Enterprise Systems Deployment: Payback Time

Mark Cotteleer
Over the past several years, there has been debate in the academic and industry research communities over the payback of enterprise-level information technologies like ERP systems. Some have suggested that there is no payback for these investments, that they represent infrastructure investments and are strategic in nature (i.e., we need to pursue them in order to keep up with the competition). Performance-oriented managers should recoil at such logic.

The "no payback" argument is an inappropriate response to the issue.


ERP Checking the Status on Benefits

Robert Austin
Few IT-related subjects have inspired stronger feelings over the past few years than enterprise resource planning systems, more often known by the acronym ERP. These large, off-the-shelf software packages promised to replace complex legacy problems with a well-integrated and modern application infrastructure. In many ways, this promise was always too grand, and savvy businesspeople should have known better.

ERP Checking the Status on Benefits

Robert Austin
Few IT-related subjects have inspired stronger feelings over the past few years than enterprise resource planning systems, more often known by the acronym ERP. These large, off-the-shelf software packages promised to replace complex legacy problems with a well-integrated and modern application infrastructure. In many ways, this promise was always too grand, and savvy businesspeople should have known better.

Relationship Management Gets Its Due

Wendell Jones
  For more on business process and IT outsourcing, see the July 2003 issue of Cutter Benchmark Review, available from from Cutter Consortium's Bookstore, at +1 781 641 9876, fax +1 781 648 1950, or e-mail service@cutter.com.  

 


ERP: Checking the Status on Benefits

Robert Austin

Few IT-related subjects have inspired stronger feelings over the past few years than enterprise resource planning systems, more often known by the acronym ERP. These large, off-the-shelf software packages promised to replace complex legacy problems with a well-integrated and modern application infrastructure.


Web Services Interoperability

Tom Welsh
Volume 2, No. 8; September 2003Printer Friendly PDF version

Cutter IT Journal: Patterns in Software Development

Joshua Kerievsky

An Idea Whose Time Has Come Software patterns have been helping us design better software for many years. They capture and effectively transmit highly useful knowledge that was once solely in the minds of gurus.