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How Customers Can Prepare for Fusion Applications

While at Collaborate 07 in Las Vegas last month, I happen to attend an incredible session led by my colleage, Nadia Bendjedou, about i??What Customers Can Do Today to Prepare for Fusion Applicationsi??. For those of you who didni??t get to attend this or haveni??t had a chance to participate in one of her many Webcasts and or Podcasts, I thought I would highlight some of her best practices i?? Top 10 things to do to prepare for Fusion Applications.


1. Consider Upgrading to the Latest Release of your Applications.


For example, Oracle E-Business Suite - 11i10 or R12, PeopleSoft Enterprise - 8.8, 8.9 or 9.0, JD Edwards EnterpriseOne - 8.11 or 8.12, Siebel - 7.8, 8.0 applications


2. Rethink your Customization Strategy


a) Is what I put in place still valid and worth keeping?
b) If they are still required, should customers evaluate if there
   are better ways of doing/developing these customizations?
c) Should I think about engineering for the future with products
   that will survive the upgrade to Fusion? What are those
   products?
d) What are the benefits of implementing Fusion technology?


3. Put together a Project Plan to migrate to Fusion


a) Are there areas where you will need to upgrade first?
b) Do I need to evaluate the drivers (business as well as IT)
    to upgrade to Fusion Applications?
c) Is there a pilot project for upgrading to Fusion, based on
    geography, departmental/functional silos or other reasons?


4. Take advantage of Oraclei??s Fusion Architecture and Fusion Middleware


a) How can I evaluate the benefits of Oracle Fusion
    Architecture?
b) Does it solve business problems such as security and
    compliance, integrating new business flows at lower cost
    and or is it just about cleaning and consolidating the  
    critical data?
c) You can actually use the Fusion Technology today. Go to 

    www.oracle.com/fusion
for more details.


5.  Consider Master Data Management


a) Master Data Management (MDM), is a data hub tool that
    enables you to synchronize critical data such as
    customers, suppliers and products - in a single, accurate,
    consistent view of the companyi??s data, whether from
    packaged, legacy or custom applications.
b) You should consider consolidating and cleaning your
    critical  data about customers, suppliers and products
    before going to Fusion.


6. Move to SOA-based Integration


a) Find out from Oracle what they are doing to make their
    suite (EBS, PSFT, SEBL and JDE) of applications 
    SOA-enabled?  Are they providing new capabilities in each
    product to help them play in a SOA world?
b) Check out Oracle Fusion Middleware i?? it is a complete
    product line - much more than just the application server.  It
    includes a process orchestration modeling tool BPEL PM,
    business activity monitoring (BAM), as well as an
    enterprise services bus (ESB).  All these tools are known
    as the SOA   suite and can be used by ALL Oracle
    customers today (EBS, PSFT, SEBL, JDE as well as other
    point solutions such as Oracle Retail, G-Log etc... ).
c) Consider leveraging Oraclei??s Application Integration
    Architecture (AIA), which develops a number of Process
    Industry Packs to integrate various applications products,
    namely SEBL, EBS, G-Log, PSFT etci??. these can be
    tailored by customers to fit their applications infrastructure.


7. Extend your Business Intelligence Portfolio


a) Adopt Oraclei??s enterprise reporting, publishing & business
    intelligence tool (comes with each of our Applications). All
    applications have been certified with Fusion BI known as
    Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition or OBI EE,
    which includes XML Publisher (also known as BI Publisher)
b) Start converting your reports to XMLP.Your users will love it! c) Leverage OBI EE as well as XMLP to improve and enhance 
    your enterprise reporting & analytics today. You will be a
    head of the game - these are part of the Fusion Technology.


8. Secure your Global Enterprise by Consolidating


a) Review your custom and legacy applications.  You may be 
    at risk not only to data fragmentations but also to security
    fragmentation which could increase your security
    vulnerability and security risks. 
b) Start consolidating security functions by centralizing
    access control (by implementing LDAP and SSO), ensuring
    data privacy and enabling compliance for the entire
    enterprise.
c) Externalize security functions from the applications (where
    it was built by the traditional applications) to a centralized
    and professionally managed security infrastructure).
d) Get ahead of the curve by using Oraclei??s Fusion Security
    (known as the Oracle Identity Management), knowing it is
    the security infrastructure for Fusion Applications.


9. Consider Grid Computing


a) Think i??Gridi?? at all levels before going to Fusion. Especially
    in a SOA-world where services are independent, well-
    defined encapsulations of software functionality that can be
    invoked over a network using heterogeneous platforms and
    execution environments. 
         i. Grid computing is about resource allocation,
            information sharing & high availability at lower cost. 
         ii. Resource allocation ensures that all who need or 
             request resources are getting what they need, that 
             resources are not standing idle while requests are 
             going unserviced. 
         iii. Information sharing makes sure that the users and
             applications need is always available. 
         iv. High availability features guarantee all the data and
             computation is always there, just like a utility 
             company always provides electric power.


10. Centralize your Lifecycle Management


a) Minimize hardware, software and system management
    costs by moving to Oraclei??s Grid Control, also known as
    the Oracle Enterprise Manager - that is the centralized
    management tools that help you manage your applications,
    database, middleware, operating system, storage and the
    network i?? all from one console.
         i. Oracle Enterprise Manager works with most of 
            Oraclei??s applications, using the Applications
            Management Packs. These packs reduce efforts to
            manage multiple environments, allow faster discovery
            and diagnosis of incidents and provide rapid
            provisioning and scaling.
b) What is great about the console is that it is the very same
    console that will also manage the Fusion Applications.
c) Start with Grid Control today. You will be able to plug in
    your first Fusion pilot along side your EBS, PSFT or SEBL
    applications as if it were just another application in your
    enterprise.
d) Grid Control will be the hub of Oracle Applications Lifecycle
    Management.


Well, those are my notes. I hope this helps you. To see Nadiai??s slides from her session, go to:


http://www.oracle.com/partners/home/personalized/global/fusion-application/apac-fusion-apps-champs-cal-pres-070125.pdf


What does this mean to Oracle customers? I was corresponding with a customer the other day via email and he said:


"I'm excited by the steps Oracle is taking to prepare their customers for the future of Oracle Applications.  Oracle is providing customers with numerous choices for moving forward through Fusion Middleware, Applications Integration Architecture, and the upcoming Fusion Applications.  At the same time, Oracle is providing a means for customers to move forward at their own pace by protecting current application investments through the Applications Unlimited and Lifetime Support programs."


Floyd Teter
System Engineer for Institutional Business Systems
Jet Propulsion Lab

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