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Is the PLM Ecosystem Ready for PLM? Razorleaf Is

Jim Brown - July 24, 2009

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I had the chance to talk with … Razorleaf during a research project earlier this year. Razorleaf helps manufacturers leverage PLM, Design Automation, and other enterprise technologies to improve product development and engineering processes. Razorleaf LogoDuring the conversation, it was clear that they really understand how enterprise technology can be applied in an engineering environment. They are ready to step in and deliver the enterprise services required to implement PLM. But how much of the “PLM” ecosystem is really ready and capable to implement PLM? In my experience, too few.

What Razorleaf Does

Talking to the people at Razorleaf, I recognized the approach and skillset they use to implement engineering solutions. Yes, they know the products. But they also know how to help companies transform their processes, change their business, align their organization, and all of the other lessons learned from implementing systems like ERP and supply chain management. I recognize these in part from my research, and in part from spending a number of years with Andersen Consulting (now Accenture) implementing enterprise applications. These solutions require more thoughtful implementations than engineering tools, because improving the productivity of an individual is not enough. They have to improve the way the overall business works together. Not an easy task, but that is where the value comes in. This is what Razorleaf does.

How Razorleaf Fits in the PLM Ecosystem

Why did it strike me that they had this knowledge? Because too few resellers in the engineering software market have these skills. What comforted me, though, was that it is exactly those resellers that call on Razorleaf to help their clients. The good news is that the resellers know – or maybe it is their manufacturing customers – that there is more to a PLM implementation. This is likely the reason that other companies such as Kalypso (an innovation consultant with strong enterprise and PLM skills) is on the scene at so many PLM implementations. I find frequently that companies like these are pulled into implementations early on to help augment the skills of the software resellers (and even the vendors themselves).  It also helps explain the importance of a resseler like NovaQuest (a Dassault Systemes reseller with significant PLM experience)

Impliciations for Manufacturers

Why is this important to the manufacturing community?  If you are implementing PLM, make sure that those doing the implementation understand the different between implementing software tools (CAD, CAM, CAE, etc.) and enterprise applications like PLM. It can be the difference between a technically successful implementation that provides little or no business value (what I like to call a failure) and improving your business performance through the use of PLM technology.

So that’s what I hear from Razorleaf (with some additional perspective thrown in, I think it might be as much “What I Learned” as “One-to-One this time). I hope you found it useful. What do you think? What else should I have asked them?

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Filed Under: One-to-One, What I Learned Tagged With: Kalypso, Enterprise Application, Razorleaf, PLM, CAD, Dassault Systemes, Implementation, NovaQuest, Engineering

Comments

  1. Oleg Shilovitsky says

    July 24, 2009 at 12:25 pm

    Jim, Your question is probably – do we have enough PLM consulting companies to form PLM-service-eco-system? Razorleaf is definitely in the top part of the list. Regards, Oleg

  2. Jim Brown says

    July 24, 2009 at 12:34 pm

    Thank you Oleg,
    I think we have enough companies, but do they have the right people and the right skills? Maybe the question is “do we have the right mix of skills in the ecosystem?” I have met a number of resellers that are extremely competent at implementing design tools, but just don’t have the experience with business-oriented, enterprise systems. What is interesting to me is to see those companies pull in expertise from the companies that have the enterprise systems skillset. The key point I want to make to the manufacturers is that even though their reseller may be excellent at implementing design tools, make sure to check on their PLM credentials to ensure you get the full value out of PLM.
    Best,
    Jim

  3. Jonathan Scott says

    July 24, 2009 at 3:42 pm

    Jim, I couldn’t have expressed Razorleaf’s value any better if I tried. We aim for exactly what you said – helping clients get the full value out of PLM by focusing on the overall business processes, not just the technical implementation. Thank you, and thanks Oleg, for the kind words, and for expressing a viewpoint that I find is far too rare among PLM shoppers today. And while I’m thanking people, thanks to our partners that recognize Razorleaf’s unique value in this space and continue to introduce us to their customers.

    Jonathan

Trackbacks

  1. Why is Implementing PLM Hard? | Clarity on PLM says:
    July 27, 2009 at 11:47 am

    […] effort, not a software install. This is what I wrote about in my post last week about the PLM ecosystem being ready to implement PLM. Manufacturers can’t lose sight of the importance of business processes and people in their […]

  2. PLM and Profitability » Blog Archive » What I Learned: Why is Implementing PLM Hard? says:
    July 27, 2009 at 11:53 am

    […] effort, not a software install. This is what I wrote about in my post last week about the PLM ecosystem being ready to implement PLM. Manufacturers can’t lose sight of the importance of business processes and people in their […]

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