One thing that really annoys me even within my own usergroup
is the definition of membership. Yes Fujitsu is a partner or SI. We do make
money from providing products and services complimentary to those of Oracle,
but we are also a customer of Oracle. In the UK alone we have hardware, linux,
virtualization, databases galore, middleware and apps to run our business which
is to Design, Build and Run ICT systems.
So I was delighted to be asked by Fujitsu to speak at the
Oracle Customer Showcase in Tokyo on our use of Hyperion Financial Manager, a
single global instance we run from the UK to manage and consulate all Fujitsu
Entities at regional and Group levels.
The event was held in a major hotel, accessed by a 7 minute
walk from the subway (I love the Tokyo subway) and there was no mistaking what
event was taking place.
My schedule was hectic and I arrived at the venue just one hour before my session to meet with the interpreter and left straight after.
My schedule was hectic and I arrived at the venue just one hour before my session to meet with the interpreter and left straight after.
The extract for my session was
Fujitsu has successfully
used Hyperion throughout its global operations for many years but in 2007
decided to consolidate to a single instance of HFM to give them faster month
end accounting, local statutory reporting and a sound basis for ever increasing
regulation.
This is the story of
why and how they moved from 23 disparate Enterprise installations with 350 users to the model
they use today, and the benefits it gives them.
The presentation was not simulations translated but the
slides were in Japanese. So I stood at the lectern using a clicker with my
right hand to move on the slides, with my Fujitsu tablet in my
left hand showing the slides in both languages, so I knew what they were
looking at and what I was meant to be saying. Japanese uses more words so for
the 35 minute presentation I spoke in total for around 14 minutes, not long for
me and a lot to share. We then had a question time and they were good questions
which always tells me as the presenter how well the audience has engaged.
I know users love user stories and this was one of ours. A
special thanks to the Hyperion and accounting teams in Baker Street for their
help in teaching me what they do everyday and to my Belfast colleague Stephen
Sharkie for his alleged translation skills :-)
2 comments:
Hmm...."23 desperate Enterprise Installations" or disparate?
(Perhaps both? :-))
yes both (now amended :) )
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