A Holistic Approach to Implementating Enterprise Application Software
25 Jun
I am not a fan of MS. The Apple zealots scary me. The fact that people get so emotional and irrational about a company, a technology or a product, has puzzled me for years. It is surely a testimony of the powerful Software Marketing machine, which turned a preference for tools into a religious war.
Bill Gates is falling a victim to the success of his own business model - “dazzle them with functions and features until they forget about reliability and performance”. Well it worked for a while, but it gets harder and harder to remember why I opened this program in the first place.
I don’t get this blogger’s frenzy about a 3 year old email either. Not that I do not see the irony, but did you really think that Bill unconditionally loves every piece of crap his company has ever produced? Is it a hate for everything Microsoft?
I find most software is designed by people who understand marketing much better than the processes they are suppose to make easier to execute. Personally I do not find Mac any more intuitive than PC, but they sure market much better and I admire that. And is there less hate for Oracle than Microsoft, because Larry got less money than Bill? Or does anyone really think that Oracle Financial’s, or any other Oracle business application, is less convoluted and frustrating for users than Dynamics? You may have noticed that I don’t even want to mention the usability of SAP products.
It seems the Software Giants got themselves into a position similar to the Telephone Giants, they are more interested in protecting their cash flows than innovating and re-building from scratch. If they treat their existing code and architecture as a capital investment, such a strategy makes financial sense, but..
23 Jun
It is very common to see a gap analysis as a very first deliverable in most Business Process optimization initiatives, regardless how these initiatives are branded. For that very reason, quality of the result for this exercise can either completely obliterate any chance for this investment to show any return, or give a reasonable opportunity for the initiative to succeed. Yet, many projects allocate a very small proportion of time and resources to this critical stage in the initiative’s life cycle.
18 Jun
The problem with consultants is similar to the problem with politicians - both are largely useless and extremely expensive, unless they are deployed properly and managed closely. Now to be fair, most consultants, unlike politicians, are quite knowledgeable and capable, but because they are pawns in a corporate political game, they are largely ineffective.
Ben Worthen of Wall Street Journal Blog on Technology quotes “big brains” from Deloitte Consulting:
The ailing economy has many businesses trying to cut costs. But most are going about it wrong. That’s according to the big brains at Deloitte Consulting. The company, which presumably would be happy to help your business go about doing it right, interviewed execs at 70 Fortune-500 companies, more than two-thirds of which have cost-cutting measures in place. But 64% of these companies are cutting costs through incremental steps like layoffs or shrinking travel and training budgets. These efforts only make a superficial difference and are harder to sustain, Omar Aguilar, a principal at Deloitte, tells the Business Technology Blog.
These are statements which are very hard to disagree with and even harder to make any use of. Let’s try to select the area from this quote - “travel and training budgets” and look at it from a fundamental economic perspective:
I have seen reports in WSJ Technology Blog and other publications, but cannot find the links now, about Cisco and Siemens offerings, which provide high quality meeting conferencing over VOIP at the range from $5K to $25K per location set-up. Cisco predicts that the technology will really take off by 2012, but I think it is quite conservative of an estimate, barring oil price collapse. There are people who complain that “tele presence” cannot replace the quality of cooperation that personal meetings provide. I would agree that hand written books are also much more “precious”, but we have learned to “suffer” with printed and even electronic media’s shortcomings.
Corporate consultants need to learn and re-engineer “best practices” from one of the oldest and still most successful industry - the industry of religion. If the tele-evangelical mega-churches figured out how to provide a human experience over the television, which is “warm” enough to collect billions of dollars, why do Global Corporations that are rearmed with “tele presence” and Web 2.0 collaboration software tools fail to learn how to be more productive?
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