intelligent
implementation

Bringing a new technology system on board is never easy for a manager. Here are things to make the process smoother.

By Roman Lockshin

During the last 10 years, revolutionary advances in computers and networks have brought about an unparalleled explosion in technology solutions, completely changing the way we create, process, manage, store, and communicate information.

Engineering information is no exception. However, many managers remain bewildered by all of the turnkey solutions, comprehensive software packages, gadgets, and gizmos that pop up in the engineering field like party balloons and then deflate just as quickly, often with a bang.

Occasionally, the news media report a horror story about a disastrous technology decision—or indecision—made by managers at a now-extinct company. The disaster creates an opportunity for the business community to learn that technology is a double-edged sword, the media reasoning seems to go.

Keep yourself from becoming an example! Here are several points to consider when deciding to accept or reject a technological solution:


Use Common Sense


Your good business and management sense served you well so far. Use it, together with your intuition, to choose a system appropriate for your engineering operation. Don't be overly influenced by a flashy presentation or intimidated by techno lingo. Do be aware that, although the salesmen may look like scientists, what sounds like an objective report is, in fact, a sales presentation. It's worth repeating: If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

When considering the price of the solution, don't ignore hidden costs, lest they come back to bite your amended supplemental statement of income. For example, it will cost you to upgrade hardware and networks to run the new software; to train your engineers to use it; to maintain the system and exterminate bugs; to commit resources to the project.

Every manager is acutely aware of the limited-resources-allocation dilemma, which says that a scarcity of time, capital, and workforce ensures that undertaking one project means abandoning another, or even several others. Be sure to allocate your resources wisely. Keep in mind that a project with a certain outcome is greatly preferred to the project with a hoped-for outcome. Stay open to new ideas, but stick to what you know.

Be very, very skeptical if you're told that a proposed technological solution will save you a fortune over a 10-year period.

Will that investment in microcircuits make or cost you megabucks?

After all, in two to three years, your competitors or customers will force you to upgrade your system just to keep up. Most technological solutions become obsolete within two to three years, and with the way things are going, it looks like the interval will continue to shrink in the future. If you can't say the system will soon benefit your company tangibly, find a better use for your time and money.

There's a fine line between the top-of-the-line and the budget solution. One solution consists of experimental products, which feature sky-high prices and the privilege to be the solution vendor's favorite test subject; the other is so obsolete that you shouldn't implement it even if the vendor pays you to do it. Fortunately, most feasible solutions pass through a period in their product life cycle when both the time and price are right.

The most advanced solution is not necessarily the best one. It's best to let someone else be on the bleeding edge and to serve as the test subject while the bugs are being worked out. Being the second to implement a system is infinitely better than being the first or, at the other extreme, the last.


Is It Exactly What You Need?


Electronic system integration between supplier and customer is quickly becoming a standard in many areas, engineering included. You can beat the competition and improve your margins by making it easy for your suppliers and vendors to work with you, so be sure to inquire what system they are using. Strive for compatibility and integration as much as practical. System integration will increase the cost of switching technologies, making it harder for your suppliers and customers to leave you. Tie everyone together if you can.

Many software packages that you'll be looking at will include every imaginable feature offered by the system designers. These features can be a problem, because the system will be harder to learn, slower to function, and less stable. Be sure that you are not buying bloatedware.

As your company grows and evolves, expect that your information technology requirements will change. A scalable or modular system is better suited to keep up with your growth.

Remember, after the system you pick is implemented, the consultant will pack up and leave. Before that happens, make sure that your staff receives the training necessary for system operation and routine maintenance.

Even the best system will add little value to your engineering organization if your staff is reluctant to use it. Your staff will feel enthusiastic about the new system and will work with it properly if it's easy to use with a user-friendly interface.


Develop It Internally


Not every company can afford the luxury of maintaining a full-time information technology staff. At the same time, however, if everyone on your team is ignorant of technology, your enterprise may be at the mercy of a highly paid IT consultant whose interests and goals don't always coincide with yours, and whose skill is not always proportionate to the fee that's demanded.

Although it's not realistic to recommend that every firm hire and maintain an information technology staff, it is within your power to see that at least one team member is sufficiently well-informed to help you choose a feasible and reasonably priced solution, track project progress, and keep a keen eye on the consultant.

Keep your old system running until everyone is convinced that the new system does what it should and works reliably. Companies have perished by making the fatal error of discarding the old system for a new one that didn't work as promised. It's vital to maintain the capability to roll back to the old system at any time. Keeping your old system ready to go gives you the option of keeping your operations intact and of firing your consultants should they fail to deliver on their promises.

Technology can enlarge the effects of the right—or wrong—decision.

When selecting any vendor, diligent managers must check track records and contact several former clients. This rule goes double when it comes to selecting information technology vendors, because an error in judgment in this area can wreak chaos on your operations and cause more damage then any other undertaking.

Don't rely on a legal contract alone. Litigation will tie up your resources and even if you win, you're very unlikely to collect because most IT consultants are poorly capitalized. Lawyers are like nukes: You have yours because they have theirs, but pray you won't have to use them.

Be sure to protect your client list, business plan, pricing, and other confidential material. Keep in mind that your competitor may hire your former consultant. Again, don't rely on non-disclosure agreements. Make sure that your files never leave your facility.

Protect your networks from unauthorized access from both within and outside your company. Implement firewalls, passwords, and encryption, but at the same time try to achieve a good balance between usability and security. Back up your files and scan for viruses at night, when system usage and load are low.


Did You Get It Right?


Here are some questions you should ask yourself to determine if you are getting all that you can from your chosen system:

What goals did you have in mind when you decided to implement the solution? Measure your progress toward these goals.

It all comes down to the bottom line. Is your operating cost lower or higher than before? (Don't count the sunk costs of implementation, but do include operating costs of the new system.)

What is the value added by the new system?

Did you acquire new customers and get larger orders from established customers?

When figuring out the answers to these questions, listen to employees, suppliers, and customers, and evaluate what they say.

Don't be reluctant in announcing your new capabilities
to all of your current and prospective customers as well as your suppliers.

Find new uses for the system. Leverage technology to increase your margins and reduce costs. Train your staff to use it fully.

Be aware of the various technological trends in engineering, but take advantage of innovations only when you can clearly see how an upgrade translates to a significant positive contribution to your bottom line.

Technology is a powerful lever, capable of amplifying the effects of both correct and erroneous decisions. Thus, it's a double-edged sword. Used intelligently, it can give you a significant competitive edge and contribute to the success and prosperity of your enterprise. Good luck!


With a background in proprietary trading, Roman Lockshin holds an M.B.A. from the City University of New York and is a Chartered Financial Analyst. For leisure, he plays classical violin, practices yoga, and rides a motorcycle (but not all at the same time).



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