With the advent of SAP S/4HANA in the mid-2010s, SAP undertook a major change in how it provided logistics capabilities to customers.
In this blog post, we’ll take a look at how logistics in SAP S/4HANA compares to logistics in the SAP ERP solution.
SAP ERP included SAP’s main logistics offering up until the arrival of SAP S/4HANA. It focused on three key areas: procurement and logistics execution, product development and manufacturing, and sales and service.
For procurement and logistics execution, SAP ERP focused on reducing costs in purchasing, providing in-depth inventory management, and managing an efficient warehouse.
For product development and manufacturing, SAP ERP focused on improving production processes, which included product planning, master production scheduling, and material requirements planning. For manufacturing, this included production technique support, plant maintenance, and quality management.
For sales and service, SAP ERP focused on sales order management from order to delivery (including transportation management) and customer service like repairs and warranties.
SAP S/4HANA provides four lines of business relating to logistics processes: Sourcing and Procurement, Manufacturing, Supply Chain, and Asset Management. Let’s look at each briefly.
In the Sourcing and Procurement line of business, SAP assists users in identifying and acquiring materials through extended procurement, operational purchasing, contract and supplier management, and more. Peripheral solutions such as SAP Ariba and SAP Fieldglass are considered part of the Sourcing and Procurement line of business.
With the Manufacturing line of business, SAP assists users in product creation through responsive manufacturing, production operations, scheduling and delivery planning, quality management, and more. Legacy processes such as the manufacturing extension SAP Manufacturing Integration and Intelligence (SAP MII), quality and quality issue management, and production planning and control are considered part of the Manufacturing line of business.
The Supply Chain line of business assists users in overall business planning, as well as storing and dispatching products when purchased. It covers processes including production planning, batch traceability, warehousing, and inventory management. Solutions such as SAP Integrated Business Planning (SAP IBP) and embedded versions of SAP Extended Warehouse Management, and SAP Transportation Management are considered part of the Supply Chain line of business.
In the Asset Management line of business, SAP assists users in taking care of in-house items from a maintenance perspective. Maintenance management solutions such as SAP Enterprise Asset Management (SAP EAM) and EHS monitoring and reporting tools are considered part of the Asset Management line of business.
The most striking change to logistics in the new suite was the retirement of the SAP ERP module concept and the advent of SAP S/4HANA lines of business. In the legacy suite, users would routinely utilize modules such as Materials Management, Warehouse Management, Plant Maintenance, etc. to complete their tasks. These no longer exist per se; all logistics functionality remains accessible in the new suite, of course, but within the four logistics lines of business. This change was done purposefully by SAP to better distribute functionality and place similar processes together.
Beyond that, central to the SAP S/4HANA logistics solution are the process and reporting improvements available via SAP HANA’s in-memory architecture; SAP says reporting times in SAP S/4HANA are 1800x faster than SAP ERP. Many reports, like Resource Scheduling for Maintenance Planners and the Maintenance Scheduling Board, can be run with SAP Fiori applications designed with the end user in mind. New options such as predictive maintenance and predictive MRP introduce intelligent technologies to SAP users, and SAP S/4HANA is Industry 4.0 compatible.
There are a number of benefits to moving to SAP S/4HANA for logistics. SAP has laid them out in maps, which we’ll discuss in the following sections.
The streamlined procure-to-pay value map helps businesses manage the procurement function more efficiently by leveraging the SAP S/4HANA central system and role-based functionality. The functionality available in this value map gives the business information to make more informed procurement decisions.
This value map includes operational purchasing, collaborative sourcing and contract management, inventory and basic warehouse management, invoice and payable management, supplier management, and procurement analytics. Let’s explore these further.
Operational purchasing includes the following functions:
Collaborative sourcing and contract management includes the following functions:
Inventory and basic warehouse management includes the following functions:
Invoice and payables management includes the following functions:
Supplier management includes the following functions:
Procurement analytics includes the following functions:
The accelerated plan-to-product value map includes all the functionality from product design to production assembly. It provides all the needed functionality to support all areas of the product lifecycle.
This value map includes project control and product development, production engineering, production planning, production operations, quality management, and maintenance management. Let’s explore these further.
Project control and product development includes the following functions:
Production engineering includes the following functions:
Production planning includes the following functions:
Production operations include the following functions:
Quality management includes the following functions:
Maintenance management includes the following functions:
The optimized order-to-cash value map allows for a streamlined process from quote management to customer delivery and payment. It allows for insights into real-time customer requirements and dashboarding, which provides fast response times to customer demands and more accurate and timely information.
This value map includes order and contract management and receivables processing. Let’s explore these further.
Order and contract management includes the following functions:
Receivables processing includes the following function:
The enhanced request-to-service targets the aftermarket sales and service business processes. It provides functionality for managing an installed base, aftermarket contracts, and internal service management business processes.
This value map includes service master data management, service management, service parts management, and service agreement management. Let’s explore these further. Service master data management includes the following functions:
Service management includes the following functions:
Service parts management includes the following functions:
Service agreement management includes the following functions:
Moving to SAP S/4HANA for logistics offers numerous advantages over the traditional SAP ERP system. Unlike the modular structure of SAP ERP, SAP S/4HANA consolidates logistics functionality into lines of business, streamlining processes and leveraging SAP HANA. With streamlined procure-to-pay processes, accelerated plan-to-product cycles, optimized order-to-cash workflows, and enhanced request-to-service capabilities, increased efficiency and better decision-making in logistics are only a migration away!