It is important to understand the purpose of the COE. For many companies, the COE provides business and application expertise to support an organisations global or domestic SAP implementation, by designing new processes, optimising current ones, managing complex implementation projects, providing user support and training, and keeping the complex SAP system landscape up and running 24/7. In addition, the COE helps optimise the use of all SAP products implemented in a cost-effective manner, contributing to the overall Company’s success. It involves operational support, application management and enhancements, infrastructure management and change management.
The first hurdle is to regain the best practices that were most likely employed pre-live. Once you go live, there is no reason to abandon the core success factors that were pertinent to the implementation. For example:
Overall, the difficulty in implementing a COE will probably reside in how committed your organisation is to its successful deployment – from a budgetary, resource, and process perspective.
Just to reiterate, without a SAP COE, you will lack the necessary support ecosystem – including resources, funding funnel, and governance body – and more importantly, the strategy and roadmap that are required to launch and sustain a successful support organisation.
In many companies, business and IT go their separate ways once the implementation project is “complete.” This is a mistake. To get enduring results, the Business must drive the ongoing improvements needed for the SAP platform. It is the Business – supported by IT – that needs to identify the process changes, reporting for decision-making and end-user needs on an ongoing basis.
To that end, you need to re-examine the current mix of your post-implementation support team. COE’s must include a mix of Process Owners – the “super-users” within the business community, functional application experts and technical experts for configuration and reporting. In addition, the team needs to include people focused on new initiatives, whether for additional rollouts or new modules, which will be inevitable, as business needs change.
Overall, The COE needs to be designed to break down the walls between IT and the business community, and establish a new way to provide sustainable support that remains business focused.
One of the most critical steps for COE set-up is establishing Governance for the support organisation. The goal of governance is to provide strategic direction, as well as accountability, for all SAP initiatives. Governance also provides a framework for the Business Units to work collaboratively, and in unison with IT, enabling process standardisation and business alignment across the enterprise.
No generic formula exists for the functions and roles that should be encompassed within the COE. At a minimum, you will need to map out the roles and responsibilities of The Executive Steering Team, PMO Group (Program Management), Support Services Team and the SAP Power Users.
Some of the key roles and functions of the COE:
Reclaim ownership of your SAP business processes. Too often, the “to-be” vision turns out to be a one time exercise done early in the implementation process and then is cast aside post-live. This needs to be re-visited as streamlined business processes are as important in the post-live COE as it was in implementation.
The COE should perform or coordinate a review of what is working and what is not. Typically, the 5 areas that companies should address are:
The business should have a regular stream of improvement requests to support operational changes. Inability to deliver this will create frustration and a sense of stalling in the improvement process.
Your COE should provide guidance on how best to manage change within the context of your SAP platform. An effective COE has the appropriate knowledge, skill and time to evaluate alternatives and implications, estimate the level of effort required and provide the necessary testing, training and documentation. Changes must be made in a controlled way to ensure that the live environment is not put at risk – and implemented effectively to exploit the business benefits of the improvements.
One of the most forgotten aspects of setting up a COE is the marketing effort to publicise and promote the services offered. Only after users are aware of processes and services available, can widespread adoption of the COE occur within the organisation.
It would be a mistake not to expend the effort to launch an internal marketing campaign. The lifeblood and longevity of the COE depends on the perception and service it provides to its internal customers.
Where to begin? Ideally, planning for your COE begins before you go live with your SAP business platform. This way, continuity is ensured and the likelihood of matching your ROI expectations is increased.
If you are in the initial stages, budget for it now – it’s a question of pay for it now, or pay for it later – and latter has higher costs. If you are in the midst of implementation, raise the flag now and address it. But if you are already live, it’s not too late. Take it step-by-step to identify and prioritise the areas to address.
Neil ran his first SAP transformation programme in his early twenties. He spent the next 21 years working both client side and for various consultancies running numerous SAP programmes. After successfully completing over 15 full lifecycles he took a senior leadership/board position and his work moved onto creating the same success for others.