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And who is signing contracts that commit to spending multi-millions without a clear plan for delivery (and importantly.. evidence of delivery)??
Business leaders have raised the ERP subject at the council I work at, normally because someone like an Oracle sales executive has told them they should.
We tell them to go away because 1. Council management culture is 'inappropriate', 2. Need to fully understand the cost of change.
Up until now they've listened to us
I can't help about the shape I'm in, I can't sing I ain't pretty and my legs are thin
But don't ask me what I think of you, I might not give the answer that you want me to
Sunk cost fallacy is a huge thing...
"If it smells like shit...It is probably shit"
but they then left the processes the same
and started having the solution customised to fit. Cue money pit.
Doing one for a university at the mo; by ignoring the BOQ (created by someone with no significant expertise) and going for the functional spec I can save them 10% with better quality and future proofing. Careful reading of the tender documentation, and careful answering of the questions means my response counts as compliant even though there isn't a single item they specified.
If I was evil I could game the scoring system giving them something useless. Tenders are not a good way to buy anything.
When I joined 5 years ago, cleaning the mess so that we could move on was the big project everyone is preparing for. In 5 years all that has taken place is some can kicking.
Most people who create tenders aren't good at it. Consultants seem to be particularly bad at it.
There was a brilliant one for a governmental department maybe 10 years ago. They wanted to buy about a dozen signage screens, with a backend system that blah blah blah.
Unfortunately they wrote it in such a way that they were obligated to award to the cheapest bid that met just two of the requirements. I won that by specifying a single £15 digital photo frame from Argos. Then we did a really good job with the right functionality, at sensible margins we'd never have achieved in a fair fight.
I actually put the original SAP system in at Birmingham back in the 90s and they were a good reference customer as it was a successful implementation.
I wonder why the changed?
It's too big a council I think, and they just aren't very good at a lot of things so they get in massive messes like this. Also being a council run by the opposite party to that in government they probably don't get a lot of support but then, to be fair, they should probably be able to remain solvent without government stepping in