Enterprise management describes the tools and strategies used to administer, monitor, and improve vital day-to-day business processes.
Enterprise management systems can cover a range of specific uses and functions. That said, they generally relate to the following primary functions:
Enterprise resource planning (ERP) helps organizations manage the day-to-day processes associated with a range of business functions, including accounting, procurement, project management, supply chain operations, and risk management and compliance. With the right ERP solution, businesses enjoy easier access to real-time data, while eliminating duplicate information and identifying and responding to discrepancies.
Customer relationship management (CRM) is an organizational tool that focuses on tracking and recording interactions with current and prospective customers. The goal of CRM is to streamline and optimize these interactions, and ultimately increase the value of each individual buyer. Customer service management (CSM) is the logical extension of CRM, leveraging CRM capabilities to integrate customer engagement with customer operations, and to provide a fully-unified view of customer engagement across an entire enterprise.
Supply chain management (SCM) manages the flow of goods, data, finances, and services, and includes each step in the processes used to transform raw materials into finished products.
Other important EMS functions can include HR management, financial processing, sales, budgeting, and logistics.
By simplifying various processes across an entire enterprise, enterprise management systems deliver a number of key benefits. Some of the most noteworthy advantages include:
Enterprise management solutions are generally cloud based, allowing organizations to allocate more or fewer cloud-computing resources to match current demand. This makes enterprise management limitlessly scalable, without the increased cost or effort.
Although enterprise management systems can come with a big price tag, they tend to be a less expensive alternative to purchasing and implementing solutions for each core business function individually. Enterprise management tends to bundle many different capabilities together in a single package, allowing companies to reduce their expenses. And because EMS systems are fully integrated together, organizations can improve interdepartmental interaction, potentially eliminating a number of costly inefficiencies.
Enterprise management systems make it easy to share and track goals, chart customer satisfaction metrics, and compare production and expenses. Most EMS options compile this information together and present it visually on user-friendly dashboards. Decisionmakers can then use these insights to guide planning and strategic initiatives.
A core component of enterprise management is automation. Automation allows businesses to reduce or eliminate the need for manual intervention in specific processes. By freeing up the workforce from directly managing certain key business functions, enterprise management improves employee productivity. At the same time, cloud-based EMS gives users the freedom to work from anywhere, rather than restricting productivity to a single location.
EMS systems include an integrated security system, helping mitigate the threat of data theft. This secure data may be easily retrieved at any time by authorized, validated users, and used to help prove compliance with established laws and regulations.
Although some people may use the terms interchangeably, EMS and ERP are not actually synonyms.
ERP almost always consists of a single application which includes a set of modules. This software application tends to be applied most commonly to HR, asset management, or financial resources. ERP solutions are capable of checking inventory statuses, planning production, and tracking many different back-office activities.
Enterprise management considers the bigger picture, and is more comprehensive and data focused than ERP. EMS solutions often include ERP in their functionality, but are also able to go beyond ERP limitations. In other words, the EMS is a kind of central command designed to securely store and retrieve real-time business data, standardize and automate vital business processes, monitor competitor data, improve and track external relationships, streamline supply chain management, and reduce costs while improving productivity company wide.
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