| Status | |
| Owner | Stephen McCarteny |
| Stakeholders | Peter Rusnak |
This document aims to evaluate the potential benefits and drawbacks of copying over custom units of measure (ie no SAP Standard ones) that have been created over time by Qyensqo for use with Supplier integration, Ordering and Invoicing.
Decide whether to bring over the custom UoMs created for stopping vendor issues at invoicing stage into the S4 Hana System or to start with just the standard ones.
In the past suppliers who did not send in a standard ISO or SAP Unit of Measure on an acknowledgement, or an invoice would get an error at the point of the data being entered (manually or by interface) on SAP.
This means that the transaction has to be checked and the Unit of Measure corrected by the supplier causing delays – or for the UoM to be added to the SAP UoM list as a custom unit and mapped to the existing standard to avoid recurrences.
The ERP Rebuild will mean a switch to SAP standard as a default. This could result in going through the same UoM errors that were found in the past and having to correct the supplier or add the custom UoMs to SAP again.
Alternatively, the custom UoMs that have been used to bypass the issue in ECC could also be ported to S4 HANA (and Ariba) to avoid repeating the same errors.
Not all suppliers adhere to the SAP standard or ISO Units of Measure and will send non standard ones on Acknowledgements or Invoices
Capture any additional constraints that the chosen alternative (i.e. the decision made) might impose on other parts of the overall design, solution, or processes.
However, it is important to consider potential drawbacks or challenges associated with adding in custom UoMs
Any Custom UoM needs to be manually added to the new system and transported through as config.
It would be painful to go through the same UoM errors that Syensqo has already solved by adding in custom UoMs. However, the impact needs to be analysed across the system in order to see how big an issue it is and any downstream or reporting impacts.
Option 1: Do not transfer over the custom UoMs
The organisation simply starts with the standard SAP offering
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Option 2: Carry over the custom UoMs As Is
Take over the current custom UoMs as they are, including any mapping
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Option 3: Review current situation, size the problem and move any UoMs that are required
Assess how many non standard UoMs are currently ebing received, volume of legacy data that would carry them and any issues with reports. Bring over any non standard UoM where the impact is such it cannot be avoided.
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Analysis Effort: Requires additional effort and time to conduct the impact analysis, which can delay the migration process.
Decision Complexity: Decisions on which UoMs to migrate can be complex and might require significant stakeholder involvement.
Partial Continuity: Might still lead to some data consistency issues for less frequently used custom UoMs that are not migrated. Will take time to carry out review and contact suppliers
Based on the evaluation of the solution options, it is recommended that the Review approach is used to size and scale the nature of the problem.
Requirements
To successfully carry out the review approach, the following Requirements should be taken:
Conduct a thorough analysis of the custom UoMs to understand their usage, importance, and impact on business processes and supplier relationships.
Engage with key users, suppliers and customers(?), to understand their requirements and preferences regarding UoMs.
Based on the impact analysis, decide on a balanced approach that ensures critical custom UoMs are retained while minimizing the overall complexity and maintenance burden.
Review data :
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Insert links and references to other documents which are relevant when trying to understand this decision and its implications. Other decisions are often impacted, so it's good to list them here with links. Attachments are also possible but dangerous as they are static documents and not updated by their authors.
