Hi Ali,
ERP grew from MRP (Material Resource Planning which was a means of
planning and allocating resources in Factories. The difference between
the two is that MRP's were stand alone systems whereas ERP's are
modular and have more functionality. From an evolution perspective ,
it would be ideal to manage IFMIS from Ministry of Finance since they
are the custodians of the treasury and normally allocate resources
through the budgeting process. From a Project Management perspective,
it would be ideal to manage IFMIS from ICTA since it is the
specialized agency meant to manage government technology investments.
Regards
On 1/17/17, S.M. Muraya via kictanet <
kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
Doubt Treasury economists and accountants are well placed to provide Cyber
Security :)
We need the ICT Authority to configure enterprise wide data protection
(limiting theft of passwords & access to IFMIS).
In 2016, the UN ranked the UK as # 1 in providing digital services.
The Government Digital Service (GDS) is part of their Cabinet Office, not
their Treasury.
Their Treasury is consulted about the payment system 👆🏾 the GDS
continues to build.
SMM
*"Better a patient person than a warrior, one with self-control than one
who takes a city." Prov 16:32*
I fundamentally disagree with this assertion.
First,y, the role of a CIO is to support the enterprise. I have never
heard in my life of an ERP Director. This is just adding a superfluous
layer of useless bureaucracy.
The owner of an ERP is the business with each department taking ownership
of their components:-
1. Financials - CFO
2. CRM (Commercial/marketing/sales)
3. Procurement - Procurement which sometimes comes under Finance
Etc.
The CIO takes ownership to ensure that the company is well oiled to
execute on its mandate. This in my humble opinion goes beyond ERPs and
talks to aligning the Technology Strategy with the Business Strategy. For
example in the banking sector where increasingly the more savvy banks are
taking a 'Platform Thinking' approach. This allows partners to plug into
their core technology through APIs to enable them extend capabilities and
hence offerings to their customers.
The role of a CIO has fundamentally changed to speak to the need for
using
Technology as an accelerator to successful business models.
Secondly, I don't see how the ICT Authority would be better in managing
the monster that is IFMIS. Let them first learn the basics of
communicating
effectively with the community before taking on this elephant in the
room.
*Ali Hussein*
*Principal*
*Hussein & Associates*
+254 0713 601113
Twitter: @AliHKassim
Skype: abu-jomo
"We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act but a
habit." ~ Aristotle
Sent from my iPad
On 17 Jan 2017, at 6:42 PM, S.M. Muraya via kictanet <
Interesting comments...
ICT Authority, not Treasury, should oversee IFMIS
3520560-5j04aq/index.html
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