data-model
As part of the solution design for your EPM planning application, it is very important to define the data model appropriately. The building of dimensions and plan types are key to the design and will determine how efficiently your EPM application will perform. The number of dimensions, number of database cubes and application installation architecture will be the primary elements of the design, so it is critical to put extensive thought into this.  There are some elements of a project that require significant time investments, and this is one of them.  You must work very closely with your implementation partner to understand the pros and cons of each data model element, following the standard guidelines at every step.
Join us next week as we focus on the approach to data integration.

event-at-ast
Sweep the diamonds, lace up your sneakers, and get your game face on!  AST is hosting an employee kickball game on Friday, May 29th at noon near our Naperville office.  While we work hard to make AST the successful operation that it is, we also play hard to celebrate our achievements and enjoy life.  Combining team building, nostalgia, and a little friendly competition, it’s sure to be an interesting game as we dig up our skills from grammar school recess and see if we can still “kick it old school”.  See you then!

csoaug
We hope to see you at the CSOAUG Spring St. Louis Oracle Summit on Wednesday, May 27 from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM.  The day will be packed with educational sessions and networking opportunities, and is free to the first 100 registrants.  There are ten educational tracks ranging from ERP to Big Data to Mobile. A networking reception will be held following the event on Wednesday evening from 5:30 to 7:30 PM.  Don’t miss this exciting opportunity to learn from your peers and network with other Oracle Users from the St. Louis area!
More information and registration are available here: http://csoaug.com/2015-spring-st-louis-oracle-summit/ 

managed-services
Last week, we examined the benefits of utilizing managed IT services with a “wisdom of the crowd” analysis. In doing this, we developed a list of the top five ways that managed services can be most beneficial to your organization. This week, we will be expanding on this idea by looking at the opposite side of managed services.  Using a similar lens and analysis, we will consider some challenges you may encounter in employing a managed services team, and will offer helpful ways to overcome those challenges.  We will provide ways that both clients and managed services departments can be more aware of the broader issues facing their collaborations, along with how both parties can be best prepared to avoid or mitigate the most common issues.

Because there are far less companies or publications willing to examine this issue head on, we are using a wider array of search terms, and looking into the top 20 results for each, instead of the top 10, along with discounting some of the results with a scope beyond our study. Additionally, we will be categorizing the results in a similar fashion as last week, grouping them into a standardized data set based on shared themes, then examining the distribution to see which results are the most commonly cited difficulties.  Once we have identified these results, we can begin to address how to circumvent these issues to improve the managed services partnership for both the client and the provider.

In our analysis, 20 different websites were used, and we ended up with a total of 102 data points regarding issues related to managed services. We standardized the information and were able to create 14 different categories. Once we assigned a value to each data point based on it’s ranking of importance on each website, a very clear pattern emerged. There was a significantly greater level of variability overall, compared to last week, but 5 results stood out very clearly from the others with an average score of almost double the remaining data points.  Following are the top issues our analysis pointed to as the most frequent and critical concerns.

1. Communication

This was a concern of many, appearing repeatedly in the lists we uncovered.  There was a lot of variability in how it was discussed; having very clear and standardized Service Level Agreements, the importance of regularly meeting face-to-face, how reoccurring issues are discussed, having clearly established channels of communication and modes for regular reporting. This suggests that communication is a more deeply entrenched issue than any single quick fix, but instead means that a team must be willing to learn how to be responsive to each client’s unique and individual needs in what information they want and how they want it. Additionally, it means that clients must be able to concretely express and explain their needs upfront, while still leaving room for both to be flexible and adapt to technological, infrastructure, and organizational changes as they occur.
2. Support
Support is the centralized purpose of a managed services partner.  Your managed services team should support your organization and business, including being readily available, responsive, and timely in rectifying problems as they arise. A good managed services team should be able to demonstrate how they have proven themselves in a variety of situations and handled the issues that were faced, in addition to providing metrics on their response times and solutions. A good client needs to be clear about what they believe the priority of incidents are for them and how much information they want regarding each issue and resolution.
3. Planning/Preparedness
It is important for your managed service team to prevent as many issues as possible before they arise.  A quality managed services team will anticipate problems and thwart them, as well as establish contingency plans. Being there for issues that arise is the bare minimum for any managed service team. A high-quality collaboration is one where both the client and the team are able to think through how future needs and changes will influence the software and hardware infrastructure, and consider and prepare for the ways this may fail, along with developing backup and contingency plans for when those problems occur. This often means thinking beyond and outside of the limits of the service agreement.  This is the area where organizations can see the greatest value in partnering with a managed service team. The unexpected will arise, but the teams that have prepared for it are the ones with the operational and functional edge to succeed as others flail to stay afloat.
4. Security
Security was mentioned almost as much as planning and preparedness in our results.  With the rise of cloud computing, along with internal and external security threats, data protection is becoming more and more critical and a prime focus of organizations. This means that as experts, a managed services team will be one that not only understands the strengths and weaknesses of the client environment, but actively works to improve and patch weaknesses and limitations before they become issues. It also means knowing the current regulatory environment, understanding how new technologies and compliance rules will interact and developing a plan that anticipates these changes, minimizing client risks.

5. Teamwork

Managed services departments should be aware that they are not working in isolation. More and more, a managed services team is working with multiple departments and with different organizational hierarchies, along with a variety of different vendors and third-party interests. Often, managed services is the hub that holds these disparate parties together.  The departments form one unit that takes responsibility and focuses on how to work together to solve a problem. Centralization is one of the aspects that makes a managed services team efficient, and there must be clear communication and a defined format for reporting and addressing issues.  This includes a collaborative strategy developed between the client and the managed services team with well-defined roles, reporting requirements, clear and consistent expectations, responsibilities, and response times for both sides.
An interesting and surprising theme in this analysis is that trust was the lowest-rated issue, mentioned in very few results.  This shows that many managed services teams are doing the right thing.  A trustworthy managed IT services team is one that:
  • Establishes clear and consistent communication with full transparency
  • Provides well-defined and immediate responses and support
  • Plans ahead and anticipates future problems or changes
  • Treats their client’s data, security, and compliance with the utmost importance
  • Works with the client and vendors in a collaborative partnership
That is what makes a managed service partnership such a popular decision for business and organizations. When you chose the right partner, are aware of all the benefits and potential complications, then you do not need to worry about trust. It is established and maintained by the decisions made together each and every day. What you and your organization can and will gain from this type of partnership goes far beyond anything that can be encapsulated in any top five benefits list.

implementation-partner
Selection of a skilled team is a critical factor for the success of any implementation project. By selecting quality team members, your organization can mitigate the risk of failure and increase your chances of project success.  Any team member selected should be comfortable in learning the new system, as well as guiding the implementation team towards the success of the project. Any project team should have an equal mix of technical and functional skills, along with proper decision-making authority.
Subject Matter Expert (SME) Selection:  SMEs are critical team members who know the business in the greatest detail and will drive the EPM implementation project to successful completion. Your systems integrator/partner will surely be skilled in the software functionality and capability, but your SMEs will bring their expert knowledge about the way your organization currently runs. They will act as the key translators to convey not only the existing business processes, but also the direction the organization wants to go in the future. In addition to domain knowledge, a SME’s primary objective is to gather process and configuration information from other key users and to help the implementation team configure the business system based on that information; hence, it is the SME who is expected to know the business and all the processes involved so that they can educate the software implementers at each stage of the project lifecycle. Selection of SMEs is a critical process and should be done with great care and caution. SMEs should also be empowered to make project decisions to avoid any stop-gaps in the process.
Implementation Partner Team Selection:  Before the team from your implementation partner is deployed, it is important to ensure that quality team members are selected. Failure to complete due diligence in this regard may lead to project failure, so it is critical that your organization is partnering with the right people with the appropriate roles and skills for your project. Be sure that the team has relevant and adequate experience with EPM software tools, as well as thorough knowledge of your industry. Choose a Project Leaderwith strong management and communication skills who understands the operations and objectives of the business software implementation. The Project Leader is the person responsible for the overall project planning and progress toward agreed-upon goals. The Functional Leader leads the software configuration efforts and decision analysis during the project implementation process. Similar to SMEs, Functional Leaders from the implementation team play a key role in the success of the project. It is highly important to select a leader for your project who not only understands the complexity of the EPM software, but also has in-depth knowledge of your industry, as well as a history of successful implementations for similar business entities. Similar care must be taken in selecting other technical, change management and administration team members.
Executive Management Support:  A critical factor for the success of any project is to have regular support from an Executive Sponsor &Steering Committee, both from your own team, as well as the implementation partner’s team.  Receiving support from business executives from the very beginning of the project is essential to its success as they are the main drivers of all key project decisions. It is important to conduct regular steering committee meetings to keep management actively involved in the project.
Now that you have selected an appropriate and skilled team for your implementation project, next week we will discuss the solution design.

cloud-service-specialists

Once again, several AST team members have increased their professional skillset with certifications in their respective disciplines!

AST would like to congratulate Mathew A. on completing his Project Management Professional Certification. Ken V. has obtained three certifications this month: Oracle WebLogic Server 12c PreSales, Oracle Database 11g PreSales, and Oracle Access Management Suite Plus 11g PreSales. Also, Nick G. is now the 12th employee to obtain his Oracle Business Intelligence Cloud Service Specialist certificate.
We are constantly impressed with and proud of each of our associates.  Congratulations and keep up the great work!

ebs

Join AST Corporation on Thursday, May 21, 2015 at 1:00 PM CDT to learn about our pre-built EBS/WAM integration tools and how your organization can gain significant operational efficiencies and competitive advantages with their use.  We’ve helped several utility customers succeed with EBS/WAM integration and you can benefit from their experiences.

 Do you suffer from a lack of integration between Oracle Work Order and Asset Management (WAM) and your E-Business Suite (EBS) Financials?  Are you unable to close books because you are not sure which system is the best source of truth? Do you find yourself constantly trying to trace transactions between both systems? Is your IT helpdesk inundated with calls from irate users asking why the systems are not in sync? If you answered yes to any of these questions, attend our free webinar to learn how AST Corporation can help eliminate your work-around solutions, spreadsheets and continuous reconciliation efforts.
 

managed-services

The ‘wisdom of the crowd’, popularized by James Surowiecki’s book of the same name, rests on an idea originally credited to Aristotle.  The idea is that if you take a diverse set of opinions and aggregate them, the average tends to be much closer to the truth than any single or individual response.  This can easily be applied to the utilization of a managed IT services team for your project.

Nine of the top 10 search results on Google for “benefits of managed IT services” are lists from various publications in recent years. This provides a total data set of 66 responses.  Although each is phrased differently, we can group them by creating categories based on commonalities to normalize and standardize the data. Of the search results, 13 different categories were obvious.

Once each response is categorized, we assign each standardized data point a value based on its rankings and add the values to find the total value of each category. There is some subjectivity involved in determining which category each data point best fits into based on their descriptions, but overall, the results were fairly clear.  Of the 13 categories, the top five from our data set using the ‘wisdom of the crowd’ analysis on the benefits of a managed IT services team include:

1. Expertise and Staffing
As the highest-rated category, the focus is primarily on having a highly skilled and knowledgeable team of IT professionals.  This team should increase efficiency within the business, thus reducing costs.

2. New/Changing Technology
Resting significantly higher than the following categories, this proves that an organization’s ability to keep up with the rapid pace of changing technology can greatly impact operations and efficiency.

3. Planning and Budgeting
     Planning and budgeting your human capital resources can often present a challenge. Enlisting the help of a Managed Service team, budgeting becomes much more predictable and planning and staffing is less of a concern.

4. Response Time

     Having a focused and dedicated managed services team means that any error or emergency can be addressed immediately, with minimum down time, and that your business is able to more quickly adapt to changes as they arise.
5. Centralization
    A dedicated managed service team is not only able to handle vendor matters for you, but as a single unit, allows you to focus your time on working with one team that is immediately responsive to you.
Now that we have seen how the wisdom of the crowd applies to the benefits of managed IT services, next week we’ll continue this discussion with how to avoid common pitfalls in your collaboration with a managed services team.

implementation-partner

Selecting an implementation partner is a key decision affecting the success of your project.  The market is full of quality partners, each with vast amounts of experience.  It is critical that your firm selects a partner who fully understands both the software and your detailed business requirements.  For instance, if your firm selects Oracle software, you should seek an implementation partner at an appropriate Oracle Partnership level.

Oracle Partner status is not easy to achieve, and the level of partnership defines the expertise of the systems implementer.  Partners must demonstrate mastery of each subject area through employee certification and demonstrable customer satisfaction. 
Business/Industry Knowledge:  Apart from being a certified partner for your selected software, you should always validate their level of familiarity with your line of business or industry. Ask how many implementations they have successfully completed for similar business entities.  It is important to know how mature the partner is in handling your type of project and what industry best practices they have to offer. If you decide to partner with a firm that has a successful track record in your industry, chances are high that they will do a great job and add value to your implementation project.
Reference Cross-check:  The reference check is a proven method to find the right implementation partner. Communicating with customers in your industry can provide a deep insight into the vendor’s implementation methodology and success claims. It is important to reach out to at least three previous clients of the partner. Be sure to discuss what went well and how issues and risks were addressed.  Every systems implementation will have a number of issues, and the mark of a good partner is not the absence of issues, but rather the way the issues were addressed.
Implementation Approach: It is essential to know your implementation partner and their methodology well. An experienced partner with an extensive successes rate is worth considering, so make sure the partner has industry-driven methodologies. The consulting world is very competitive and cost is a major factor in partner selection. Many consulting firms are adopting off-site/offshore methods. This business model may help them bring down costs and remain competitive, but this approach may not be suitable for your organization. It is crucial to evaluate the benefits and drawbacks of the implementation partner’s business model before making your selection. 
Thanks for joining us!  Next week, we’ll discuss selecting the right team for your implementation project.

ast-screening-event

As part of AST’s N.E.W. (Nutrition, Exercise and Wellness) health initiative, we are sponsoring, in partnership with Optum and Gallagher Benefits, a Wellness Screening Program for our employees.  The onsite event will occur on Friday, May 8th, and offsite employees have the opportunity to participate throughout the month of May. 

The Wellness Program will include one simple blood draw that consists of 36 lab tests designed to detect disease or illness at the earliest stage, a simple health risk questionnaire completed to identify risk factors, blood pressure and body mass index (BMI), an educational summary report and access to a health portal to help support our employees on their wellness journey.
This Screening Event is one of the many wellness initiatives that AST will provide through its N.E.W. program!