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Showing posts with label Cloud Computing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cloud Computing. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

NetSuite Report: Businesses See Cloud Computing As A Competitive Advantage

NetSuite, a provider of cloud-based financials / ERP and omni-channel commerce software suites, recently announced the results of a study titled, 'Disrupt, Collapse, Transform: The Role of the Cloud in Industry Transformation', sponsored by NetSuite and conducted by global industry analyst firm Frost & Sullivan. The study, completed in October 2014, surveyed 1,500 senior executives across multiple industry sectors in seven countries—the US, Australia, Singapore, the UK, Japan, Hong Kong, and the Philippines. Two-hundred of the surveyed participants were from the US.

The study examined the drivers for disruption across all industries and how modern businesses respond. Among respondents, 81 percent of US cloud-based software users told Frost & Sullivan that the cloud has provided them with a competitive advantage over their rivals—particularly with regard to entering new markets—and has helped them react more quickly and effectively to change.

Survey respondents identified four significant disruptive drivers impacting their businesses and motivating them to transform.
The four drivers are:
•New disruptive competitors
•Digitalization
•New business models
•Productization/Servitization

Frost & Sullivan research shows that cloud computing is both a contributor to industry transformation, as well as a necessary response for organizations to survive.

According to the research, greater adaptability to industry change is now a main driver of cloud adoption in the US.
•62 percent of those surveyed in the US describe cloud computing as representing an opportunity for their business.
•51 percent of US respondents said they are leveraging the cloud to access elements of their business management software, with customer relationship management (CRM) and e-commerce being the cloud-based business applications they most commonly use.

To read more of the Frost & Sullivan research study, and learn more about the benefits of cloud computing in the manufacturing and distribution sectors, visit the NetSuite NewsRoom.

The Brown Smith Wallace 2014-15 Distribution and Manufacturing Software Guides are currently available for download. Please contact snelson@bswllc.com for more information about these latest editions.

 
2014 Manufacturing Software Guide: 
 
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Friday, November 30, 2012

Acumatica Cloud ERP Software Keeps Businesses Running Through Hurricane Sandy

Hurricane Sandy had a wide-ranging and devastating impact as it slammed though the U.S. East Coast just a few short weeks ago. While power and internet service was out for hundreds of thousands of businesses and residences all along the East Coast for well over a week, smart technology planning and adoption of cloud technologies kept businesses like AME Corporation up and running, and in touch with their employees, their customers and suppliers, shortly after the storm subsided.

AME Corporation specializes in custom rubber and plastic components and sealing solutions, with locations in New Jersey and Shanghai, China. About five years ago, AME Corporation’s President and CEO Ehren Dimitry had the foresight to understand how cloud computing could really give his business a competitive advantage, and could help save his business in the event that natural disasters like Hurricane Sandy strike.

AME uses Acumatica’s built-in business wiki to create and store standard operating procedures, workflow diagrams, and collaborative documents between operations in New Jersey and Shanghai. AME is working with Acumatica partner SIPD Services to fully integrate Box, AME’s preferred cloud-based file repository and collaboration service.

To view a short video of AME Corporation’s president and CEO showcasing their decision to use Acumatica, and to download the case study featuring AME Corporation, visit the Acumatica blog.

The Brown Smith Wallace 2012 Mid-Year Supplements are available. Visit our website to download your copy!



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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Infor Wins Technology Innovation Award at Equip'Hotel Show

Infor, a leading provider of business application software serving more than 70,000 customers, announced that Infor Hospitality has been awarded a prestigious Equip’ Innov Award for one of the most innovative products in the technology category at the Equip’ Hotel Industry Conference and Exhibition in Paris.

Infor HMS was selected because the application has made significant strides in cloud, mobility and social network integration solutions, expanding rapidly into international markets. Infor HMS is a multi-departmental application that touches the important areas of the business – whether it’s financial asset management, central reservations, revenue management or corporate office, on-property operations, sales, marketing, maintenance or staffing schedules. Infor Hospitality connects hospitality-specific strategy and plans to front- and back-office systems so organizations have tools to operate more efficiently, make better decisions faster and maximize revenue opportunities.

Learn more on the Hospitality Upgrade blog.

The Brown Smith Wallace 2012 Mid-Year Supplements are available. Visit our website to download your copy!



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Friday, September 28, 2012

The World’s Most Game-Changing Companies Standardize on Cloud ERP

The new generation of leading companies think, act and operate differently and are changing the dynamics of business. What do these companies have in common and why are they consistently out-maneuvering and out-performing their larger, better-funded competitors? These innovative, fast-growing businesses outperform their peers because they move and adapt more quickly, make better decisions faster, operate with greater efficiency, and enable significantly more productive employees. They also all run their core business operations on modern, cloud-based business management software.

Read more on the Cloud NetSuite blog.

The Brown Smith Wallace 2012 Mid-Year Supplements are available. Visit our website to download your copy!


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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Why the Cloud Won’t Save Your Business

All of the hype and hoopla that has surrounded cloud computing is finally quieting down. We’re almost in the place where cloud computing is no longer being suggested as the miracle cure for what ails business. However, just in case your business still thinks that the cloud will solve all of its problems, here are the top 5 reasons why it won’t...

Read more on the SAP on the Cloud blog.

The Brown Smith Wallace 2012 Mid-Year Supplements are available. Visit our website to download your copy!

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Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Cloud Computing: Debunking the Myths

For the past few years, the IT world has seen the increasing popularity of cloud computing, easily becoming 2012’s most talked about business software solution. More and more organizations have chosen to adopt the cloud to some extent. In Asia Pacific alone, a 2011 Frost & Sullivan survey indicated that cloud computing has emerged as the #1 priority for a significant number (38%) of businesses.

Cloud solutions and services come in various forms and pricing models, which may have caused some IT professionals to be sceptical on how this new technology may affect their businesses. Frost & Sullivan dispelled a few of the most common Cloud myths in its recent white paper. Visit the Cloud NetSuite blog to read more.

The Brown Smith Wallace 2012 Mid-Year Supplements are available. Visit our website to download your copy!


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Monday, August 27, 2012

Things About The Cloud We Take for Granted

Crystal-ball gazing is always a fun pastime, and can make for some pithy punditry. Predictions about The Cloud are especially fun to bandy about, as prognostications can take real flights of fancy. Case in point: Ben Kepes—commentator, adviser, cloud computing analyst, blogger, and CloudU curator—got his crystal ball rolling when he asked tech business leaders, “What are the top 10 things about cloud we’ll all take for granted in three years?”

Visit the SAP on the Cloud blog to read more of the soothsaying!


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Friday, August 17, 2012

Does Cloud Computing Hurt or Help Hackers?

The convenience of cloud computing is intoxicating, and we’re all living in the cloud more and more every day, both at work and at play. Unfortunately, with convenience comes exposure. The headlines are rife with cautionary tales of personal identity theft and corporate data breaches, and hackers show no signs of slowing their efforts to get their hands on sensitive information. So, just how dangerous is the cloud? Is cloud computing enabling cybercrooks, making it easier for them to practice their nefarious trade? At focus.com, folks tackled the topic of cybercrime in the cloud when answering the question “Does the accessibility of cloud computing make hacking easier?”

Read more on the SAP on the Cloud blog...


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Friday, August 10, 2012

Taking Your Business Overseas? Pack Your Cloud Financials!

Expanding your business to new markets is exciting, but once the thrill of new potential wears off, you are left with a very important, utilitarian problem—how to keep track of profit and loss in a new office, in a new currency, with a new set of tax and regulatory requirements? In the past, the solution was typically to extend a complex corporate ERP system to the satellite office, or adopt a regional accounting package and go through the cumbersome process of converting and manually integrating results with the head office. Today, however, sophisticated international cloud ERP is making both approaches obsolete.

Read more on the Cloud NetSuite blog...


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Wednesday, August 8, 2012

The Future of Cloud Transformations for Business

In a recent survey of global business and technology executives shows that nearly 75% of the 600 leaders surveyed indicated that their companies had piloted, adopted, or implemented the cloud in their organizations. However, the cloud’s potential for driving business innovation remains virtually untapped. Irving Wladawsky-Berger, Chairman Emeritus of the IBM Academy of Technology and Visiting Lecturer at MIT's Sloan School of Management and Engineering Systems Division, notes that “over the next decade, advances in cloud computing will enable critical societal and business applications in a number of industries, including health care, learning and finance.” The report cites six specific game-changing business enablers empowered by the cloud:  visit the Epicor blog to read more...


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Friday, July 20, 2012

Disaster Recovery and HR

June marked the official beginning of the hurricane season in the Atlantic—a good reason to check your kits to ensure that adequate supplies are on hand in case of a major storm.

What is needed is an effective disaster-recovery plan, a set of guidelines and procedures used by an organization for the recovery of data lost due to severe forces of nature like earthquakes, fires, tornadoes, floods or hurricanes.

Strategic HR leaders will prepare by working through scenarios to deal with issues that may arise in the wake of a disaster that affects both personnel and systems.

Read more on the Epicor blog for a series of articles highlighting the cloud as a means of improving business continuity in the face of catastrophic risk.

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Monday, July 16, 2012

Mitigating Common Cloud Risks

Although many vendors are willing to present cloud computing as the perfect solution to all problems (real and imagined), as with all new service delivery mechanisms, it comes along with potential risks that need to be mitigated. If you are evaluating cloud computing for use in your organization, here are some of the most common risks that people fail to identify, assess or mitigate.

Read more on the SAP on the Cloud blog...


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Friday, July 6, 2012

Top-Level Support Key for ERP Investments

A recent study by Gartner and the Financial Executives Research Foundation indicates that chief financial officers are becoming increasingly influential in the decisions regarding technology investments for many organizations. The study shows that the CFO's role in technology decision making has increased in the last year, with 44 percent of CFOs stating that their influence over IT investment has increased since 2010.

Enterprise organizations are being challenged to adapt as technologies intersect (e.g., social, mobile, cloud, information) and the data that result from their adoption and deployment (within and beyond the enterprise) expand exponentially.

In this environment, ERP remains a core tool for leveraging data, one that CEOs and CFOs as well as CIOs must attend to. We are seeing this in increased executive participation, from funding to implementation to ongoing operation and maintenance.

Read more on the Epicor blog...


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Monday, June 11, 2012

Cloud Computing: Paradise or Peril

From the Association for High Technology Distribution:

Many distributors ask, "should we be moving our technology to the cloud?" Some of the reasons that this question is being asked is based on the following factors listed below. Do any of these apply to your business?

  • We just had a server failure and we lost a ton of data
  • We are trying to reduce our expenses and we heard that the cloud was cheaper that what we are doing today
  • Maintaining our current hardware is expensive and it is not what we want to be focusing our time and dollars on
  • Technology is changing so fast, we just never seem to be able to keep up.
Let's start by explaining some of the terms you may have heard...

Read more...



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Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Cloud Silos - Not a New Trend

These days all it takes to enter the cloud is the swipe of a credit card – Visa, MasterCard, or corporate AMEX will do. This has led many enterprises and line of business owners to turn to the cloud for their business applications, computing, and storage needs. However, in the rush to take advantage of these easy to procure and deploy solutions, a hidden threat is beginning to emerge. This challenge is the proliferation of cloud silos across the enterprise. According to David Linthicum of InfoWorld, if companies are not careful “in many instances clouds will just become a set of new silos, diminishing the value of IT if we’re not careful… the end result is an enterprise IT that becomes more complex and difficult to change, now on the new cloud computing target platform.”

However, the silo trend is not a new one. We have seen it before in the 1980’s and 1990’s as large enterprises in an effort to spur growth and reduce costs purchased a large number of on-premise solutions to improve both the efficiency and effectiveness of their operations.

Read more on the SAP on the Cloud blog...

 

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Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Providing Enterprise Collaboration Tools Employees Will Use

From CIO:

"Businesses are under pressure to enable collaboration beyond the corporate firewall as workers increasingly need to connect with remote colleagues as well as business partners, suppliers and consultants.

The challenge to IT departments is that many employees are turning to email and consumer-grade file-sharing services to get their work done and exposing the enterprise to risk in the process."

Read More...

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Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Using The Cloud To Weatherproof Your Financials

Good Clouds and Bad Clouds
Recent weather events including flooding along the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, tornados from Northern California to Oklahoma, thunderstorms from Illinois to New York, and heat alerts in the Southeast have demonstrated the impact of ‘bad clouds’ on business and data availability.

I’ve often heard the phrase “you have to fight fire with fire.” Today many businesses are fighting clouds with The Cloud. In the case of one Oklahoma manufacturing firm, the solution to business problems involved using the Cloud to centralize data in a secure location that is impervious to the impacts of local disasters. By using the Cloud, DDB Unlimited (http://www.ddbunlimited.com/) was able to automate financial processes, streamline operations, eliminate accounting costs, and process orders faster.

Building a Cloud Solution
AIM Solutions in Dallas, TX helped DDB Unlimited, a rugged enclosure manufacturer, take advantage of Cloud technology. The solution was designed to automate business processes while simplifying infrastructure requirements.

Prior to moving to the Cloud, DDB Unlimited utilized QuickBooks for accounting and Profit 21 for CRM. Having disparate systems for different purposes created extra work including dual order entry, manual import and export processes, manual accounting, and offline reporting. In addition, the solution was susceptible to local power outages and other issues caused by ‘bad’ clouds. The accounting solution was scheduled to be replaced by a Sage MAS 90 solution, but during implementation, DDB Unlimited noticed that processes became slower and more confusing when using MAS 90.

After some investigation, DDB Unlimited determined that the Cloud could unify several operations in a single system. The Cloud eliminated manual accounting practices, providing an out-of-pocket savings of $80,000/year. In addition, the Cloud ERP solution did not require client software so installation was fast and maintenance does not require touching each computer or mobile device.

The Cloud solution came with import and export tools so existing data – including the chart of accounts, current account balances, customer, active orders, and much more could be easily imported. The solution was up and running in about one month.

Weatherproofing Financials
By replacing papers and forms with electronic orders, businesses such as DDB Unlimited have become much more efficient. However, when installed locally, a computer driven solution is just as susceptible to natural disasters as papers stacked in a filing cabinet. In addition, a faulty hard drive can have the same impact as a tornado when not properly backed-up.

The Cloud enables businesses to store their critical data offsite in a fault-tolerant datacenter with multiple sources of power and bandwidth. Data is replicated in different fault zones so a single disaster does not hinder business operations. DDB Unlimited’s manufacturing plant can still be impacted by local weather conditions, but it’s financials and business operating data are secure in a weatherproof electronic vault.

Documents as well as transactions
In addition to company financials, the Cloud can store critical business documents. Intellectual property, business processes, sales list, and company records can be maintained in a safe location. These documents can be linked to transactions to provide an audit trail and simplify the auditing process.

Don’t wash away the technical experts
The Cloud does not eliminate the need for technical experts. Access to the Internet and application configuration are still required.

The cloud allows technical experts to spend less time managing servers and more time helping solve business problems and analyzing business data. This allows IT employees to shift from being an unwanted expense to become an integral part of company profitability.

Are financials useful if your plant is impacted by a natural disaster?
If a natural disaster destroys your plant, does it really matter if your financials survive? The answer of course is yes. Insurance frequently covers your plant and allows you to rebuild in the event of a disaster. Putting a value on your financials, sales lists, customer orders, and critical business data is difficult, so it is frequently not insured. Often this uninsured data is what adds value to your business (many companies are purchased for only their customer lists and intellectual property). By using the cloud, you can effectively “insure” this part of your business. In the event of a natural disaster, you can still access your information using a computer from any Internet connection.

Contact us if you want a copy of the 2-page DDB Unlimited case study.

By djohnson
(http://erpcloudnews.com/2011/06/using-the-cloud-to-weatherproof-your-financials/)

Monday, February 22, 2010

Finally a rationale discussion of Cloud Computing

Through attending a webinar hosted by Safari Books Online from author, David Linthicum, titled “Cloud Computing and SOA Convergence in Your Enterprise,” we find that most of the Cloud Computing discussions take on the overtones of the Mac vs PC debate. Those who are in favor of Cloud Computing and Software as a Service view it as the answer to all problems and anyone who disagrees with them is a luddite or worse. Those who are against Cloud Computing point to any failure as a reason why the whole movement is flawed. As consultants who advise clients on the topic, we have been searching for a more rational discussion of the pros and cons.

David Linthicum presented several valuable slides in the webinar. The first slide that was useful listed seven criteria to be used to determine when Cloud Computing is a fit. Those criteria were:
  • When process, applications and data are largely independent
  • When points of integration are well defined
  • When a lower level of security is fine
  • When the core internal architecture is healthy
  • When the web is the desired platform
  • When cost is an issue
  • When the applications are new

The next slide listed the criteria for determining when Cloud Computing isn’t a fit. Those criteria were:

  • When process, applications and data are interdependent
  • When points of integration are poorly defined
  • When a high level of security is needed
  • When the core internal architecture needs work
  • When the application requires a native interface
  • When cost is an issue
  • When the applications is legacy

David also provided a 17 step process for implementing a cloud computing initiative.

We have found this to be one of the few objective and balanced assessments of Cloud Computing and recommend that you read his blogs and book. His book is available on Amazon and he has a blog at http://davidlinthicum.sys-con.com/

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Managing ERP Implementations Differently

CIO Magazine recently published an interesting article about why legacy ERP systems need to be managed differently. Though this article uses examples from very large ($1B+) companies running SAP the author made several observations that are true for the typical wholesale distributor:

1. ERP packages that have been heavily customized can't be upgraded.
2. Maintenance investments are wasted as you can't benefit from new enhancements
3. New technologies (cloud computing, mobile apps, social media) are changing how ERP is delivered
4. Analytics and utilization of data is the new "killer app"
5. Implement new ERP software and don't customize it this time change your process instead.

If you are using older ERP software that can be upgraded because of the customizations read this article.

CIO Magazine: ERP_How_and_Why_You_Need_to_Manage_It_Differently?
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