
into the market.
The
thought was to create a software package that would cater to all kind of
businesses and processes. The software should be customize-able and scale-able
enough to make sure any given enterprise can pick it and tweak it based on
their requirements. That thought gave birth to the ERP. Software, which is
created keeping various industries in mind, in order to satisfy the business
needs on a global platform, still being adaptable to support any further
extensions / customization. But before that, it is essential to understand
the requirement of software to manage the business process. So what all
processes are involved in an enterprise that needs automation / management? To
answer this question,
Lets take an example. Suppose you are running a small grocery
shop named "Raja Grocery", so the typical operation as a shop owner
is you basically buy groceries from some big seller and stock
it in your shop. Now people come to your shop for day-to-day needs
and buy stuff from your shop at a slightly higher price than
what you originally bought and stocked it in your shop.
Occasionally you may not be carrying items or run out of stock
that people ask for so you make a note of it and promise the person to come
back tomorrow and they will get their item. So far so good, now let’s name some
entities before we proceed and things get complicated. The big seller from
whom you buy stock is called as Vendor, the people who come to your
shop to buy things are known as customers, the stock in your shop
is known as inventory.
So far we have identified few entities that play an active role
in your day-to-day operations. As time goes by, your business expands and now
you take orders over the phone and provide service to deliver the
items to your customers, so you hire people to help you out in
maintaining the inventory, do the delivery part and all the necessary stuff to
keep the business running smoothly. The people you hire are known as employees.
So in this small shop, you typically manage the bookkeeping
activities by hand using a notepad or something similar. Now imagine
the same setup on a larger scale where you have more than 10,000 customers,
have more than 1000 vendors, have more than 1000 employees and have a huge
warehouse to maintain your inventory. Do you think you can manage all that
information using pen and paper? Absolutely no way! Your business will come to
a sudden stop sign.
To facilitate big businesses, companies like Oracle Corporation
have created huge software known in the category of ERP (Enterprise
Resource Planning) as Oracle Applications. Now coming to think of it, Oracle
Apps is not one huge software, instead it is a collection of
software known as modules that are integrated and talk to each
other.
Now what is meant by integrated? First let us identify the
modules by entities. For e.g Purchasing and Account
Payables deal with the vendors since you
typically purchase from vendors and eventually have to pay the
dues. Oracle Purchasing handles all the requisitions and purchase orders
to the vendors whereas Oracle Accounts Payables handles all the payments to
the vendors.
Similarly Oracle Inventory deals with the items you
maintain in stock, warehouse etc. Dealing with customers is
handled collectively with the help of Oracle Receivables and Oracle
Order Management. Order Management helps you collect all the information
that your customer is ordering over the phone or web store etc. whereas
Receivables help you collect the money for the orders that are delivered to the
customers.
Now who maintains the paychecks, benefits of the
1000 employees? right! it is managed by Oracle Human Resources. So
you get the idea by now that for each logical function there is a separate
module that helps to execute and maintain that function.
So all the individual functions are being taken care but how do
I know if I am making profit or loss? That's where integration
comes into play. There is another module known as Oracle General Ledger.
This module receives information from all the different transaction modules and
summarizes them in order to help you create profit and loss statements, reports
for paying Taxes etc.
Just to simplify the explanation, when you pay your employees
that payment is reported back to General Ledgers as cost i.e money going out,
when you purchase inventory items the information is transferred to GL as money
going out, and so is the case when you pay your vendors. Similarly when you
receive items in your inventory it is transferred to GL as money coming in,
when your customer sends payment it is transferred to GL as money coming in. So
all the different transaction modules report to GL (General Ledger) as either
"money going in" or "money going out", the net result will
tell you if you are making a profit or loss.
All the equipment, shops, warehouses, computers can be termed as
Assets and they are managed by
Oracle Fixed Assets.
If
we see, as they have the business to run, they will need software to automate
all their work. The one that should save all the transactions, and should be
able to tell the business management, how much did they spend on what, what is
the net profit, how much did they pay to their employees etc. The more
information they have, the better is the grip on their business, because with
the detailed information, they can make budget forecasting, budget management
etc with ease.
To
automate the books, some company might give them a software that will be made
just for their business need, which will have different modules, like
Purchasing (to track the raw material cost), Inventory (to manage the entire stocks
of materials), Human resource (to enable them manage their Employees and
Ex-employees with automated pay checks and benefits), Order management (to
manage all the orders and deliveries), and finally a General Ledger (to give
them an eye on the entire financials) combined together. This one will be like
a jackpot, everything together. But yes, they will have to pay a lot for it,
just because it’s made just for their business need with their business rules
embedded on to it.
So
what’s the solution now? Let someone come up with a software package, which
will be very generic in nature, however intelligent enough to be able to be
customized based on any business need and business rule.
We
just discussed a software product that is similar to ERP. ERP is very generic
software that can be customized based on any business need. Although the design
will be constant, it will still have handles, so that the enterprises can tweak
it, based on their business needs. Again fail proof, as it’s tested and being
used by a lot of other firms with a broad spectrum of industries. It will also
be capable of Inter-communications of Modules, which solves a lot of the
business logic implementation issues. Another big advantage of ERP is that, it
is frangible. The enterprise can pick modules that they want, club them
together and then start using it. They don't have to buy everything in an ERP.
For an example, if someone does not want a Material Management module, they
just wouldn’t buy it. Buy everything else and start using them. Oracle
E-Business suite, PeopleSoft, SAP, Sage, MS Dynamics, JD Edwards, Baan are few
big names in the ERP space today.
History of ERP
It
was the early 60s where enterprises made software to handle their
material management needs. Although the software inured to be highly
customized, it was used to handle the Materials and Inventory of the given
firm. Later in 70s they came up with something called MRP (Materials Resource
Planning), this was better software that could manage the Procurement and
Inventory with the logic of timeliness. Then in the 80s MRP-II came. It was
just an extension of MRP with the advantage of managing shop floors and
Distribution. Finally they started involving all other functionalities as well,
like Finance, Order management, Human Resource etc, and then the software were
named more suitably as ERP.
Oracle
has been a big name in the software industry since 1980s. Because of its robust
hold on the database management and Business intelligence sector, it was one of
the leading software industries that time. It started off with Oracle
financials as one of its products in 1980s. It was a software product that was
capable of managing the financial ledgers of a firm. That incepted the role of
Oracle in ERP market. Gradually with time, it started adding different other
modules to its ERP sphere. Products like Supply chain management and Human
Resource Management increased its visibility and made it a big name in the ERP
market.
It
started introducing oracle forms and reports as tools to create and extend GUI
for its products, they named it, Oracle developers 2000; very popularly known
as Oracle D2K. D2K brought in a fantastic GUI and reporting capability to the
ERP world, and made the Oracle ERP, one of its kinds back then. The entire
package was then called Oracle E-Business Suite and came with the first release
as Oracle 10i. Eventually, based on the requirements, a lot of modules and
sub-modules are added to the product. Along with that, came in a lot of tools
like Oracle Workflow, AME, XML Publisher. These tools increased the scalability
of the entire Product. Oracle released its E-Business Suite version 11i in the
mid of 1990s. It had near about 50 modules and many more sub-modules. In 2006
Oracle released Release 12, popularly termed as Oracle R12.
While
the E-Business Suite track kept on challenging its own brand with wonderful new
features release by release, Oracle never stopped working on the supporting
tool. It released the Oracle Developer suite 6i, which was an advanced and
sophisticated version of the D2K. Later Oracle Developer suite 10g and 11g came
up with an amazing product embedded to it. The new addition were called Oracle
Fusion Middleware and Oracle Applications framework. These two products changed
the look and feel of the ERP line of Products. Finally grabbing a strong base
in market, with the acquisitions of PeopleSoft, JDE and sun Microsystems,
Oracle was capable of synthesizing its ERP line of products into a large-scale
emblem. They called it Oracle Fusion Applications. It was released in late
2010, and still being piloted on a major set of its clients. The embellishment
through innovation continues and so does the chronicle of Oracle E-Business
Suite.
Rest of the Market
E-Biz
holds the second largest chunk of market share in this field, followed by SAP.
After the Acquisition of PeopleSoft Inc, Sun and JDE, Oracle is
measured to be one of the Prime stake holders in this market. It’s considered
to be the one and only package in market with 360 degrees business support.
Looking at the other contenders in Market, SAP has the biggest pie. It has its
own flavors to the segments it serves. Apart from Oracle and SAP, some other
notable names are Bann, PeopleSoft, JDE, Microsoft Dynamics and Sage.
R12.x
Oracle E-Business Suite Essentials for Implementers
Overview of Oracle Applications
Oracle E-Business Suite is the most comprehensive suite of
integrated, global business applications that enable organizations to make
better decisions, reduce costs, and increase performance.
Oracle E-Business Suite (EBS) version 12 is an internet enabled
product that can be managed from a single site. A company can operate a single
data center with a single database, similar to other ERP products. This release
was launched in February 2007 and contains a number of product lines which
users can implement for their business. Oracle EBS includes the company’s
enterprise resource planning (ERP) product as well as Human Capital Management,
supply chain management (SCM) and customer relationship management (CRM) applications.
Each application is licensed separately so companies can select the combination
that is suitable for their business processes.
The applications found in the Oracle EBS include:
Oracle CRM
Oracle Financials
Oracle Human Resource Management System (HRMS)
Oracle Logistics
Oracle Supply Chain Applications
Oracle Order Management
Oracle Transportation Management
Oracle Warehouse Management System
Download the "Introduction to Oracle
R12 Application Training Manual" document from below
link:
Thanks & Regards,
Raju Chinthapatla
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9 comments:
good info, thanks...
Very valuable information for begginers, Thanks Raju
Very good information.....
Thanks Raju good info
Detailed, comprehensive and a superb article on Oracle EBS. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks a lot..
Thanks for the information It's really a great help to understand ERP in a general terms
Thanks for the information It's really a great help to understand ERP in a general terms
Hi
Can any one send oracle forms and reports metirial
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