ERP or Enterprise Resource Planning has been in the Apparel and Textile industry for quite a long time. The need for ERP arose when the industry required a smarter way of working and reducing data redundancy. The beginning of ERP started in the 1960s when an open-loop MRP (Material Requirement Planning) was introduced. This MRP was linked to the Bill of Material and Inventory Master File. This MRP was able to release Purchase Orders, Work Orders, and Rescheduling Notices based on Planned Orders. The major drawback in this system was the control or check points. To address these problems, in the 1970s, a closed-loop MRP came into existence. This model of MRP was able to check the capacity requirements before generating any Purchase or Work Order. But it still worked in isolation from the Business Plan, Financial, and Marketing. This led to the development of MRP II in the 1980s, which, based on the constraints of Marketing and Financial Planning, ran the closed-loop MRP. However, the industry still felt the need to integrate all the resources of an enterprise, giving birth to ERP. As a result, all enterprise-wide resources were on a single platform, working for optimization with better planning.

In the 1990s, early ERP systems used client-server methodology, where client systems had an application installed that could fetch information from the server. With the advent of the internet, ERP evolved further in the 2000s, where no installation of a client application was required, and ERP moved to the web. With the emergence of cloud computing and highly complex mobile devices, ERP became faster and easily accessible.

Why ERP in the Apparel or Textile industry?

The Apparel and Textile industry is complex. Unlike the automotive industry, where the variants of a single car run on a single assembly line for decades, the apparel and textile industry sees a lot of variation every minute. With the introduction of new production systems like Lean and Modular, which have been successful in the automotive industry, the Apparel and Textile industry also adopted similar trends. Companies like LT Karle, Gokaldas Exports, Laguna, ITC, and many others took initiatives on Modular, Lean, and Just in Time Manufacturing concepts. All the above-mentioned systems required a focus on reducing Work In Progress and Waste and increasing initiatives on operator training. To support these manufacturing systems, various solutions for the Apparel and Textile Industry are being proposed, ranging from material handling and tracking to ERP.

As competition increases, and margins and timelines are reduced, people in the Apparel and Textile Industry have started to realize that the need for cost control and utilizing enterprise-wide resources to the maximum have become essential. ERP comes as a rescue to all these issues.


Basic Components of ERP

-          Material Management

-          Sales and Distribution

-          Production Planning

-          Production Management

-          Costing

-          Quality Management

-          Finance and Controlling

-          HR/Payroll

Choosing the Right ERP.!!

As the competition is increasing in Textile and Apparel Industry; the ERP market has also seen the same. There are generic ERPs like SAP, Oracle, JD Edwards, Peoplesoft, and Microsoft Dynamics/Xapta etc which cater to all the industries worldwide. Then there are ERP specific to Apparel and Textile Industry like Datatex, Intex, WFX, RDPL, etc.

Datatex One of the oldest ERP in Textile and Apparel sector started way back in 1986 with over 450 implementations all around the globe. Many large organizations in India like Arvind, BRFL, Vardhaman, Bhilwara Group run on Datatex ERP. With the success of implementation on AS400 platform, Datatex moved to Web in the year 2004. This allowed them to cater a whole large audience around the globe. The product is positioned on Small, Medium and Large scaled organizations.

WFX World Fashion Exchange started off in the year 2000. The company has a well known implementation success story in Gokaldas Exports. It started off with an EDP/EDI product for all Fashion Agents in India along with Brands. They rolled out the ERP in 2004 and ERPII in 2007. The product is positioned on Small and Medium Scale organizations and only Apparel sector.

RDPL Royal Datamatics Private Limited is known for their product called as APPS. They have done a no. of Implementations in and around the NCR in India. The product is positioned on Small Scale Organizations and only Apparel sector.

ERP Implementation in Apparel and Textile Industry

ERP Implementation has the following phases in any industry


-          Project Preparation Phase

-          Business Process Study Phase (AS IS Phase)

-          Business Blue Print Phase (TO BE Phase)

-          Realization Iteration Phase I

-          Customization and Reports Development

-          Realization Iteration Phase II

-          Prepare and Go Live

Well as Apparel and Textile Industry is not that organized till now in India, ERP implementation usually start with a time line of 6 months and get extended. The Apparel and Textile industry usually face a problem of change management which leads to Core Team of implementation being changed every now and then.

Successful ERP Implementation

Client


The key success of ERP implementation in Textile and Apparel Industry is full involvement of Business Process Owners and a Core Team from client side which is having deep knowledge of their business process. To ramp up the implementation process the core team must have on time implementation as one of their KRAs.

Implementer

The Implementation team must have a Pro Active Project manager and at least one Consultant for each module with deep insight on business process of the Industry. The consultants should have knowledge on best practices being followed in the industry.

Myths during Implementation

ERP Increases Data Entry: The truth is ERP does not increase data entry; but ERP asks the end user to enter each and every detail which the users in earlier way of working use to write it down in his/her dairy. The data to be entered in the ERP makes the life of the C-Level much more easier as they get a clear picture on the status of Orders and Payments.

Excel is better than ERP: ERP and Excel cannot be compared and they should not be. During ERP implementation the consultants face lot of problem in this Myth. Actually Excel is nothing but a record keeping tool or calculation tool. It behaves in manner a particular user wants to. ERP is a system on which behaves in a manner set by organization. In excel users can change value or calculation any time they want; but is this advisable?