This is a corporate horror story right from
the bottom of my basket of tales. You have heard about how software companies
pay their employees so well and they have a gym and cafeteria – food for free -
in their office itself. Well, I have never had any of those amenities in the
companies I worked, hm, slaved rather. Hey, but the story here is different.
You will see how these companies can afford the abovementioned gyms and
cafeterias.
I was working then with the company sales
of which was around 2000 crores. A real biggie. The company was listed on the
stock exchange and had good projects in various parts of the country. Then the
chairman decided that we must computerise the whole operations as accounting
for all the projects was getting out of hand. So we had experts suggesting to
us whether we needed SAP or Microsoft. Microsoft was favoured because it was
cheap. The chairman agreed to give the contract to a company who would do the
development of an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system for the company.
Meanwhile the chairman also became friendly with the boss of the company doing
the ERP system. It was usual for the chairman to have breakfast and lunch with
the owner of the ERP company at his home.
I was in the ERP department to implement
their Sharepoint system, which is a software that linked all the knowledge resources
of the company, so that information was available to all when needed. The ERP
manager chosen was a retired army Colonel who knew next to nothing about ERP or
computers. The Colonel spent time chatting with his girlfriends on the computer
and we pretended to work.
So when the chairman was merrily having
breakfast with the ERP company boss, he assumed the Colonel was doing his job.
The chairman was also cheerfully signing the completion-related documents which
entitled the ERP company to claim their payments. Meanwhile the Colonel who
thought ERP was some sort of caper which they played in the united services
club went about addressing his staff in stentorian voice about duty and
responsibility. He didn’t know what was happening behind his back. He was
having long meetings with the ERP company in which he didn’t understand much of
what was said, but kept nodding his head.
The chairman signed the last of the phased
out payment cheques, a large cheque this time. The entire contract was paid out
without much being done. When it came to a demonstration, nothing worked,
because the basics of an enterprise resource planning system were not in place.
This made the chairman livid with rage. He raved and ranted at the Colonel, who
raved at his staff. The staff went home and raved at their poor wives. Crores
of rupees had gone down the drain already and then somebody in the staff
pointed out that the ERP company had never done any projects whatsoever because
it was recently set up by a disgruntled employee of another software company.
The ERP company got rich, Microsoft got
rich but the company I worked for was poorer by a few crores. Then the decision
was taken to implement SAP. I only know the story thus far because by that time
I had left.
1 comment:
Thanks for sharing such a fantastic line with us
Publish free ebooks
Post a Comment