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Status

  Approved

Owner
Stakeholders

Issue

This Key Decision Document (KDD) outlines the decision, considerations and recommendations essential for determining and managing what materials will be serialized and whether equipment serialization is required to support business processes and incorporate new functionalities S/4HANA will bring to Syensqo. 

This needs to provide Syensqo with a consistent approach to determining what materials are eligible for serialization from a maintenance perspective so that a global standard is followed for all sites. 


Recommendation

Based on a comprehensive evaluation and various business workshops held, we recommend implementing Material Serialization as the preferred approach.

  • Equipment Serialization is not recommended because the identified use cases (e.g. seals, motors, pumps) require tracking at a spare-part level, not as installed equipment in the asset hierarchy.

  • Equipment Classification without Serialization is simple and low-cost but fails to provide unit-level traceability, creating compliance and warranty gaps.

  • Material Serialization provides the ability to track individual spare parts by serial number across plants, warehouses, and maintenance orders, without creating unnecessary complexity in the equipment master data. This approach would ensure global harmonization, support compliance needs, and balance business requirements with system simplicity.


Background & Context

Syensqo is currently using serialization at some plants. While this solution has served its purpose, it has reached a point where it must evolve to accommodate the evolving needs of the organization. The SyWay project is introducing several new capabilities and functionalities that require a standard solution. Among these capabilities are enhanced Fixed Asset and Equipment integration, with seamless integration embedded in the SAP S/4HANA platform.

The primary goal is to standardize the way in which serialization is handled. The transition to SAP S/4HANA presents specific challenges that need to be addressed, particularly around integration and process optimization. In addition, the organization seeks to streamline maintenance workflows, ensuring greater operational efficiency and real-time access to data. The new approach should offer a comprehensive, user-friendly experience that enables users to manage tasks and responsibilities more effectively, while also improving data visibility and supporting informed decision-making.

This is aimed at ensuring a smooth operational transition during the SAP S/4HANA transformation, enabling Syensqo to fully capitalize on the new features within SAP S/4HANA such as real-time asset and material tracking. 


Assumptions

  • Serialization is only required for selected spare parts (e.g. seals, pumps, motors) where traceability is critical.

  • No requirement to manage this equipment master data as a rotable for these parts, since they will not be installed and dismantled within the functional location structure.

  • All sites will adopt the same global rules for identifying serialized materials.

  • Material type ZIND, UNBW will be used to group serialized spare parts.


Constraints

Project Timeline: The serialization solution must be implemented within the timeline set for the SyWay project.

Master Data: Requires harmonization of material master records to be serialized across business units to avoid duplicate records.

Change Management: Business users must adapt to new processes in stores and maintenance orders involving serialized spare parts.

Training: Warehouse and maintenance personnel will require targeted training to handle serialized materials correctly with stock movements and maintenance orders. Additional guidance will be needed for reporting and process checks related to serialization throughout the asset lifecycle. 


Impacts

Benefits:

  • Improved traceability of critical spare parts when the material is held in inventory, enhancing visibility across plants and orders.
  • Reduced master data and process complexity by avoiding unnecessary equipment rotation (install/dismantle) and the associated complexity around the rotable process.
  • Consistent global approach across all Syensqo business units.
  • Better support for regulatory, warranty and compliance tracking.


Challenges:
  • Training required for warehouse and maintenance users to handle serialized materials.

  • Additional process checks and discipline needed when issuing or returning serialized spares.

  • Reporting needs to be adapted to leverage serialization fields.


Business Rules

After a series of workshops conducted with the business, below are the guiding principles to be considered for material serialization eligibility (LEIGHTON-ext, Dean this may require more specifics which we'll need from the business so it's less subjective):

  1. Capital Spares : All capital spares must be serialized. A spare part is considered a capital spare if its value is €15,000 or higher.

  2. Criticality : Any spare part marked as Critical must be serialized, regardless of its value.

If either of the above criteria is met, the spare part must be serialized. Both criteria do not need to be met simultaneously.

These criteria represent the minimum global standard. However, the plants may choose to serialize additional spare parts beyond these criteria based on local operational or traceability needs. Such flexibility allows sites to maintain additional control where beneficial, while ensuring a consistent global baseline across Syensqo.

Note:

  • The specific parameters of the above guiding principles will be set by the business and detailed in the Material Master MDS relating to the Serialization profile.
  • The configuration workbook will also need to contain details for the serialization profile setup. 


Options Considered

Option A: Fully Fledged Equipment Serialization

In this approach, each serialized part is created as an equipment record in SAP, meaning individual spare parts, such as a mechanical seal, pump, or motor, exists as an equipment master and can be installed or dismantled within the asset hierarchy. This enables full lifecycle traceability, from procurement to decommissioning and disposal. Each item can be linked to a functional location, capturing detailed usage history. It also supports advanced scenarios such as preventive maintenance, asset performance monitoring, and digital twins at the part level, with strong integration into Asset Accounting and other SAP modules.

However, this approach creates significant master data volumes, potentially thousands of new equipment records for parts that may never require equipment-level management. It adds complexity to maintenance processes due to install and dismantle transactions, requiring additional data entry for each spare part. End users would face higher training and governance efforts, and the solution is generally over-engineered for the stated business need of tracking spare parts rather than managing their rotable lifecycle. Furthermore, system governance, process discipline and storage requirements would likely increase.

Option B: Equipment Classification without Serialization

This approach manages spare parts through material classification only. Materials can be refurbished and reused, but no unique serial number is assigned. It offers a very simple setup with minimal master data requirements and avoids system complexity, as materials remain generic. End users benefit from easier stock management because there is no need to handle serial numbers. This method works well when part interchangeability is high and unit-level traceability is not required.

The downside is that unit-level tracking is impossible, meaning it is not possible to distinguish between identical parts. Lifecycle information for individual items, such as refurbishment history or usage location, cannot be captured. Support for warranty management, compliance reporting, or investigation of recurring failures is limited, and visibility across plants and maintenance orders is lacking. This approach fits high-volume, low-value, low-criticality spare parts or consumables with short lifecycles where tracking effort outweighs the benefit.

With material serialization, materials are serialized in the material master so that each unit receives a unique serial number, but no equipment object is created. Serial numbers are tracked through logistics and maintenance processes, including goods receipt, issues to orders, returns, and stock transfers. This approach provides unit-level traceability without the overhead of managing roatable equipment records.

Material serialization aligns directly with business needs, allowing spare parts to be tracked in stores, across plants, and within maintenance orders. It supports regulatory, warranty, and compliance requirements where unit-level visibility is mandatory, while remaining simpler to manage than full equipment serialization, reducing training needs and process overhead. The approach ensures a globally harmonized process and offers a balanced solution that avoids over-engineering, while still delivering traceability.

The main limitations are that detailed maintenance history per unit, such as install and dismantle information within the asset hierarchy, cannot be recorded. Some reporting adjustments are required to fully leverage the serialization fields, and users must be trained to handle serialized materials correctly within inventory and maintenance orders. This approach is ideal for spare parts such as mechanical seals, motors, and pumps where the business needs to know the part’s location and usage but does not require installation tracking. It also works for refurbished or reusable items that move between plants and for materials subject to warranty, compliance, or low-volume, high-value risk where unit-level visibility is essential.


Evaluation

The evaluation focused on four dimensions: complexity, feasibility, implementation effort and cost, and ongoing operational impact, while also testing each option against the program principles of simplicity, standardization, and global harmonization.

Option A would deliver maximum traceability but with very high complexity, cost, and master data overhead, making it disproportionate to Syensqo’s needs.

Option B is simple and low-cost but fails to provide unit-level traceability, creating compliance and warranty gaps.

Option C strikes the right balance; it enables serial-level tracking without unnecessary equipment records, is feasible to implement, aligns with program principles of simplicity and harmonization, and minimizes ongoing operational impact.



Option A - Equipment Serialization

Option B -  Equipment Classification w/o Serialization
Option C - Material Serialization
Traceability & Compliance

(plus)Full lifecycle traceability, strong compliance support

(minus)Over-engineered for spare parts

(minus) No unit-level traceability

(minus) Limited compliance and warranty tracking

(plus) Unit-level traceability across plants and orders

(plus) Supports regulatory and warranty needs

Complexity & Master Data Effort

(minus) Significant increase in master data records

(minus) Complex maintenance processes

(plus) Very low complexity, minimal data effort

(plus) Balanced effort – serial numbers without equipment objects

(minus) Some reporting and training adjustments needed

Business Fit / Process Alignment(minus) Misaligned – designed for installed assets, not spare parts

(plus) Simple fit for low-value consumables

(minus) Insufficient for critical spares

(plus) Aligned to business needs – tracks spares without equipment overhead



See also



Change log

Version Published Changed By Comment
CURRENT (v. 29) Jan 07, 2026 15:36 LEIGHTON-ext, Dean
v. 51 Jan 07, 2026 15:36 LEIGHTON-ext, Dean
v. 50 Nov 24, 2025 14:55 LEIGHTON-ext, Dean
v. 49 Nov 19, 2025 10:34 HEARD-ext, Kevin
v. 48 Nov 19, 2025 10:17 HEARD-ext, Kevin
v. 47 Nov 17, 2025 13:34 SARUKAN-ext, Ayse
v. 46 Nov 13, 2025 09:47 HEARD-ext, Kevin
v. 45 Nov 13, 2025 09:33 SARUKAN-ext, Ayse
v. 44 Nov 12, 2025 15:39 LEIGHTON-ext, Dean
v. 43 Nov 12, 2025 15:37 LEIGHTON-ext, Dean

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