| 41. |
PRISM Users Get A Dedicated, Independent Web Community (3 Pages)
by P. Catz
Nov 5, 2001 Abstract : Users of the Baan Process ERP product PRISM form a web-site community to provide an independent source of information and sharing of knowledge on one of the market's first Process-ERP Products.
Type: Article
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| 42. |
ERP Beginner's Guide In So Many Words (4 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Feb 5, 2001 Abstract : ERP remains the information backbone for contemporary manufacturing enterprises. However, today's ERP systems are required to address more than traditional processes taking place within the walls of an enterprise. This is a concise ERP reference guide for anyone needing a general knowledge of ERP features and the ramifications of implementing it (or not).
Type: Article
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| 43. |
ERP Showdown—Round 2! Exact Macola ES vs. Infor SyteLine vs. QAD MFG/PRO (1 Pages)
by Dylan Persaud
Abstract : I'm Dylan Persaud, senior analyst at Technology Evaluation Centers. Due to the overwhelming response to our first ERP Showdown, we're pleased to present another head-to-head discrete enterprise resource planning (ERP) comparison. Here, then, is ERP Showdown, Round 2!—featuring Exact Macola ES vs. Infor SyteLine vs. QAD MFG/PRO.
Type: White Paper
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| 44. |
Baan Resurrects Multi-Dimensionally Part 1: Recent Announcements (7 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Feb 18, 2002 Abstract : Having stemmed the tide of losses and returned to profitability in 2001, will in 2002 market witness Baan's return to former ERP stardom given the company's recent product enhancements, new partnerships and customer base retention/expansion initiatives?
Type: Article
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| 45. |
The ERP Market 2001 And Beyond – Aging Gracefully With The ‘New Kids On The Block’ (5 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Oct 3, 2001 Abstract : Although we believe that exorbitant growth rates are a matter of the past, growth will remain the word associated with the ERP market in the 2000’s. ERP will, however, have to share the spotlight with the fast growing adolescent ERP-adjacent areas like SCM, CRM and e-procurement.
Type: Article
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| 46. |
Where Is ERP Headed (Or Better, Where Should It Be Headed)? Part 1: Functional Scope and Vertical Focus (6 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Apr 18, 2001 Abstract : ERP applications are the information backbone for contemporary manufacturing enterprises. This note identifies current trends in the ERP market that we believe businesses that are both current and potential ERP users should be cognizant of in order to appropriately manage their expectations.
Type: Article
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| 47. |
Can You Add New Life To an Old ERP System? (5 Pages)
by William R. Friend
Oct 31, 2003 Abstract : Getting ERP transaction data into a summarized form that is useful to knowledge workers is one way to extend the value of your ERP system. This article discusses the advantages that can be gained by moving ERP and other transaction data to a data warehouse.
Type: Article
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| 48. |
Wrong ERP Demise Predictions Have (Only Partly) Created Skills Shortage (4 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Feb 2, 2001 Abstract : With so much frenzy surrounding e-business and CRM applications, ERP may be a far cry from its halcyon days. However, ERP implementation skills are still in demand, particularly as a foundation and a facilitator to other sexier applications.
Type: Article
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| 49. |
Where Is ERP Headed (Or Better, Where Should It Be Headed)? Part 2: Product Architecture and Web-Basing (9 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Apr 20, 2001 Abstract : This note discusses how a flexible and agile ERP system needs an adaptable architecture, how easy integration to 3rd-party applications has become a key selling point for ERP vendors, and how extending ERP to the Internet stems from the intent of many IT organizations not to reinvent the wheel in their scramble to create e-commerce applications.
Type: Article
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| 50. |
Trends Affecting Manufacturers and ERP Part Three: Four More Trends (8 Pages)
by Dr. Scott Hamilton
Oct 8, 2003 Abstract : The evolution of ERP systems has been driven by the emergence of new business practices and information technologies. These have been supported by the growing maturity of the manufacturing profession, and by the evolving development of commercially available software packages. This is an excerpt from the book, Maximizing Your ERP System.
Type: Article
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