Hang on to your hat!
Last year I came into the end of a PeopleSoft implementation that was
underfunded, understaffed and completly misunderstood. Last year was hell, a
"typical" ERP disaster.
Some observatons:
- Whatever your hardware vendor of choice tells you your database server
should be for "sizing" double it. We're on our 3rd machine now (and it's
been upgraded) and it's finally almost fast enough. Compaq and HP are the
vendors I worked with and they both undersized the machine initially. HP was
closer, Compaq's PeopleSoft competency center has not a clue. However; like
anything else, a poorly written SQL statement can bury the server,
PeopleSoft has many poorly written statements.
- Plan on spending alot of time tuning SQL and adding indexes that actually
do something. The PeopleSoft application designer likes to add indexes, some
are very redundant and some never get used.
- It's imperative that the business properly model their process otherwise
you'll be attempting to put in kludgy workarounds to make up for a poor
implementation planning, causing more problems downstream.
- If you're the DBA attend the data management course given by PeopleSoft.
- Ensure that your test plans are well thought out and get good coverage.
- Phase it in, don't just flip the switch.
Good luck!
dave
"Douglas Scott" <dsscott_at_ev1.net> wrote in message
news:396A4DAC.5F11DEE0_at_ev1.net...
> My company is planning on implementing PeopleSoft Applications on top of
> an Oracle database and I was wondering if anyone has any comments about
> PeopleSoft good or bad? I've heard that a lot of companies that started
> with PeopleSoft have since changed to something else, any truth to these
> stories?
>
>
> Thanks,
> Douglas Scott
>
Received on Tue Jul 11 2000 - 00:00:00 CDT