Infor ERP Tips and Infor ERP News for Infor LX, BPCS, Infor ERP LX, Infor LN, Infor ERP LN, Baan, Infor M3, and Movex

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Infor LX Tips, Infor LN Tips, BPCS Tips, Baan Tips, Infor M3 Tips & Infor ERP News

Crossroads Connections

Infor ERP Tips & News from the Experts

Infor LX | Infor LN | BPCS | Baan | Infor M3

Factors to considered when undertaking an ERP implementation or upgrade

Kathy Barthelt 0 40044 Article rating: 5.0

Things to consider when choosing your ERP Implementation Partner:

ERP Partner Value Add:

  • Proven track record
  • References
  • Focused on-time / on budget
  • Strategic partnership with Infor
  • Knowledge of extension products that are available for your ERP
  • Post-implementation – What does the partner bring to the table once the project is complete?

Project Management

  • Does your assigned project manager fit your needs?
  • Past project management experience with the same ERP
  • Project Management methodology
  • Project Plan development and style
  • Does the PM develop a realistic plan with clear objectives, timeline, and responsibilities?

 
Consulting Team Selection​

Need help figuring out if your organization is properly positioned for an implementation or upgrade? Contact Kathy Barthelt today. We can help to ensure that your organization is positioned for success.

  • Does my ERP Implementation partner have the team to support my project?
  • Resume review
  • Interview all candidates
  • Working knowledge of ERP system/version
  • Communication skills
  • Geographic location
    • Relative industry experience
    • Technical Viewpoint
    • Understanding of any enhancements made to your system and what the best approach to streamlining for future releases. Knowing the tools available to accomplish this task.

LN & Baan Tip of the Week: Inventory In Transit Report – 10.7

Kathy Barthelt 0 84313 Article rating: 5.0

A new In Transit Inventory report can be printed in the Print In Transit Inventory (whinr1410m300) session. The report provides an overview of company inventory that is on the move and not stored in a warehouse. This concerns only inventory that is transferred from one warehouse to another. Items that are shipped to, for example, customers or projects, or items that are issued to production lines or service departments are excluded.

The report shows item inventory quantities and values on warehouse transfer orders which are issued at the origin warehouse, but are not yet received in the destination warehouse. These open inter-warehouse transfer orders represent inventory that is loaded on trucks or other means of transport, or located at intermediate pooling points such as harbors and train stations.

The quantities and values are retrieved from the Item-Warehouse-Inventory Transactions and the Inventory Integration Transactions sessions.


Do you know where you're required to collect sales tax?

Crossroads RMC 0 35300 Article rating: 5.0

More than 40 states have changed their rules on sales tax obligations for remote sellers in the past year, meaning more companies are required to collect sales tax in states they’ve never even considered before. 

Attend the Avalara sessions at Inforum to learn more:

333450 - Vision: From 1 to 50—Scaling your business to handle new sales tax requirements, sponsored by Avalara
New laws that obligate remote sellers to collect sales tax are spreading throughout the US. In many states, you’re now required to register, file, and remit if you make 200 transactions or $100,000 in sales into the state. In this session, a sales tax compliance expert will break down what these new laws mean for your business and how you can scale your business effectively without turning your accounting and finance operations upside down. Join us to learn how to prepare.
Wednesday, Sep 25, 2:00 PM - 02:45 PM – Room 288

333727 - Speed: Sales tax compliance in the post South Dakota v. Wayfair era, sponsored by Avalara
Join Avalara to learn about sales tax compliance in 2019. We’ll review new mid-year sales tax changes for 2019; economic nexus laws and how to mitigate risk and maintain compliance; help you determine where to file and register based on where you conduct business; and discuss how Avalara and Infor deliver end-to-end cloud-based sales tax automation, including rate determination, return filing, remittance, and exemption certificate management.
Wednesday, Sep 25, 1:30 PM - 01:50 PM – Hub Theater 6 (Product Spotlight)

Anxious to learn more about IDF? Attend Inforum Sessions highlighting the latest and greatest updates

Anthony Etzel 0 26365 Article rating: 5.0
  • ERP242 - Product: What’s new with LX 8.4
    Learn about our latest release of LX and the value it can provide to your business. This release includes additional support for IDF, new application features, and an expanded database. Additionally, this release continues to improve through ongoing enhancements from our enhancement request system.
    Thursday, Sep 26, 10:00 AM - 10:45 AM – Room 272

  • ERP243 - Product: LX—IDF Master Data Management
    Learn about the new flexibility and features available with item, cost, vendor, and customer definition through IDF during this session. Maintaining this critical information is now easier to manage and control with LX 8.4
    Wednesday, Sep 25, 12:00 PM - 12:45 PM – Room 272

  • Academy: Learn to Use IDF to Better Manage Customer, Vendor, and Item Data with LX
    Attend this session for hands-on experience using IDF to manage your critical master data in Infor LX 8.4. (Length: 1hr & 45mins) 
    Wednesday, Sep 25, 1:00 PM - 02:45 PM – Room 277

  • ERP106C - Case Study: Trinity—Upgrading a 20-Year-Old Customized ERP system
    Join this session to learn why and how Trinity is upgrading its customized 20-year-old BPCS ERP system to the latest version of LX and going vanilla. Trinity is using the best business practices built into LX along with Infor OS and IDF to support the latest user experience and integrations.
    Wednesday, Sep 25, 2:00 PM - 02:45 PM – Room 272

OTTO: Making plans happen isn’t just about monitoring material shortages

George Moroses 0 29422 Article rating: 5.0

Making plans happen isn’t just about monitoring material shortages. Supporting activities can be the real cause of delays. Some non-material events customers have monitored using OTTO include:

  • Scheduling and coordination of outside services (such as heat treating and plating)
  • Quality Assurance for pharmaceuticals and inspection
  • Moving off-site inventory to the plant
  • Moving inventory from temporary (conveyor) location to pickable location
  • Scheduling of overseas containers
  • Design engineering for make-to-order

OTTO provides the ability to proactively manage the entire customer order backlog from top to bottom. It begins monitoring orders as soon as they’re booked and identifies and prioritizes those critical events that must happen every day so they can be managed and get orders produced and shipped on time.

Visit Our OTTO page to learn more.

How Do I Determine If MES Is Right For My Business?

George Moroses 0 31594 Article rating: No rating

There are certain key questions that must be answered to determine whether or not an MES system would benefit your organization: 

  • How do you analyze OEE?
  • Is there an opportunity to reduce WIP inventory, indirect labor, downtime, waste or scrap?
  • What is the cost and impact of producing and distributing shop paper including drawings and work instructions?
  • Would you like to go paperless on your shop floor?
  • How are your continuous improvement initiatives tied to your ERP?
  • Is Management requesting real time production status reporting via dashboards or drilldown reports?
  • What different “islands of automation” exist on your shop floor?

The answers to each of these questions could have a significant impact on the profitability of your business. Want to quantify your results? Contact George Moroses today to schedule your FREE MES ROI Analysis.

Consulting: Methodology for Infor LX & BPCS Upgrades

Anthony Etzel 0 42225 Article rating: 5.0

Throughout the years, Crossroads RMC has participated in several 4.0.05CD upgrades to LX, from which we had the opportunity to refine our methodology for CEA (Configurable Enterprise Accounting) implementations/upgrades. As a result, we have fine tuned our overall upgrade approach and have been very successful in implementing this approach with our clients.

CEA replaces the green screen GLD module and allows for considerable flexibility in the design of the COA (Chart of Accounts).

Our approach incorporates any changes that are needed in the COA and facilitates the transfer or replacement of Profit Centers and Account Codes from BPCS to LX, building on the existing GL. Among the issues we manage is the conversion of historical GL balances.

We maximize the use of LX and CEA while minimizing the manual effort that gets you there.

Contact Frank Petrasio to discuss how we can help you:

  • Preserve what works in BPCS
  • Optimize what works in LX

with a maximum of respect for your time and budget. Learn more about Crossroads RMC Consulting>

Infor LX & BPCS Tip of the Week: Additional Selection Criteria for Cycle Count Purge Enhancement – 8.4

Anthony Etzel 0 65511 Article rating: 5.0

The final step in Cycle Count processing is to maintain the (ICY) Cycle Count file. This history file increases in size with each posting session. It is up to users to purge the historical data that you no longer need. Previously, INV015 Cycle Count Purge by date only allowed users to purge the cycle count file by date. Now, additional selection criteria have been added that allows users improved ways to control records they may want to purge.

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Tips:  LX | BPCS | M3

Tips: LN | Baan

David Dickson

Why Your Operation Doesn’t Stand a Chance in Hell of Going From Good to Great (and What to do About it)

You dream of building a manufacturing powerhouse.

An operation with loads of throughput, profit, and efficiency in every process to make your products the best quality you can make them.

You want to be as successful as the factories and companies they write about in books like Good to Great, changing your operation and even motivating and inspiring your teams to do so too.

But you know you haven’t got a chance in hell of seeing that kind of success unless you can truly change and make significant differences over the long haul.

Of course, the big question is How? Optimization is an elusive creature.

Sure, you get the occasional bump in numbers, but it’s not like consultants and writers are seeking you out to rave about your New, New Thing, or secret method for manufacturing nirvana.  

You worry that you’re not doing enough of those “bumps” in numbers consistently, but damned if you can figure out the magic formula.

But there is a way to do this pivot to success at the highest level, even if you’re a beginner, and even if you’ve tried before with limited progress.

It’s a game-changer, one that can take your operation from teetering on the brink of mediocrity to achieving the success you dream of.
 

The Real Reason Your Factory Floor is Operating at a Snail’s Pace

You know the feeling. You’re ready to try and implement creative ideas and plans to make things better. You know that bump in productivity and throughput was not an outlier and we can make that work consistently.  

The result of data-oriented feedback is miles better than the trumped-up, creative writing your hand-written reports show.   

You speak to colleagues at other operations like yours and try to figure out what they are doing differently. You may have even read about them in The Breakthrough Company. You may have clipped articles, shared blogs, and dug deep into Drucker, Peters, and Senge and read about the manufacturers they listed as “superior.”

Then you wonder how they do it?

The answer is they had a handle on their Manufacturing Optimization (M.O.) Score.

Knowing your M.O. is the master key to all doors leading to manufacturing greatness.

Simply stated, the better you understand your operation, the more you’ll know what to do to make things better and better. Constant, never-ending improvement is the goal. Without this kind of optimization, your operation’s chances to be great are deeply diminished. Think “snowball’s chance….”

But what if you’re not blessed with the market drivers or a “hit” product? Don’t worry, you can develop these greatness skills no matter who you serve, what you build, or how mature the business, but only if you ignore some of the most common advice about operational improvement.
 

The Problem with Popular Advice about Developing Greatness in Manufacturing

Pre -conventional wisdom says that to control your operation you should create a command and control approach to the factory floor, putting in layers and methods to organize things down to the last detail.  

Now, conventional wisdom says to let things loose to “flow” and creating accountability and standards-based performance for both man and machine. Output measures and quality levels are the new language of our current standards in operational efficiency and the applied management of it.

What if you actually try to maximize with Six Sigma or Kanban, using your ERP and Logistics as a tool? Two problems surface right away:

   1.  You spend way too much time obsessing about getting those processes “right.”

   2.  You end up concentrating on information that is suspect from the beginning.

Of course, if you are serious about improvement, you need a process and information, and sometimes bad data is the only information you have -- so you go with it.

Attention to the processes that make your operation better and the data that supports real insight is an important differentiator to success at the greatness level.

Instead of trying to improve the current plant operations, turn your attention to the things that are ripe for growth and dig deep into the potential found hidden there.
 

Where to Focus Your Attention if you Really Want to move from Good to Great  

Here’s the big idea…

You can only develop operational greatness in your manufacturing plant if you have a deep understanding of the real numbers, not theoretical “standards” or human reported histrionics.

That means understanding the people, process, and systems that already work at high levels and gleaning insights into those scores and numbers their output represents.

But what if you don’t know your M.O. score? Then you must play detective.

Follow the people, processes, and systems closely and notice what else is happening. Then, when data shows up directly, without filters or massaging, gather this up as it is the treasure trove of useful information about your operation you need.

Will this data deliver the exact methods and steps to greatness and growth? Probably not, but if you know your stuff, or have people around who do, you will likely find you have a lot in common with the great ones already, and they keep score too. Even if you have to rely on educated guesses in the beginning, the more details that emerge, the more you can reveal evidence instead of crystal-ball gazing.
 

How to Become a Master of Greatness by Stepping Inside Your Operation’s True Nature

The key to greatness is knowing exactly where you are now and where you want to be next. You cannot make the leap in one effort. You have to truly understand every aspect of the part you manage or the components to effectiveness and improvement.

The basis for this is not some collection of ideal business book strategies, or some manufacturing philosophy gone viral, but real, tested results with real data behind the outcomes.

If you know your Manufacturing Optimization score, you now have the controls to do something different. You hold the steering wheel to an engaged shop floor, machines that spit out good information, technology, and processes that deliver consistently and effectively.

This model of thinking is so effective that whole industries have sprouted up to support it: ERP, Data Collection, MES, and a slew of services to boot.

And here’s the kicker – the job is never done!

It’s tough, and each project takes a while to complete, but it’s one of the most valuable things you can undertake as a manufacturing operational manager.

But where do you find the information to figure out your M.O.?
 

Where to Find the Clues You Need to Become a Master of Greatness

Filling your score box with the treasure of which I speak requires a combination of educated speculation and careful research.

But start simple, write down some goals, plans, fears, and hurdles based upon your current understanding of your plant.

For example, no matter what you make, your shop floor is probably gathering data poorly. People rarely take the time to report well and often take shortcuts in this part of the process. They probably worry that if you are measuring the data, you are measuring them and there are consequences to output measures that report less than optimal throughput. These are high-level fears that get in the way of true performance superiority. Drill into people management too. It is a must.

Think about what failure or mediocrity means specifically to your team. Things can look bleak if the scores are low in the beginning, so we shy away from even looking at them. People can work hard and yet never get to greatness. They can fail at one task or attempt and then sell you short on future outcomes because “what’s the point?” They fail to grow because they don’t believe it’s possible.

The Aberdeen Group Analysts created Insight Reports and have a great article about this very topic. We based our Infographic for M.O. score management using some of its main points: Operational Risk Management: Building a Framework to Identify, Assess, and Remediate
 

Three basic points emerge so that you can build and track your M.O. Score:

   1.  Measure Downtime

   2.  Track Effectiveness

   3.  Score the Margins

Think how each of these measures is found in your operation, and how failing to track them could be the source for why you have yet moved from good to great.

For example, if you are tracking downtime, is this done manually, or are you using some time of automation or application to gather this information in real-time, or based upon history?

If you are measuring team effectiveness by shift, you know there are significant differences between them. Have you bothered to figure out why?

In one case, an automotive customer of ours was experiencing significant inefficiencies and difficulties with their receiving operations. They hired us to help them analyze their operation, and we discovered a disconnect between how they were tracking their incoming goods and what their ERP system thought was on hand. This disconnect created numerous time-consuming manual steps to process incoming material and determine where the material was needed. The manual process slowed production, caused additional staffing needs, and hindered their ability to effectively get needed material to the assembly line. They chose to implement our data collection solution to automate the process. Since implementing the software, receiving and moving material was quicker, more accurate, and efficient. This enabled the addition of another assembly line which increased production volume – all without the need to add staff.

Many manufacturing managers have a strong desire to leave a legacy. So in my “Leave a legacy” advice, I include becoming known for doing great work, moving the operation forward towards greatness if not gaining actual greatness in kind.

Changing the operation can be done more easily if you have the tools, the measures, and the goals in place to know where you stand now and for when you arrive. It helps to achieve real measures forward as compared to a set of known good peer levels and grades.

Once you’ve made a start on tracking M.O. by using this method, you can start to flesh it out with data from the real world.
 

3 Simple Ways to Gain Access to M.O. Score Data

1)  Observe and take notes
Watch the interaction between people in your operation. Post numbers that are real. Gather the data that is true and ignore the data that is manipulated and based upon false histrionics.

2)  Listen to the shop floor and the smart people you hire to interpret what you hear
Not enough can be said about the art of authentic listening skills and the ability to find insights into moving from good to great that can be gathered from those who are doing the tasks, breaking things, fixing them, and really trying to make it all work better.  

Don’t be afraid to bring in an outside perspective and help to interpret the information you gather or to help you set up the measures and scores you wish to keep. The partners you pick are invaluable if used well and allowed to be an integral part of the team.

3)  Go right ahead and do what’s best
A lot can be said about fear in the workplace. Often a place is still wrapped up in the old pre-conventional world of command and control. Or more often than not, there is simply no budget for expanding the conventional approach to data collection and other “advanced” schools of thought.  

That should not stop you.  

Many free, easy, and clear data points can be built starting with our Crossroads RMC's M.O. Score infographic.  

The first steps are the hardest to begin but in many ways the easiest to accomplish.
  

Do You Want an Operation That’s Thriving or Just Barely Surviving?

It’s not magic. Even though we like to believe we're all completely unique individuals and our work challenges are ours alone, many have gone before and used tools, techniques, and talents to go from being ordinary to being truly great.

Follow this process and you’ll see that the closer you get to your M.O. score and what it really means the “hidden” secrets will reveal themselves simply and easily. The reactions you’ll elicit from stakeholders and the entire team will guide your next steps.  

A cheering squad will form as you achieve each step along the way and report movement towards the outcomes you see as critical to success and that will help you leave that legacy, indeed.

And you’ll know you’re on the right track when you get comments like this:

  •  “Thank you so much; this is perfect timing for this!”
  •  “This is exactly what we need around here.”
  •  “How’d you think to track this in this way?”
  •  “We’ve been hoping to improve, but just didn’t know how.”

So revisit the M.O. score tracking method often. Toss out your old notes and start over again. Each time, you come up with new perspectives, more information, and more ideas and insights into how to collect, connect and communicate data and process to be truly good to great.

You don’t have to settle for an operation that’s met with modest enthusiasm and lukewarm achievements. M.O. tracking data points might be learned in school but it is in the operation and on the shop floor that this world lives.

So put this M.O. score idea in your manager’s toolkit – this is as important as your MBA, Engineering School Certificate, and your years of, manufacturing experience, and by doing this it might make all the difference. You’ll understand your operation so well that they’ll wonder if you are some kind of wunderkind. When will they write stories about our operation?

So grab some paper and get started. Your greatness awaits.

Question Number One: Compared to the truly great what is my current grade on my M.O. Score?
 

About the author:

David Dickson is an itinerant generalist; his path to partner and CFO of Crossroads RMC has had its twists and turns. His first twist occurred when an employer needed a business system and picked him because he had three semesters of computer programming in engineering school -- an “expert” born. Somewhere along the line, he helped to build and sell a company, which he bought back a couple of years later. Add in another acquisition, a merger, and about 30 years in manufacturing systems in various roles, and you might get a sense from where his real expertise might arise.

 

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