ERP System Implementation at Pantaloon Retail: Neetu Ganapathy & Girish S. D
ERP System Implementation at Pantaloon Retail: Neetu Ganapathy & Girish S. D
ERP System Implementation at Pantaloon Retail: Neetu Ganapathy & Girish S. D
The Company forayed into retail in 1997 with the launching of its
fashion retail chain, Pantaloons in Kolkata. In 2001, it launched Big
Bazaar, a hypermarket chain. This was followed by Food Bazaar (a
food and grocery chain), Collection I (home improvement products),
E-Zone (consumer electronics), Depot (books, music, gifts and
stationary), aLL (a Little Larger, fashion apparel for plus-size
individuals), Shoe Factory (footwear) and Blue Sky (fashion
accessories).
1
Now known as Future Retail India Ltd
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More than eight years after it forayed into the retail business,
Pantaloon Retail realised that they needed an IT solution that would
help to integrate their operations and help them to stay competitive
in the rapidly growing Indian retail market. Pantaloon was regularly
opening stores in the metros and there was an urgent need for a
reliable enterprise wide application to help run its business
effectively. “The basic need was to have a robust transaction
management system and an enterprise wide platform to run the
operations,” said Rakesh Biyani, Director, Pantaloon (Shah, 2007). The
company was looking for a solution that would bring all of its
businesses and processes together. Mr. Biyani assigned the task to Mr.
Deshpande, the CIO, who had joined recently.
He set up a team to evaluate high-end ERP vendors like SAP, Oracle &
others. A major roadblock confronted him: the mind-set of business
people in the organization. They were not mentally prepared to deal
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with such a large investment in IT. Mr. Deshpande says “I had to struggle
with the mind-set that ‘just because this person has come from
some MNC, it doesn’t mean we should do whatever he asks us to.’”
(Trivedi, 2010)
Despite the hurdles, Mr. Deshpande and his team went ahead with
their plans. One of the things the IT team did then was to setup a
corporate VPN across the organization. Pantaloon partnered with Sify
to interconnect all its locations. In effect, “at the end of every day, we
had central consolidation of all of our sales reports and data. The very
next morning, management could see the performance of every single
store and category of merchandize,” recalls Mr. Deshpande (Trivedi,
2010).
The Solution
Some of the qualities of SAP retail solutions are that it supports product
development, which includes ideation, trend analysis, and
collaboration with partners in the supply chain; sourcing and
procurement, which involves working with manufacturers to fulfil
orders according to strategic merchandising plans and optimise cost,
quality, and speed–variables that must be weighted differently as
business needs, buying plans, and market demand patterns change;
managing the supply chain, which involves handling the logistics of
moving finished goods from the source into stores and overseeing
global trade and procurement requirements; selling goods across a
variety of channels to customers, which requires marketing and brand
management; managing mark-downs and capturing customer
reactions, analysing data, and using it to optimise the next phase of
the design process.
The Implementation
At this point, Mr. Deshpande faced three successive risks associated
with the adoption of new technology. The first risk was more of a
technological one: whether the decision to opt for certain technology
is correct or not. The other problem was: once it is established that
the technology a CIO has adopted is good enough, the trained
employees would start to leave the organisation in search of better
jobs armed with their new learning. So, there would be the case of
trained employees leaving the organisation creating a void very
difficult to fill. How would they handle that?
The biggest of the three risks was planning the implementation - and
the danger of investment going awfully wrong. Mr. Deshpande
grappled with this risk the most. Initially, his entire focus was on
validity of the solution, and whether it met business needs (Trivedi,
2010). Once he was certain of this, he decided that they could proceed
further.
To ensure top management support, the CFO was roped in to be the
executive sponsor for the project. Several sessions were planned to
educate and inform all the employees about the need for ERP and the
benefits that would accrue to the company as a result of the
implementation. The SAP implementation project was named and
branded as SAARTHI (Baburajan, 2007).
With everything in place, the next step was to form an implementation
team. This team comprised of experts from Pantaloon, consultants
from SAP, the vendor and Novasoft the implementation partner. About
24 qualified people worked on this SAP implementation. Mr.
Deshpande, the CIO, headed the implementation. This team
composition ensured that the team had expertise at all required levels
namely domain, process, project management, technical, package etc.
(Trivedi, 2010).
Once this was done, a newsletter was started with the intention of
keeping everyone informed about the ERP project. The
implementation was undertaken in three phases. In the first phase,
the existing processes were documented and the gaps were
identified. This was used to then arrive at new states of the solution.
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For this the SAP team worked in close association with the Pantaloon
team to get a finer understanding of their current processes. At the
end of this exercise, the customisation required and the processes to
be reengineered were identified.
In the second phase, the SAP platform was developed with the help
of the template designed by Novasoft. SAP defined this template on
the basis of their expertise in retail solutions and a careful evaluation
of Pantaloon’s needs. This technique is called Accelerated SAP (ASAP)
which is used to speed up the implementation. The technical setup
required for the deployment was put in place as shown in figure 2.
The last phase in this project was for stores to go live. This involved
switching over to the new system and porting data from the legacy
system to the new system. Before the SAP implementation, all the
data was unorganised. This data had to be organised and ported to
the new SAP application and this was a major challenge. This was the
most time consuming activity during the implementation.
Post Implementation
Information Security
For any external threat, the company put up strong firewalls in both
hardware and software forms. This apart, the company tried to
combine best of prevailing standards in the industry, ranging from
perimeter security to desktop level security. Taking into account the
geographic spread and the nature of business the company segregated
the internal set-up from the outward facing infrastructure and
implemented the best in class products, services and solutions
(Baburajan, 2007).
Business with IT
Operational Benefits
Real-time, continuous reconciliation of cost elements and
expense accounts, freeing up personnel for more value-
added activities
Ability to close books 15% to 20% faster
5% to 10% reduction in accounts receivables
In 2011, Pantaloon Retail also won the ‘Best run Business in Mobility
Adoption’ from SAP. This reaffirmed that they had made good use of
IT to make information available anytime, anywhere on any device
(SAP, 2011).
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Future
With the success of the ERP implementation, Mr. Rakesh Biyani was a
happy man. But he was aware of the changes happening in the retail
industry and the increasing competition with the entry of foreign
players. The question on his mind was whether the current system
would serve their needs in future too. What enhancements would be
needed to support their growth and allow them to respond to the
dynamic market conditions?
2. From the case, draw on the key factors responsible for the success
of the implementation?
3. In view of the changes in the retail industry, what more should
Pantaloon Retail do? What are the new features in the SAP Retail
package that they can benefit from?
References
Baburajan. (2007, March 12). Pantaloon Retail: ‘The problem is not with
technology but gap in the perception and possibility’. Retrieved from
http://www.voicendata.com/voice-data/news/165345/pantaloon-
retail-the-technology-gap-perception-possibility
SAP. (2011). SAP ACE Awards 2011. Retrieved from SAP: http://
www.sap.com/india/campaigns/ace_awards/winners/index.epx