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Friday, July 19, 2013

Systems

Systems in todays do a lot more than what many people actually think. Any system that is used in a specific field is there for a vital reason and if removed, could hinder the entire field. Even then, a system can be related to anything that functions on an everyday basis. Systems are set up in order to help something run more smoothly. One of the most common systems that can help do this is an enterprise recourse planning system. This system has the capability to run and entire vital business operation in a global organization.
One of the main types of enterprise planning systems is the two-tier enterprise planning system, which allows the company to run two of the ERP (enterprise planning systems at once). With two-tier ERP, the regional distribution, production, or sales centers and service providers continue operating under their own business model—separate from the main company, using their own ERP systems[1]. This current system allows companies to run two types of systems at the same time while still being able to monitor the entire company at once.
The enterprise recourse planning system helps a company survive, compete, and thrive in today’s world. ERP software typically consists of multiple enterprise software modules that are individually purchased, based on what best meets the specific needs and technical capabilities of the organization.[2]This helps a company grow in the needs of what the company is looking for.
Anything in today’s world can be looked at as system though. A system is defined as a set of connected things or parts forming a complex whole, in particular[3]. The human body, our solar system, and even most businesses are considered to be a system. This is done by everything working together in order to function. This is why many of the bigger companies use planning systems and other forms of information systems. The goal is to make the company or business or whatever the system is working for, function better.

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