While
majority of ERP systems are implemented on premise, the rising cost
of IT infrastructure, upfront investment on software licenses, and
the complexity of implementation have compelled CIOs and CTOs to
adopt innovative ways to optimize IT operational excellence with
minimized cost. As a major tectonic shift in IT operations, the
innovations in cloud computing have contributed significantly to the
acceptance of cloud-based software systems in general, and
cloud-based ERP systems in particular. Although the early adopters,
mostly small and medium enterprises, are leveraging the benefits of
affordability, accessibility, and manageability of cloud-based ERP
systems, the large enterprises are still skeptical about the
long-term benefits because, for them, ERP system is not just another
piece of fringe software which would meet their short-term
objectives, nevertheless it's a key driver of their long-term
strategic goals.
This
white paper attempts to touch upon various aspects of cloud-based ERP
systems and deciphers the myths around realized benefits that are
usually advocated by the software vendors and product evangelists.
With changing business landscape, emerging customer needs, and
evolving best practices in securing customer data and privacy, the
large enterprises are focusing majorly on the right kind of
deployment of ERP systems that would not only accelerate business
productivity, but also it would ensure their business future ready
and full-proof during any disaster. This paper unfolds the fact
behind increasing concerns over cloud-based ERP systems and why the
large enterprises are still not ready to move into cloud computing in
a decisive manner.
Overview of ERP
The
genesis of enterprise resource planning (ERP) solutions emerges from
the requirement of management in accessing information regarding the
performance of all departments and business processes in any
organization. In an enterprise structure, as different business
functions, such as finance, human resources, sales and marketing,
customer service, manufacturing, quality assurance, and IT, are
integrated to translate the organizational goals into top lines and
bottom lines of the enterprise, similarly an ERP system supports the
data flow of all functions in a seamless manner and provides a
holistic view of enterprise-wide information in terms of reports and
charts. Since its early adoption in industry in the late eighties and
early nineties, the ERP systems have evolved along the ever changing
business requirements of organizations.
The
latest breed ERP system framework comprises modules like HRM (human
resources management), SCM (supply chain management), CRM (customer
relationship management), FAM (finance and account management), MRP
(manufacturing resource planning), project management, and BPM
(business process management), which are loosely coupled with the
core ERP system database. A client can opt for an all-inclusive
system or even can demand a lean system with fewer modules depending
upon the business requirement. Furthermore, the ERP system vendors
are smartly designing industry-specific ERP solutions, such as for
manufacturing and service industries.
While
integrating various functional processes, the ERP systems ensure
businesses eventually increase productivity, reduce turnaround time,
improve customer satisfaction, increase transparency and
accountability, speed up decision making process, and save money and
time.
When
it comes the deployment, the real fight begins amongst the decision
makers of the organization. While cost becomes an alpha factor for
deployment type, the management team often deliberates upon various
sensitive issues including privacy, control, data security,
dependency, performance, and integration. Depending upon client
requirements and organizational conviction, the ERP vendors provide
flexible options like on premise, hosted, and SaaS-based deployment.
Understanding Cloud-based ERP
Cloud
computing has opened new avenues for delivering an array of IT
services over the Internet. With the advent of service oriented
architecture (SOA) and Web 2.0 technologies, software vendors have
started offering various cloud-based services such as IaaS
(Infrastructure as a Service), PaaS (Platform as a Service), and SaaS
(Software as a Service), easing the upfront investment required by
any client. Multi-tenancy, hardware virtualization, and flexible
software architecture contribute to the drastic cost reduction in
cloud-based offerings. And that's the vantage point which prompts
many leading technology behemoths like Amazon, Google, Microsoft,
IBM, and Apple to provide cloud-based services to enterprises across
the geographies.
With
changing business dynamics, market competitions and sheer economic
reasons are becoming more palpable to the management. This endorses a
paradigm shift in the managing of IT and software services in any
organization. Most small and medium enterprises (SMEs) are now
shifting towards the cloud-based services for the singular reason
that initial investment becomes a pain area while acquiring
enterprise-grade software; however, with a fraction of that cost they
can even realize immense benefits, if they adopt cloud-delivered
services. In fact, a typical ERP solution, which is a huge
capital-intensive product, for a small company with 100 users, would
cost around $500,000 plus the investment on IT infrastructure for
on-premise deployment; whereas, the same system on cloud-based
delivery would almost cost half of that price, and that too without
infrastructure burden.
Apart
from initial investment point of view, cloud-based ERP systems have a
number of tangible advantages that appeal to SMEs. Some core
advantages include:
- Decreased infrastructure cost
- Reduced maintenance staff
- Quick implementation
- Lower implementation cost
- Faster customization
- Easy integration with other systems
- High scalability
However,
large enterprises where user base accounts more than 10,000, the
implementation of ERP on cloud gets extremely cumbersome. Adding
further, data security, control, and customization are other critical
areas that turn stumbling blocks for the decision makers to promptly
switch over from on-premise mode to on-demand implementation over
cloud.
Challenges of Cloud-based ERP
While
cloud-based software services are defining new dimensions in IT
offerings, large enterprises are still not fully convinced about the
future trajectory of these offerings. Although many SMEs are taking
the lead in adopting cloud-based ERP solutions, big organizations are
treading with a caution. The major point of concern is data security.
When the entire business-critical data are stored on cloud, the
management is doubly skeptical about the control and portability of
data. Irrespective of big assurances of cloud service providers
regarding the security and privacy of information, the large
enterprises are yet on evaluation mode. Here are some challenges that
restrict large enterprises to adopt cloud-based ERP solution.
Data
Security & Privacy
The
biggest fear about cloud-based services is the breach of data
security and privacy. Despite continuous assurances from cloud-based
service providers, the large enterprises are still doubtful about the
measures taken by data centers. And to exacerbate their doubts, the
growing incidents of cyber attacks across the world only add more
distrusts. According to a report published in Security Week, last
September noticed a number of cyber attacks on top US financial
institutes including Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase. The fact
that people generally believe that client machines are more
vulnerable to attacks; however, in this case the denial of service
was originated from the servers in data centers. According to
Internet Security Threat
Report Volume 17,
Symantec, April 2012, 93% of data theft identified in 2011 were from
the companies in the computer software, IT, and healthcare sectors.
Since
enterprise-grade ERP systems capture the business critical data from
all functions of the organization, exposing them to a third party
service provider would not only sometimes breach the SLA between the
company and its clients, but also it jeopardizes business secret when
they become vulnerable to large scale cyber attack. For big
enterprises, the security of customer information, business strategy,
and business-sensitive data weigh more than the growing trend of cost
optimization. Although cloud service providers come out with
innovative methods such as data encryption techniques, multiple
authentication process like dual password system and sequential
log-in, and multilayer fire-walling, today's hackers are smart enough
to intrude into data centers quite easily. Certainly, there is no
100% guarantee from the cloud service providers that their data
centers would never be vulnerable to such attacks.
Data
Control
When
cloud service providers take control of enterprise data, it becomes
imperative for the enterprises to agree upon various service level
agreements (SLAs) to accommodate service requests. However, once the
data are moved into data center servers, enterprise control gets
diminished. Any request for accessing a specific type of reporting
or maintenance of data becomes binding to the SLAs. As large
enterprises place thousands of requests from various functions, these
requests turn out to be additional cost overrun. Moreover, when an
enterprise wants to change the cloud service provider, the real
trouble arises because data migration from one data center to another
data center is the toughest task they have to handle.
Integration
For
large enterprises, cloud-based ERP system is not the only program
that they entirely bank upon; there are scores of other critical
software programs that run on the premises are also equally
important. Synchronization of data lying at the local servers with
the data available on cloud sometimes becomes difficult. When
integration of data sources becomes essential, the inability to do so
or inordinate delay in execution impacts the business.
Portability
All
cloud service providers are not in a democratic structure, which
would enable transitioning of data from one data center to another
smooth and painless. When a large organization invests hugely on
cloud-based ERP solutions, it doesn't essentially corroborate to the
fact that the business relationship would last for eternity.
Sometimes, the services provided by the cloud service provider won't
suffice to the relevant needs of the business. In this case, a shift
in vendor becomes indispensable. However, simply shifting the vendor
won't resolve the issue because the huge corporate data lying with
the previous vendor might not be migrated to the new vendor's data
center as it is. Then the real crisis begins.
Dependability
In
comparison to on premise deployment, cloud-based ERP has a major
bottleneck, which essentially represents the dependability on the
vendor for all and sundry. Even a small report, which might have some
urgency for now, can't be retrieved at the moment because everything
needs a proper process and it takes time to execute. Too much
dependability on the vendor for everything sometimes hampers the
decision making process of the client as well.
Conclusion
The
evolution of of cloud computing combined with the power of Internet
technologies and the service oriented architecture (SOA) has opened a
floodgate of opportunities for cloud service providers and software
vendors to expand their services. From multiple deployment
opportunities to flexible services to easy customization, the
cloud-based software services have already made their marks in the
SME segment delivery. However, the large enterprises are not fully
convinced about the benefits articulated by cloud service providers.
Especially, in case of cloud-based ERP solution, the short-term
benefits may seem quite exiting, but for many good reasons such as
data security, privacy, super control, integration, and data
migration, the big companies have a valid point to differ with the
service provider's views. Vulnerability of business-critical data,
customer information, and strategic corporate information is not a
mere narrative, but the stark realities of today's cyber attacks.
While hackers are stealing millions of customer data from the data
centers, then it dismantles the real vulnerability of cloud service
providers, as how helpless they are. And all these ground realities
only substantiate the skepticism of large enterprises on the promises
made by cloud service providers. There is a long way to go for the
cloud-based ERP solutions for large-scale deployment because the
unquestionable risks attached to data security and privacy shouldn't
be undermined.