MITS6004 Enterprise Resource Planning Assignment 1 Case Study and Presentation March 2020 MITS6004 Assignment 1 and 2 Copyright © XXXXXXXXXXVIT, All Rights Reserved. 2 Objective(s) This assessment...

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MITS6004 Enterprise Resource Planning Assignment 1 Case Study and Presentation March 2020 MITS6004 Assignment 1 and 2 Copyright © 2015-2019 VIT, All Rights Reserved. 2 Objective(s) This assessment item relates to the unit learning outcomes as in the unit descriptor. This assessment is designed to analyze business/ enterprise activities and to identify problems, weaknesses, strengths and threats and entities interacting with the enterprise. This assessment improve presentation skills and give students experience to apply knowledge to identify, make recommendations and devise solutions for an ERP implementation topic and writing a report relevant to the Unit of Study subject matter. INSTRUCTIONS Assignment 1 – Case Study and Presentation - 10% Due Session 5 Case Study: Nike ERP Implementation • BACKGROUND: Nike was founded in 1964 by Bill Bowerman and Phil Knight in Beaverton, Oregon. It began as Blue-Ribbon Sports (BRS). In 1972, BRS introduced a new brand of athletic footwear called Nike, named for the Greek winged goddess of victory. The company employs 26,000 staff around the world with revenues in fiscal year 2005 of $13.7 billion. It has facilities in Oregon, Tennessee, North Carolina, and the Netherlands with more than 200 factory stores, a dozen Nike women stores, and more than 100 sales and administrative offices. Its subsidiaries include Cole Haan Holdings, Inc., Bauer Nike Hockey, Hurley International LLC, Nike IHM, Inc., Converse Inc., and Execter Brands Group LLC. As of May 31, 2004, manufacturing plants included Nike brand, with 137 factories in the Americas (including the United States), 104 in EMEA, 252 in North Asia, and 238 in South Asia, providing more than 650,000 jobs to local communities. • OBJECTIVE Nike grew from a sneaker manufacturer in the early 1970s to a global company selling a large number of products throughout the world. Nike’s sneaker supply chain was historically highly centralized. The product designs, factory contracts, and delivery are managed through the headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon. By 1998, there were 27 different and highly customized order management systems that did not talk well to the home office in Beaverton, Oregon. At that time Nike decided to purchase and implement a single- instance ERP system along with supply chain and customer relationship management systems to control the nine-month manufacturing cycle better, with the MITS6004 Assignment 1 and 2 Copyright © 2015-2019 VIT, All Rights Reserved. 3 goal being to cut it down to six months. • PLAN The company developed a business plan to implement the systems over a six-year period, with multiple ERP rollouts over that time. The plan called for the implementation of the demand planning system first while working through the ERP system and supply chain implementation. • IMPLEMENTATION The demand planning system was implemented first for reasons that made a lot of sense. The total number of users was small in comparison to the ERP system and was thought to be relatively easy to implement; however, this turned out not to be the case. When the system went live, there were a number of problems related to the software, response time, and data. In addition, training was not adequately addressed, causing the relatively small number of end users to use the system ineffectively. The single-instance ERP system and supply chain implementation plan differed from the demand planning system and called instead for a phased rollout over a number of years. The ERP system implementation went much more smoothly. Nike started in 2000 with the implementation of the Canadian region, a relatively small one, and ended with the Asia- Pacific and Latin America regions in 2006, with the United States and Europe, Middle East, and Africa in 2002. This included implementing a single instance of the system, with the exception of Asia-Pacific, and training more than 6,300 users. The total cost of the project as of 2006 was at $500 million—about $100 million more than the original project budget. • CONCLUSION: WHAT WAS LEARNED? The demand planning system interfacing to legacy data from a large number of systems that already did not talk well with each other was a root cause for misinformation and resulted in inadequate supply planning. The demand planning system was complex, and end users were not trained well enough to use the system effectively. System testing was not well planned and “real” enough to find issues with legacy system interfaces. • The overall business plan for all the systems and reasons for taking on such a highly complex implementation were well understood throughout the company. Thus, Nike had exceptional “buy-in” for the project and was able to make adjustment in its demand planning system and continue with the implementation. The goal was to ensure business goals were achieved through the implementation, and not so much to get the systems up and running. MITS6004 Assignment 1 and 2 Copyright © 2015-2019 VIT, All Rights Reserved. 4 • Nike exhibited patience in the implementation and learned from mistakes made early in the process. • Training was substantially increased for the ERP implementation. Customer service representatives received 140–180 hours of training from Nike, and users were locked out of the system until they completed the full training course. • Business process reengineering was used effectively to clarify performance-based goals for the implementation. CASE QUESTIONS 1. How could Organizational Project Management (OPM3) have helped to identify the problems with implementing the demand planning system? 2. What were the three primary reasons Nike was successful with the ongoing ERP implementation? 3. Why was a phased rollout the correct decision for Nike? Sources: Koch, C. (December 7, 2004). Nike Rebounds. CIO Australia’s magazine for executives. Submission Guidelines All submissions are to be submitted through turn-it-in. Drop-boxes linked to turn-it-in will be set up in the Unit of Study Moodle account. Assignments not submitted through these drop-boxes will not be considered. Your report should be limited to approx. 1500 words. Submissions must be made by the due date and time (which will be in the session detailed above) and determined by your Unit coordinator. Submissions made after the due date and time will be penalized at the rate of 10% per day (including weekend days). The turn-it-in similarity score will be used in determining the level if any of plagiarism. Turn-it-in will check conference web-sites, Journal articles, the Web and your own class member submissions for plagiarism. You can see your turn-it-in similarity score when you submit your assignment to the appropriate drop- box. If this is a concern you will have a chance to change your MITS6004 Case Study and Presentation - 1 Copyright©2015-2018VIT,AllRightsReserved. assignment and re-submit. However, re-submission is only allowed prior to the submission due date and time. After the due date and time have elapsed you cannot make re-submissions and you will have to live with the similarity score as there will be no chance for changing. Thus, plan early and submit early to take advantage of this feature. You can make multiple submissions, but please remember we only see the last submission, and the date and time you submitted will be taken from that submission. Your document should be a single word or pdf document containing your report.
Answered Same DayMar 28, 2021MITS6004

Answer To: MITS6004 Enterprise Resource Planning Assignment 1 Case Study and Presentation March 2020 MITS6004...

Kshitij answered on Mar 30 2021
133 Votes
Nike ERP implementation
1. The project management maturity model of an organization (OPM3) assists and guides the organization to make customized changes in its system in compliance with the objectives and strategies of the organization. This tool is a significant tool for the organization for measur
ing its utility and returns from the system even at the time of implementation as well as at the time of absorption. There are numerous ways in which the tool OPM3 can implement a demand system and can have a positive effect on the same.
First being that with the help of OPM3 Nike can take proactive in determining all the requirements in the supply system before the decision related to the demand system has been taken by the organization. On the other hand, the purchase and sakes segments are interconnected with the other segments and sectors of the organizations and for these there the need for a detailed provisional study is raised to identify the need, timeliness, and relevance of the integrated and harmonized system instead of the single-phase system. The demerit in the following can be the failure of Nike to maintain the coordination in the system of demand with the organizational goals as well as the aims and objectives of the whole system (OPM experts. 2017).
At last, the output that was generated from the study and analysis from the demand system cannot be integrated into the rest of the operations taking place in the different parts of the said organization or the company. Organization project management maturity model commonly known as OPM3 clearly and apparently states that all the organizations and entities responsible should make sure of the fact that all the actors must be provided with adequate appropriate knowledge regarding the system either before or at the time of purchase or even the implementation. As per the above discussion, it can be concluded that the company or organization had enough capability to imbibe the planning system of the demand of the organization.
Without any clear idea of the planning related to the demand of the whole organization and without having clarity regarding the demand slope of the organization, it was very obvious on the failure of the demand plan. There are numerous reasons for the same, firstly Nike failed to assess the capabilities and skills rationally and in an effective manner for the affected users of the project which ultimately lead to a gap and formed a barrier while using the same.
This is a shred of clear evidence to the fact that the company majorly focused on the powerful tools and neglecting the topic of knowledge to the users. Organization project management maturity model commonly known as OPM3 clearly and apparently states that all the organizations and entities responsible should make sure of the fact that all the actors must be provided with adequate appropriate knowledge regarding the system either before or at the time of purchase or even the implementation. As per the above discussion, it can...
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