Company-wide Input for Selecting Order Management System

Here’s the picture: A multichannel company with sales of $20 million has an aging order management system that has been in place for over 20 years. While there are some things that the users like about the order management system, they have basically outgrown it. They need far better marketing information, e-commerce site to business systems interfaces, forecasting and inventory management, and the ability to deal better with light manufacturing and tracking sets and kits, which are a major part of their business.

The company president authorizes a project to investigate replacing the order management system. Immediately a turf battle ensues. IT is already researching the Internet for the most technically up-to-date IT platform. The users’ comments are predictable: “They’ll pick the most expensive, technology-driven order management system out there regardless of whether it fits our business.” There is a proverbial glass wall between the two groups in many companies.

The outcome: After months of no progress, the company president shrinks from his responsibility and says, “We’ll keep the current order management system.”

Unfortunately, this scene is played out on a daily basis in many companies both large and small. In defense of the IT department, they are often given responsibility for everything from telephone systems, to help desk, to advanced warehouse management systems, e-commerce systems and e-mail management systems. Most often they are under-budgeted. Management backs into a percent to net sales that the company can afford to spend. Additionally, the technology is diverse, complex and represents generations of different languages, databases and standards.

But in defense of the users, IT more and more takes a technological point of view rather than a business perspective. By a “business perspective” I mean that in many cases IT no longer knows the company’s business – not the mechanical things like how to enter an order. They lack knowledge of the industry overall. And they lack the understanding of how to help you grow and manage your business. Examples include details about what will make your marketing more effective; what do the merchants need to plan, grow and evaluate their merchandise selection; and how to help supply chain logistics become more efficient. In many companies, IT often looks at application function as secondary to technology. Additionally, they hide behind a lot of technical jargon that pushes users away from them.

And order management system vendor salesmen are no better off. Gone is the day when talented sales and support people really understood the industry. Many barely know their company’s system, and many can’t even demonstrate their order management system without the aid of a support analyst.

The result of all this is a collection of negatives.

A technically advanced order management system or a system that fits the IT standard is selected. It may be a weak system from a business perspective. Technology by itself rarely gives an ROI.

The IT department’s lack of a business focus means that users don’t ever make high-level use of the systems in place, because they don’t know what applications and capabilities exist in commercial order management systems or in previous generations of in-house developed systems.

Another result is that there isn’t a partnership between the user departments and IT, which optimizes the full, untapped potential of IT. The company suffers because the rather large investments in critical applications don’t materialize or they are years off of the projection.

Tear down the wall
You will have to start thinking differently in order to change things.

Outside resources can help your company make this transition. In our order management system and warehouse management system consulting projects, we have successfully assisted companies in making these types of sea changes.

We believe that IT “for good or bad (and ineffectiveness is certainly bad)” governs the productivity and profitability of this industry. How well is your company tapping its potential?

If you’re interested in discussing your systems project with a consultant, contact Jeff Barry at jbarry@fcbco.com, or call (804) 740-8743. F. Curtis Barry & Co. is a national consulting firm that works with eCommerce, catalog, retail, manufacturing and wholesale distributors on projects focusing on supply chain strategies, order management systems, warehouse management systems, inventory management, third party logistics, and to reduce freight costs.

Order management software, Warehouse Management System

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