Slide 1
Test Methods and Tools for ERP Implementations - Proposed Research Project
Paul GerrardGerrard Consulting1 Old Forge CloseMaidenheadBerkshireSL6 2RD UK
e: [email protected]: http://gerrardconsulting.comt: 01628 639173
Introduction to ERP and the ERP Market
ERP Testing Outline of Work Already Done Proposed Research Project.
Agenda
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 2
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems represent a huge market in the commercial arena
SAP, Oracle and more recently, Microsoft, dominate the market
Testing is a significant effort but is hardly supported by methods and tools
Experience shows that testing in these projects is critical, but often neglected
A Benefits, Risk and Coverage-based test approach could significantly reduce the risk of failures.
Summary
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 3
Enterprise Resource Planning systems (ERPs) aim to integrate all data and processes of an organization into a unified system
Typical ERP system will use multiple components of computer software and hardware to achieve the integration
Key ingredient of most ERP systems is the use of a unified database to store data for the various system modules.
An Introduction to ERP
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 4
ERP scope has expanded dramatically and usually includes:- Manufacturing- Supply Chain Management- Financials- Projects- Human Resources- Customer Relationship Management- Data Warehouse
Large organisations want to implement standard processes and systems across divisions and subsidiaries
ERP offers attractive, integrated solutions The market for these solutions is huge.
Scope of ERP
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 5
ERP market dominated by SAP, Oracle, Microsoft worth EUR 40 billion
SAP is the biggest and most popular- Founded in 1972 by five ex-IBM employees, by 2005, there were
100,600 installations worldwide, with over 25 industry-specific modules in the SAP portfolio. SAP is the world's third-largest independent software vendor
Founded in 1977, Oracle were first to market a reliable relational database- The second largest software company after Microsoft- Since the 1990s, they have marketed Financial, HR and other
solutions and through a series of acquisitions, including PeopleSoft and Siebel is now the second largest ERP vendor after SAP. [3]
Microsoft, also started in 1977- dominate the proprietary software market on the desktop and small
to medium servers.- Microsoft were a big Siebel software user but since Oracle acquired
Siebel, they have worked hard to build an ERP product suite of their own and are now probably in third place in ERP
The ERP Market
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 6
ERP services market possibly worth more than EUR 100 billion
Accenture, IBM, CapGemini, LogicaCMG, CSC, HP and others have substantial ERP practices
ERP services include- Consultancy- Configuration- Application hosting- Integration- Implementation and deployment- Training- Full-process outsourcing
Projects tend to be large, long term, business critical and big-budget. EUR 200m implementation projects are not unusual.
ERP Services Market
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 7
If the big three get their way, the integration of desktop (Windows), ERP and associated applications builders are poised to transform the use of IT in business
SAP and Microsoft Duet project integrates SAP back office data with the ubiquitous Office suite from Microsoft
Currently, these applications are small in number, but full integration of desktop office products and ERP systems appear to be the next phase of development in the market.
The (Near) Future of ERP
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 8
ERP implementation projects typically have a mix of the following disciplines:- Package configuration and/or parameterisation- Package customisation (including
programming)- Infrastructure development/upgrading- Integration with legacy systems- Data migration- Business change (process design and training)- Testing (typically unit, sub-system integration,
system-system integration, acceptance) Most projects are large scale and critical, the
testing budget is substantial – perhaps 50%.
The Nature of ERP Implementation Projects
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 9
Remarkably, very little research into the testing of packaged ERP suites
Few books on the subject; those that do exist focus on bundled tools
Poorly supported The software vendors have their own
methodologies for testing, but these focus on process flows through configured components
In effect, such tests prove the software ‘does what it does’
The behaviour of ERP suites are typically controlled by configuration parameters and do not involve ‘software’ maintenance at all.
ERP Testing 1
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 11
However, there are specific areas of software change and risk- Where the ERP system must trigger an interface and
import from or export to legacy systems- ‘user-exits’, custom procedures, interface programs- Amendments to the legacy systems themselves are
required. Much of the testing has to focus on- The behaviour of the system as experienced by its users- The outputs generated- Integration with legacy systems
Data migration is a challenging area of ERP projects- A lot of the functionality in integrated systems is master-
data driven- Data migration efforts need evaluation, reconciliation, and
testing using the integrated applications.
ERP Testing 2
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 12
‘How to approach testing of ERP systems to demonstrate its behaviour, to meet the needs of its users and address the risks of failure?’
An integrated set of test methods and tools is required:- Results-based management (aka Benefits Realisation), modelling of
results-chains to provide input to a benefits-based test approach- Experience-based risk assessments that can provide input to a risk-
based test approach.- Modelling of integrated user, automated and manual processes and
interactions in a format useful to testers. Derivation of objective, measurable and manageable test
objectives from these three models. To integrate these three test objectives into a non-proprietary
life-cycle test methodology that can be managed systematically.
Some foundation/visionary work has already been performed by the author, but the approach needs more research, rigor and proving in a commercial environment.
The ERP Testing ‘Problem’
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 13
Research in four areas has already been performed- Risk-Based Testing approach
- Testing as intelligence gathering
- Managing projects with intelligence
- Lessons Learned in ERP Projects Papers/presentations referenced at
the end of this slide pack.
Work Already Done
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 15
The first book focusing on Risk-Based Testing, ‘Risk-Based E-Business Testing’ [6], set out a systematic approach to testing, driven by requirements and product risk where the business environment was focused on the risky real-world business environment rather than esoteric safety-critical landscape.
1. Risk-Based Testing Defined
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 16
Testing is an information-gathering exercise whose value is in the information gathered, not the activity we call testing was presented
The term, ‘Project Intelligence’ was coined to represent the information on business benefits, product risk and test coverage that test strategies should focus on.
2. Testing as Intelligence Gathering
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 17
Project Intelligence (PI) is the key project information gathered by testers that helps managers to control their projects
Analogous to military intelligence- Commander needs to have intelligence before formulating
his plan- As events unfold, intelligence reports affect the campaign- Final intelligence reports indicate the campaign is won
Software projects need risk analyses as input to testing and QA- As testing proceeds, it provides the intelligence to measure
progress and support decision making- Final test reports indicate the delivered system is
acceptable Test process is a systematic set of activities to achieve
test objectives.
3. Managing Projects with Intelligence
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 18
Successful projects depend on- Clear and change-managed objectives- Attention to risk management- Monitoring of quality, schedule and cost.
Successful project managers manage achievements, not activities
The readiness and acceptability of project deliverables are what must be monitored, rather than the completion status of activities.
3 Managing Projects with Intelligence 2
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 19
Decision making in projects is critically dependent on accurate information
Key role of QA and testing is to gather Project Intelligence and present this to Project and Stakeholder management
Project Intelligence refers to the three information gathering activities- QA and test- benefits analysis and- ongoing product risk management.
3 Managing Projects with Intelligence 3
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 20
These three fundamental activities promote better communication within projects
They also enable stakeholders to make better decisions when setbacks occur early and when change becomes inevitable and testing is squeezed
The PI approach transforms your perception of testing, promotes closer collaboration between development and test and better inform management decision making.
3 Managing Projects with Intelligence 4
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 21
Based on research into ERP (in particular SAP) project experiences- To identify common patterns of failure in
(typically) large scale, long-term projects
- Sources included integration companies, project manager staff and user management
- Over seventy actual project failure modes and risk mitigation actions experienced by interviewees were identified.
4 Lessons Learned in ERP Projects
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 22
The purpose was to provide a coherent set of ‘challenges’ to projects
For each lesson/risk the question is- ‘has this risk been addressed?’- intention would be to ensure all the
foreseeable risks of concern are addressed Lessons Learned ‘areas’ include
Organisation, Preparation, User Issues, Change Management as well as Testing and QA
With further development, will set out the requirements for an ERP Test Strategy.
4 Lessons Learned in ERP Projects 2
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 23
Foundation work has already been performed by the author, but the approach needs more research, rigor and proving in a commercial environment
Academic and commercial partners are sought to refine, develop and prove these methods and tools.
Challenge to Academia and Industry
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 25
Academia- One business school with a focus on change
management involving ERP systems- One software engineering school with focus on
building tools to support business change, decision making and testing
Industry:- 5 large ERP user organisations- Interested in the results-based approach to
business change- Experience of problems in the past, and/or are risk-
averse- Have high commitment to testing and QA- Want greater control over ERP integration partners.
Research team
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 26
Currently talking to potential industry partners - There is NO SHORTAGE of companies wanting to
solve the ERP Testing Problem Plan to approach business schools Conference pitch to taicpart.org in
September
If it’s not of interest to you, do you have colleagues for who might be interested?
Plan
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 27
[1] Wikipedia, Enterprise Resource Planning, http://en.wikipedia.org [2] SAP corporate website, SAP History: From Start-Up Software Vendor
to Global Market Leader, www.sap.com/company/history.epx. [3] Oracle corporate website, Oracle's History: Innovation, Leadership,
Results, www.oracle.com/corpo rate/story.html [4] Microsoft corporate website, Going Beyond Microsoft at 30,
www.microsoft.com/about/companyinformation/timeline [5] SearchSAP.com research website,
searchsap.techtarget.com/originalContent/0,289142,sid21_gci1230348,00.html
[6] Gerrard P., Thompson N., Risk-Based E-Business Testing, Artech House, 2002.
[7] Gerrard P., “What is the value of testing and how do we increase it?” EuroSTAR 2002, Edinburgh.
[8] Gerrard P., “Influencing Management with Intelligence” EuroSTAR 2003, Amsterdam.
[9] Gerrard P., “Managing Projects with Intelligence”, EuroSTAR 2004, Cologne.
[10] Gerrard P., “Lessons Learned in ERP Projects” EuroSTAR 2007, Stockholm.
5. References
Assurance with IntelligenceSlide 28