With Sistrade
Print implementation it's not only intended to install
a graphic arts and printing management solution, but rather
the implementation of a solution which brings a visible return
to the company.
Although many professionals still consider ROI (return on
investment) as a mathematics exercise which suffers constant
alterations and has errors, in this case it means the fulfilled
and accounted ROI in the number of months in which it will
be returned (amortized) to begin generating profit. That is,
ROI tends to calculate how much time a company must wait to
recover from the effort (investment) in a technology implementation
and, thus, respond if the investment is feasible or not.
Calculating ROI with Sistrade®
Print
Using a little equation to calculate the savings obtained
when implementing the Estimates (Sales Module), we concluded
te following:
If the estimator has
a hour cost of about 10,00€, then: » Before Sistrade®
Print:
Time spent calculating an estimate = 15 minutes;
Total Cost = 2,50€ » With Sistrade®
Print:
Time spent calculating an estimate = 2 minutes;
Total Cost = 0,33 €
At the end of the year, using Sistrade® Print represents
a financial gain of 16.000€ and a gain in time availability,
which can be transformed in calculating more estimates, that
is, for each estimate calculated in the traditional way it
is possible to calculate 7 estimates with Sistrade® Print.
So, if the total cost of implementing the system is about
15.000€ then the investment will be payed in less than
one year. This calculation doesn't take into account other
productivity gains, naturally intangible, such as: » Immediate response
time to an estimate request. How much does this worth?; » Company's image
that now sends fast and detailed estimates: How much is this
worth?; » For small to medium
sized companies, where estimators are, many times, the managers
themselves, how much is it worth the time availability that
he now has because it takes less time to calculate an estimate?
According to experts, success in ROI's return for any company
that intends to implement an ERP solution, resides in the
following questions:
Will the ERP increase customer satisfaction?
With Sistrade® Print, customer satisfaction substantially
increases, since he is now using state-of-the-art and up-to-date
technology, with an easy, intuitive and interactive interface.
The chance to access the system from anywhere in the world
also represents value added to the customer.
Will it decrease management expenses?
Implementing the integrated management system - Sistrade®
Print, will directly turn into time reduction in daily tasks,
and therefore in a decrease on management expenses.
Will it decrease stock inventory?
With Sistrade® Print the user knows in real time the existing
stock, thus controlling more efficiently warehouse entries
and exits. The information that the system generates allows
the company to define warehouse exit rules in order to decrease
the existing stock and simultaneously to increase stock rotation.
Will it be able to reduce material
costs through improvements in purchase management?
Sistrade® Print has a shop floor control module that includes
tools for operations control, production follow-up, planning,
industrial costing, among others, which essentially allows
to accurately calculate the real cost of a work order, schedule
work orders and at the same time to control the times of involved
production processes. Thus, the user can intervene in order
to optimize the processes, operations, planning, resulting
in an effective reduction of production costs.
Obviously, there are other factors, not so concrete, which
can make a difference in adopting a project such as: quality
improvement, faster and more feasible services obtained with
an I.T. investment, although, since they are of difficult
measurement, these hardly are accounted when formulating ROI.
In this case, the objective is purely economic.
This also explains how BSC (Balanced Scorecard) gains a space
in evaluation measurement of I.T. projects, since this tool
analyses in a wider range the non measurable profits. Not
as a ROI substitute, but rather as a complement.
In conclusion:
For most of the companies that intend to invest in I.T. projects,
ROI is not only a mathematical abstraction, it's rather a
question of survival.