What is SAP Enterprise Resource Planning?

  • July 27, 2024
  • Update date: December 21, 2024
  • Dushyant Sharma

Enterprise resource planning (ERP) simply means a set of software solutions that is designed to help businesses manage and automate diverse business processes within the organisation including accounting, finance, supply chain, procurement, and human resources. Though there are different ERP solutions available these days, SAP is considered the most renowned and reliable ERP solution available in the market. This software program is developed by the firm SAP SE.

What does SAP mean?

Translated from German, SAP was first known as System Analysis Program Development. The SAP definition is System Analysis Program. Each letter is spoken separately. Similar to the phrase "Inc." in the United States, Societas Europaea is what the "SE" in SAP SE stands for.

Global software provider SAP leads the ERP market in terms of market share. Although cloud computing solutions are the main focus of the firm's development efforts, the company already serves more than 180 countries and offers on-premises, cloud, and hybrid deployment types.

What is ERP?

ERP or Enterprise Resource Planning refers to systems businesses use to bring ease to the information and manage all the crucial business processes. The use of ERP systems enables rapid access to data and real-time details for all departments, including sales, finance, and marketing.

Without an ERP, businesses risk having fragmented and disconnected systems. When it comes to efficiency, businesses may also suffer from the absence of a single source of truth. For example, the sales teams would need to manually request financial data in order to collect sales and revenue statistics, while the finance department may use spreadsheets to keep track of financial activities.

What is SAP Enterprise Resource Planning?

SAP's portfolio of ERP systems enables its customers to manage all facets of their business operations, including accounting, sales, production, human resources, and finance, in an integrated environment by centrally storing data from each module. In addition to helping to enforce financial, procedural, and legal restrictions, the close integration and shared data store guarantee that information flows from one SAP ERP component to another without the need for duplicate data entry.

SAP ERP Central Component (SAP ECC), the most popular SAP system, is an on-premises ERP system that is typically used by big and medium-sized businesses.

ECC remains SAP's flagship ERP and the basis of the next-generation product, S/4HANA. Its modules are separated into functional modules and technical modules. The functional modules include the following:

  • Human Capital Management (SAP HCM)
  • Production Planning (SAP PP)
  • Materials Management (SAP MM)
  • Project System (SAP PS)
  • Sales and Distribution (SAP SD)
  • Plant Maintenance (SAP PM)
  • Finance and controlling (SAP FICO)
  • Quality Management (SAP QM)

How does SAP ERP function?

The standard implementation of SAP ECC is a three-tier client-server architecture as an on-premises ERP system. The three layers are called the database tier, application tier, and presentation tier.

The SAP GUI, often known as the SAP graphical user interface, is installed on any Microsoft Windows or macOS computer and is accessible to the user through the presentation tier. The SAP GUI serves as the communication channel between users and ECC.

The application tier is crucial to ECC. Its responsibilities encompass managing transactions, executing business logic, producing reports, monitoring database access, printing documents, and collaborating with other applications.

A three-tier client-server architecture is commonly used to build SAP ECC as an on-premises ERP system. The three layers are called presentation, application, and database tiers, respectively.

Any Microsoft Windows or macOS computer can be installed with the SAP graphical user interface, or SAP GUI, which is made available to the user through the presentation tier. The SAP GUI is the interface that users and ECC use to communicate.

The application tier constitutes the core of ECC. Among its responsibilities are transaction processing, business logic execution, report generation, monitoring database access, paper printing, and interfacing with other applications.

Major Features SAP Enterprise Resource Planning

The ERP system at the core of SAP Business Suite, a larger group of modules that manages other typical business operations like product lifecycle management (PLM) and supply chain management (SCM), is called ECC.

The vendor's in-memory ERP platform, S/4HANA, was made available in 2015. The Business Suite has undergone a comprehensive overhaul specifically designed for the SAP HANA in-memory database system. SAP claims that S/4HANA will eventually replace SAP ECC and minimise complexity.

The benefits of HANA's in-memory processing and real-time data accessibility are offered by SAP S/4HANA Cloud, a subscription-based SaaS version of S/4HANA, in a subscription-based paradigm.

SAP Business ByDesign is a SaaS ERP system that is currently in the midmarket segment of the SAP product line, despite having initially been aimed at SMBs. The fourth ERP system, SAP Business One, can be utilised on-premises or in the cloud and is geared toward smaller companies.

Benefits of SAP Enterprise Resource Planning

The following are the primary benefits of SAP ERP, particularly the systems designed for large businesses (ECC and S/4HANA):

  • Business process standardisation inside a company,
  • A unified corporate view,
  • Customization options,
  • Robust reporting and analytics tools to support decision-making are all important.

Disadvantages of SAP ERP

  • The high cost of purchasing and implementing SAP ERP includes paying for both the software and the underlying infrastructure, hiring internal IT staff and hiring outside consultants, paying for employee training, the ongoing costs of software maintenance, and paying for recurring upgrades.
  • Another drawback is the system's complexity, which makes implementations time-consuming.

Conclusion

An ERP system is made up of various software elements, known as modules. Each of these modules is directed towards a crucial business activity. A majority of businesses only utilise the specific modules suitable for their business.


607 Views
  • Share This Post

Dushyant Sharma
Author: Dushyant Sharma

Hey there, I'm Dushyant Sharma. With the extensive knowledge I've gained in past 8 years, I have been creating content on various subjects such as banking, insurance, telecom, and all the important registration and licensing processes for various companies. I'm here to help everyone with my expertise in these areas through my articles.

Want to know More ?

Related Posts

Subscribe
to our newsletter

Top