SAP Planning: Best Practices in Implementation FROM OUR EDITORS
The Barnes & Noble Review
Pity the folks who had to implement SAP from scratch in earlier years. They had to figure it all out by themselves. Now a single book covers all you need to rapidly construct project plans and schedules, size your implementation, design for high availability, organize your team, plan for support -- even build executive ᄑbuy in.ᄑ
Longtime SAP implementer George W. Anderson covers SAP and mySAP, not only from the technical point of view but also from the business point of view, where the implementation risks are high and careers are at stake. Youᄑll start from the very beginning: defining business, uptime, and performance requirements; planning for manageability; even deciding whether to outsource your entire SAP implementation to an ASP. Next, he offers superb start-to-finish guidance on staffing all levels of your SAP technical organization. His approach will get you qualified people faster, reflect both technical and ᄑsoftᄑ skills, reduce turnover -- and dramatically reduce risk.
Anderson thoroughly covers sizing and architecture, identifying drivers that impact long-term TCO, explaining why itᄑs critical to reflect business continuity issues early on, and showing how to do so. Youᄑll walk through choosing partners, building your SAP data center, and actually installing SAP components and Solution Stack layers. Thereᄑs detailed coverage of best practices for day-to-day operations, change control, and managing functional development.
This bookᄑs CD-ROM contains complete high-level and detailed project planning templates; job descriptions, test plans, TCO analysis worksheets, sizing and architecture questionnaires, data center planning checklists, change management forms, and loads more. Weᄑve never seen this much SAP expertise between two covers.
Bill Camarda
Bill Camarda is a consultant, writer, and web/multimedia content developer. His 15 books include Special Edition Using Word 2000 and Upgrading & Fixing Networks for Dummies, Second Edition.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
Everything a company needs to know to plan and organize an SAP implementation in one book!
This is the only book available that shows the reader how to actually monitor and manage a productive SAP system. It covers how to use SAP to manage itself and how this knowledge and process helps save money. The book is written by an SAP Technical Certified Consultant with six years of experience in SAP design and implementation who offers tried and proven approaches, scripts, and tools through examples of both new and existing SAP customer sites. The accompanying CD of scripts, documents, presentations, and sizing tools valued at $50,000 saves time and makes the reader productive fast.
Coverage includes notated screen shots of real productive systems; custom checklists, how-to procedures, organization charts that can be leveraged immediately for staffing teams; PowerPoint presentations that can be used by management to sell, present, and provide status updates on their SAP projects internally; tools, utilities, and XLS spreadsheets used to design, size, and understand SAP system architectures; actual Microsoft Project plans and implementation schedules to get the customer and 3rd party PM's started quickly; and a list of batch scheduling minimum housecleaning jobs that must be implemented.
SYNOPSIS
Anderson, who currently works for Hewlett-Packard, offers a practical framework and best practices for planning, testing and implementing the MySAP business suite. He identifies drivers and characteristics of a SAP solution that impact total cost of ownership, discusses staffing and training, lists the tasks for installing each component, emphasizes the importance of managing change, and walks through the process of setting up a production system. The CD-ROM contains a sample project plan, PowerPoint presentations, Excel sizing worksheets, and scripts for a number of tools. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR