Australian toy distributor Moose Enterprise has replaced its accounting system, numerous spreadsheets and ad hoc databases with a single ERP solution in a phased rollout across Melbourne, Hong Kong and China.
Set to go live later this month, the goal is to integrate the company's expanding domestic and international operations.
Moose Enterprise chief financial officer, Stephen O'Neill, said the company will replace Accpac with Pronto Software to consolidate its financial information and business processes to achieve greater visibility across the organization.
O'Neill said the single solution will also help manage rapid expansion as Moose experienced 120 per cent revenue growth last year.
While the toy company supplies domestic retailers such as Myer, David Jones, Target, Woolworths, Kmart and Safeway, O'Neill said Moose exports 70 per cent of its product range to more than 45 countries.
Moose Enterprise will implement a range of Pronto modules including financials, supply chain, project costing, EDI, CRM, payroll, analytics and warehousing.
The financial and EDI modules are currently being rolled out with analytics set to be implemented in early 2008.
Upon completion of the project, O'Neill expects to halve the time it takes to produce a set of consolidated group accounts and dramatically increase fiscal visibility and management.
"We will be able to get a much more accurate big picture view of costs as well as more streamlined quoting which will improve our quarterly forecasting and cash flow," he said.
The Alert Intelligience feature, O'Neill said, will improve our business agility and mitigate business risks which is critical for a growing business.
"Importantly for us Pronto's in-built EDI integration supports the electronic trading compliance mandates of our major customers such as Coles and Big W.
"Currently it takes about half a day to key in orders but we anticipate major efficiencies once the software automates this process."
During the purchasing selection process, O'Neill said Pronto's local customer service was a key factor in the final decision.
"We wanted to deal directly with a supplier that makes and supports its own software, instead of dealing with a third party where support is not always guaranteed," he said.
"The team have already proven they go beyond the call of duty as it has been a very aggressive rollout and a major change project for our business."
Pronto Software managing director, David Jackman, described Moose as a dynamic Australian company that is making plenty of waves overseas.
NetApp quits bidding war in face of EMC opposition
Newest IE bug could be next Conficker, says researcher
Analysts: Google has muscle for long-term battle with Microsoft Windows
No sign of North Korean backing in bot attacks on US sites, says researcher
T-Mobile launches myTouch 3G; no plans for HTC Hero
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services. 5 steps to getting started with data loss prevention
The business justification for data security
Multiple suppliers - a common culture
Understanding Email Marketing: A Guide for SMBs
Speeding business innovation with Data Centre Transformation solutions
Providing Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery for Microsoft Cluster Server and Windows Server 08 Failover Clustering Apps
Top 10 Ways to Increase IT ROI Without Adding Staff
Keeping your SQL Server Going 24x7
Zones provide focussed content from Computerworld and leading technology partners.
















Comments
Post new comment