Intelligent Enterprises. Enterprise Systems. Integrated Enterprise with ERP. Customer-Centric Enterprise with CRM. Customer-Responsive Enterprise with SCM. Renewing Enterprise with PLM. Collaborative Enterprise with BPM. Informed Enterprise with BI. Implementing Enterprise Systems. Epilogue: Enterprise Performance Intelligence. Appendix: SAP Business Suite. References.
Vivek Kale has more than two decades of professional IT experience during which he has handled and consulted on various aspects of enterprise-wide information modeling, enterprise architecture, business process redesign, and e-business architecture. He has been Group CIO of Essar Group, the steel/oil and gas major of India as well as Raymond Ltd., the textile and apparel major of India. He is a seasoned practitioner in transforming the business of IT, facilitating business agility, and enabling the Process-Oriented Enterprise. He is the author of several books, including Inverting the Paradox of Excellence: How Companies Use Variations for Business Excellence and How Enterprise Variations Are Enabled by SAP.
"Vivek Kale’s book, Enhancing Enterprise Intelligence, de-mystifies
the latest advances in information technology applied to
enterprises in today's supply chain networks-oriented markets.
While the book features the SAP Business Suite in the appendix, in
the main body of the book the author clearly describes the purpose
and implications of integrating Enterprise Resources Planning (ERP)
with Customer Relationship Management (CRM) with Supply Chain
Management (SCM) with Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) with
Business Process Management (BPM) and with Business Intelligence
(BI). The author writes from an end-customer centric perspective of
the competitiveness that networks of processes driven by
extraordinary information intelligence can provide. Upon reading
this book, it is terribly exciting to realize that today the
technology supports dynamic linkages of different business
processes that can be tailored in real time for specific
customer-product pairs; that the technology supports the
identification of information patterns to be used for making
business decisions about which customers are most profitable and
open to buying increasingly customized new products; that the
technology can deliver accurate, synchronized, real-time
intelligence from multiple sources crossing corporate and national
boundaries in support of time-driven competition; that the
technology enables an architecture that is scalable in multiple
dimensions with the growth in business; and, finally, that the only
real constant in today's supply chain networks-oriented markets may
be information itself because information has become a tangible
resource!"
...William T. Walker, CFPIM, CIRM, CSCP, Adjunct professor of
supply chain engineering at NYU Polytechnic School of Engineering,
author of Supply Chain Construction
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