Archive for April, 2012

Corporate Perfomance Management needs Focus

April 2nd, 2012

Do you or your organization suffer from a lack of focus during your planning, budgeting, forecasting and reporting exercises?

  • Spending execessive  time collecting and organizing data than analysing the data
  • Managing and collating  different budget revisions across multiple cost centres
  • Manually converting exchange rates, and aggregating data
  • Expediting late submissions
  • Budgeting/forecasting at an inappropriate level of detail, effectively drawing our focus from key business drivers that should receive more relative focus and giving equal weight to administrative expenses
  • Routinely generating, reviewing and analyzing a standard set of reports, as opposed to interacting with the data and performing ‘ad-hoc analysis’ on key areas and variances
  • Would you like to :

  • Enable key business users to create personalized reports and conduct analysis without IT involvement
  • Automaticlaly compute kpis
  • Present senior managment with drill down dashboards to compare budget forecast and actual data for any time periads,  at at any level
  • Automatically publish and distribute your report pack
  • Implement workflow controls for budget submissions approvals and changes
  •  Receive alert notifcations of exception conditions or pending approvals
  • Free IT resources to focus on other tasks
  • Improve organizational decision making
  • Increase responce time to changes in the business environment
  • Improve allocation of resources
  • Reduce organizational risk
  • Improve organizational results
  • Ask about Prophix Corporate Performance Management Combine operational models that link key business drivers with your financial budgets provide the following results:

    • Significantly shorter budget/forecast cycles
    • Facilitates market environment vs. calendar driven re-forecasting to react to quickly to changes
    • Re-aligns financial planning focus
    • Facilitates insight between operational tactics and the financial forecast
    • Facilitates variance analysis at the operational and key driver level
    • Shifts professional resource time from collecting data and maintaining spreadsheets to analysis and decision making

    Please browse this autodemo for an overview of Prophix CPM, a solution that can facilitate sophisticated operational modelling http://www.prophix.com/common/php/forms/contact.php?tag=autodemo-bdo-blog

    Also consider  Dundas Dashboards  for rich data visualisation of your data to focus senior mangement’s attention on what really matters with intuitive presentation of data.

    Let Synergy Software Systems show you how these  solutions provide  enhanced Corporate Perfomance Management

    Microsoft Dynamics GP Enterprise Reporting – Replacement?

    April 2nd, 2012

    The Micorost Dynamics Corporate Perfomance blog recently commented :

    If your organization is affected by the discontinuation of Microsoft Dynamics GP Enterprise Reporting, you should review and consider the following replacement solutions:

    Synergy Software Systems  offers expert services for both solutions!

    Management Reporter 2012 – Ax, GP, NAV – expert training

    April 2nd, 2012

    Microsoft has delivered on all the enhancements it promised last year in Management Reporter 2012 e.g.

  • MR 2012 now integrates with all Dynamics ERPs (i.e. NAV has been added)
  • Drill-back to Dynamics ERP
  • Comments
  • Multiple-destination distribution flexibility
  • SharePoint integration
  • Scheduling
  • Missing Account Analysis
  • If you are a Dynamics user of Ax, GP or NAV then ask about our expert training courses for Management Reporter

    Dubai population crosses 2 million

    April 2nd, 2012

    According to the Dubai Statistics Centre, in December 2011 the number of people living in Dubai hit 2.003m.The Dubai Statistics Centre said that the population was skewed towards men because expatriate male workers were not always joined by their families while living there., The highest number of people in Dubai at any one time was 3.023m, which includes both tourists and people who live outside the emirate but commute to work there.

    April fool’s day in Dubai.

    April 1st, 2012

    My award for best Dubai April Fool’s day  news:

    At the beginning of 2011, Dubai‘s most notorious man-made islands, a.k.a. The World, made a splash with news that they were slowly but surely sinking into the sea. Now, in a bizarre twist of events that even had us surprised (and trust us, we thought we’d seen it all when it comes to The World), Google has announced that it purchased the troubled archipelago and will be reconfiguring it to form the shape of the Google logo. While we’ve seen the search engine giant dabble in everything from green energy to self-driving cars, this is the first we’ve heard of them making their way into island real estate. Once complete, the Google-shaped landmasses will be self-sustaining floating cities, and the company reports that it plans to retain a portion of the development for its own private use and sell the rest off to the highest bidders.

    The Google Islands will be equipped with photovoltaic panels and wind turbines in order to sustain day to day life, and engineers are also considering tidal power. While The World had major problems staying above water, Google says that it’s employed top engineers to assess the damage that the man-made islands have sustained and reinforce them so that they will be secure once each island is moved into place.

    According to Google reps, five of the islands that make up the big “G” in Google will serve as the company’s headquarters in Dubai, as well as a private resort for its employees. Reported potential bidders on the remaining islands include Leonardo DiCaprio (who had already reserved part of The World) and Cameron Diaz.

    google, google islands, google shaped islands, floating city, dubai, dubai islands, Google Starts Construction on Google Shaped Islands in Dubai, april fools, inhabitat april fools

    http://inhabitat.com/author/yuka/

    Legend has it that the New Year in France always began on April 1.  As King Charles IX of France discovered in traveling his kingdom, the date of the New Year varied depending on the diocese. For example, the New Year began at Christmas in Lyon and on March 25 at Vienne, or on March 1, or at Easter. With the Edict of Roussillon, issued in 1564, it was decreed that the New Year would henceforth begin on January 1.

    . The French April Fool’s Day holiday dates back to 1564 and King Charles’ edict. It’s said that French subjects who didn’t appreciate the January 1 date continued to celebrate around April 1. Other people who adapted to the new date made fun of the April 1st followers, using the occasions to play tricks on them and giving the April 1st followers false gifts. In this way, the tradition of the fish (“poisson d’avril,” or “April fish”) began. The day of fools also has been interpreted as meaning “the day for those who don’t accept reality or who see things differently.” Which is probably why you’re reading this blogsite!

    Cybercrime fight back

    April 1st, 2012

    Microsoft  and several partners disrupted several cybercrime rings that used a notorious piece of malicious software called Zeus to steal $100 million over the last five years. A consolidated legal case has been filed against those allegedly responsible uisng the  Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.

    Zeus has disrruopted financial institutions with  stealthy advanced spying capabilities to steal online banking and e-commerce credentials for fraud. Microsoft accused the defendants of infecting more than 13 million computers and stealing more than $100 million over the last five years.

    Microsoft has gone to court before to gain permission to take control over domain names associated with the command-and-control infrastructure of botnets like Kelihos, Rustock, and Waledac .

    Nonehtelss attackes persists. Today Gulf News reported that the US Secret Service is investigating a major cyber intrusion at an Atlanta-based payment processor that could expose millions of MasterCard, Visa, American Express and Discover cardholders to fraudulent charges  along with banks and other franchises that issue cards bearing their logos. Individual banks and processors said they had not yet determined the full extent of the breach, but the blog Krebs on Security, which first reported the breach, said it was “massive” and could affect more than 10 million cardholders