We’ve been asked to talk about this topic numerous times since the mid 1990s when the first ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) packages were expanding at a rapid rate.
“Is it better”, we were asked, “to select the best of each category of software or instead, to select one package that can do everything at once?”
The conversation would become known as All-in-One vs. Best-in-Class.
The answer from us is always the same. We see the desire for both Technical management and Finance management to get one system that will do everything. The advantages on paper are easy to display: The all-in-one product is *already* integrated. It is only one package to maintain, not multiple. So, it must be the best choice… Right?
Except it’s often not.
Our answer to people who ask about this is always the same. It’s the best choice to go with an all-in-one solution so long as it does what you need. If it doesn’t then very quickly you will end up where you started, with multiple timesheet systems.
And that is incredibly costly.
Over the years, it has happened from time to time that a client informs us that they won’t be using TimeControl anymore. Their Finance Department has changed or a new CFO has arrived with experience of different tools at previous organizations. The company will “change directions” we’re told and TimeControl, while working fine, will be retired.
Our response to this is always positive. “If your new solution does everything you need, then we wish you good fortune,’ we say.
In situation after situation, we get a call 3, 6, 9 months later “Um, we were a little hasty in moving off of TimeControl,” we’re told. It turned out that the alternate solution doesn’t actually do everything we were already used to and the person who is noticing the gaps the most turns out to be our CFO.”
“No worries,” we explain. “We’ll work at getting your system back up and running with whatever updates you might need.”
It’s not that people can’t figure this out in advance. The problem with a timesheet system is that it’s often taken for granted. After all, employees use their timesheet for 5 to 10 minutes a week. It is in the background of their experience. But TimeControl is an enterprise timesheet which often has many links with other tools and multiple processes in the organization. The administrators appreciate the complexities of the overall system and, if they’re still involved, so do the people who deployed it. But it’s an easy part of a corporate system to not pay much attention to as you’re making a sweeping systems change.
It’s not always the same thing with each client. Often it’s the multiple layers of the approvals process that a new tool doesn’t support. Sometimes it’s a simultaneous link with Payroll on one side and a project management tool like Primavera on another. Other times it’s the degree to which the flexibility of TimeControl has been employed to meet multiple internal needs at the same time.
And TimeControl can flex.
So we don’t stress too much when a client says they’re looking at alternates other that to be certain that it’s not because there is something in TimeControl the client isn’t happy with. That we respond to in a very different way.
After all, happy clients are what has made HMS and TimeControl so successful for decades.
To find out more about TimeControl and how it links with ERP systems like SAP and Oracle, see the TimeControl.com/use-cases/links-to-erp page.
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