Empowering clients for ERP success: AI and Project Manager - Catch Resource Management

Empowering clients for ERP success: AI and Project Manager

In this month’s expert tip, experienced Business Systems Program Manager, Craig Rohan, addresses selecting a key component, the Project Manager, and use of new and developing AI tools to ensure project success, reduced risk, and future system scalability.

____________________________

ERP Project Manager: Skills, Certifications and Knowledge

What is a skilled ERP Project Manager? A successful Project Manager should possess comprehensive and applicable project management knowledge and skills, validated by recognized certifications, such as:

  • PMP Project Management: Project Management Professional certification
  • ERP Software Project Management, such as Microsoft certified project manager
  • Business and accounting skills: for example, a CPA (Certified Public Accountant).
  • ERP Software: for example. D365 F&SCM certifications, such as MB 300 and 310

The PM’s expertise extends to accounting, the ERP system, and industry, ensuring sound judgment, system security, and regulatory compliance in the financial system implementation.

 

Ethical Standards

Project Managers should be strong advocates for project success and demonstrate a strong ethical foundation, supported by certifications such as Certified Public Accountant (CPA) and a PMP certified project manager.

 

AL For Successful Project Management

Effective project management incorporates the augmentation of human intelligence with artificial intelligence (AI), through the use of developing strategic planning and AI tools. The Project Manager must have the skills to understand project metrics, risk reduction tools, KPIs, to evaluate AI recommendations, and have the capability to independently recommend next steps to keep a project on schedule, in scope, and on budget. To balance their time, Project Managers must balance leadership and management, cultivate organizational culture awareness, and evaluate strategic alternatives. This is where I have been using AI in the following ways:

  • Dashboard: Set up real time project management dashboards, providing project visibility from detail task level to the overall health of the project
  • KPI and risk management visibility
  • Issue Identification, tracking, updates and recommended next steps
  • Automation and real time reporting, including daily Standup Meetings, Risks, Risk Remediations, and Risk Mitigation
  • Change Management and the documentation of Standard Operating Procedures (SOP)
  • Automated test scripts for thorough testing of system updates
  • Evaluation of ERP Roadmap, in this case Microsoft, and the scalability of the ERP system.

Effective execution of strategic plans and embracing AI involves guidance and support at all organizational levels. The next article will include the result of the use of AI tools and what to watch for to ensure concise and meaningful content, and other key project management elements for project success.

 

Craig Rohan

rohan.craig@gmail.com

Share

You might also like

View all news
ERP vs. EPM: Moving from Reporting to Strategic Decision-Making

EPM & ERP: Do we need both, what’s the difference, is OneStream a suitable solution for our business? This month, we’re exploring the difference between ERP and Enterprise Performance Management (EPM) and why many organisations find that ERP alone is no longer enough. We’ll look at how EPM helps finance teams move from reporting the […]

Read more
Where JDE Supply Chains Win—or Fail – Q&A with Carlos Guerra

From your experience, which area of JD Edwards Supply Chain or Distribution do organisations most often fail to fully optimise – and why? One of the most common areas where organisations fail to fully optimise JD Edwards Supply Chain is demand forecasting, particularly inventory replenishment. When this is not optimised, it often results in excess […]

Read more
Lessons From 30 Years of Dynamics: Scope Creep Then and Now

A prevalent challenge in D365 implementations today is persistent scope creep and the expansion of requirements. Having worked with Dynamics applications since the mid-1990s, primarily with enterprise clients, I have observed this issue intensify over time. While scope creep is not new, it has become more common due to evolving implementation methodologies and the increasing […]

Read more