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Custom systems integration
Business system integration:
Understanding and development of e-Business systems that compliment
the existing infrastructure of your business.
We rapidly design, develop, and deploy
systems that integrate into your existing system so that you
can experience the fastest return on your investment (ROI).
In order to take advantage of
the latest B2B,
B2C, B2E e-Business solutions, companies must be able to incorporate
them with their existing business systems. The challenge of
maintaining and understanding the ERP and older legacy systems
and integrate complex cutting edge e-Systems with them is
growing more and more difficult. ICIS has tremendous experience
and expertise in back-end integration with existing commercial
systems. All of our products and systems are developed with
an open architecture in order to facilitate a smooth, seamless
integration with backend databases and other processes and
systems.
Complementing Structures
At ICIS, we specialize in understanding
what you currently have and what it will take to put your
business at the level that you want...
A successful systems project involves integrating a new structure,
which anticipates future growth, with your current systems.
We have already achieved immense productivity and efficiency
in our clients' business processing by accomplishing on-line
real time integration with distributors and ERP systems that
form the backbone of their core processing model. Our applications
are designed to operate on a wide range of platforms and to
integrate with a variety of systems that you may possess.
With the expertise needed for a project, AllofE mobilizes
resources resulting in shorter time lines and higher quality
products. Our consultants and engineers have the experience
to create a custom solution that will capture where your company
strives to be.
ERP - Overview - Enterprise Resource
Planning
You can't turn around in the field of
IT today without tripping over "ERP." Enterprise
Resource Planning has been around long enough to have expired
as a fad and become a reality that looms over everything,
from the job market to the major software packages to most
of the training available to you. There's no getting away
from it.
The problem is, everybody slaps the initials
"ERP" on to almost everything, till it's hard to
sort out where it really applies. And even a concise definition
of ERP has broad implications. What's needed for developers
is a perspective that strips away the non-essentials and provides
some tactical direction.
Put simply, Enterprise Resource Planning
refers to the integration and extension of a business's operational
IT systems, with the end goals of making information flow
within (and beyond) a company more immediate and dynamic;
increasing the usefulness and shelf life of information; eliminating
redundancy and automating routine processes; and making information
system components more flexible. Departmental boundaries generally
become softer, accessibility of data is increased for partner
companies and customers, and the company's ability to respond
to the marketplace is generally enhanced.
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