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eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001

ERP Enterprise Resource Planning

  • GB: Six London councils deploy shared services ERP to cut £18m

    Six London councils are undergoing an Oracle shared services implementation, in a move expected to save £18m over four years.

    The London Boroughs of Barking & Dagenham, Brent, Lambeth, Lewisham, Havering and Croydon will be implementing the same version of Oracle release 12. Implementation will be complete at the end of July 2013.

  • Saudi Arabia: Water Ministry to Switch Over to E-Governance

    Minister of Water and Electricity Abdullah Al-Hussayen said his ministry would soon be switching over to e-governance with the signing of a contract to install an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system.

    Once the system is running, an integrated database would be in place enabling about 4,000 employees of the ministry to share the resources in the headquarters and branch offices all over the Kingdom.

    The minister signed a multi-million riyal ERP project with the US software giant Oracle for acquisition of its e-business suite recently.

  • US: Experts Offer ERP System Implementation Tips

    A new study has shown that 58 percent of public finance officers have been or expect to be disappointed with their organizations’ enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems. Discontent about large-scale projects isn’t surprising, but those who have had some success revealed a number of best practices to better handle the process.

    Conducted jointly by Microsoft and GFOA Consulting, the research arm of the Government Finance Officers Association, the survey collected responses from 268 members of the organization.

  • USA: A New ERP Market: The Federal Government

    There will be a consolidation of 'redundant' IT systems by the OMB; ERP providers should tailor their solutions to meet the demands of the federal government.

    Federal ERP spending is expected to grow 33 percent, from $5.8 billion to $7.7 billion, by 2010, according to a report by analytics firm INPUT. According to the report, in the government sector the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), and the administration's Financial Management and Human Resources Management initiatives, will be the financial drivers of these investments in the ERP market, due primarily to the Management Agenda, a presidential strategy designed to improve the management of the federal government.

  • USA: Federal ERP Spending to Grow 37 Percent by 2009

    Driven by system consolidation at the Department of Homeland Security and Administration management mandates, the federal market for Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) products and services will hit $7.7 billion in FY2009, a 37 percent increase over FY2004 spending of $5.6 billion, according to a report released today by INPUT, the leading provider of government market intelligence.
  • USA: States and Localities Explore Alternatives to Big ERP

    “The smallest ERP system known to man.” That is what Anand Dubey, Alaska’s director of enterprise technology, calls the homegrown alternative to an enterprise resource planning (ERP) application he created and dubbed the Virtual Manager.

    ERP is often defined as an architecture that supports the distribution of enterprisewide information across all functional units of a business or service organization. Dubey is on a mission to get officials in his state to rethink the traditionally expensive and complicated ERP implementation in favor of a system he created for less than $100,000 to track his Enterprise Technology Services (ETS) Division’s service catalog and personnel costs.

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