African enterprises are excelling in their efforts to establish Intelligent Enterprise capabilities and take advantage of the immense opportunities of the Fourth Industrial Revolution. This was one of the key outcomes at the 2019 SAP Quality Awards, which were held in Johannesburg on Wednesday evening, and which recognised some of Africa’s most innovative public and private sector SAP customers.
According to a release by African Media Agency, AMA, made available to OpenLife, Nazia Pillay, Head of Active Quality Management for Africa at SAP Africa said, this year’s nominees represented one of the strongest fields yet in the awards’ 15-year history. “All entries underwent stringent assessment and were judged according to our ten principles of quality. The high standards on display point to a bright future for technology-driven organisations operating in Africa.”
The SAP Quality Awards were established in 2005
as a means of recognising companies that have excelled in their use of SAP
technologies to achieve digital transformation against a number of key metrics.
This year, a total of 19 organisations from West, East and Southern Africa were
recognised for their outstanding results across a number of successful
implementations.
SAP has supported thousands of innovative African enterprises since its first
office on the continent was established in Johannesburg in 1982. Today, the
company works with more than 1800 customers across Africa, collaborating with
500 partners in 20 countries to help local enterprises, governments, SMEs and
NGOs build Intelligent Enterprise capabilities and claim the benefits of the
21st century digital economy.
“This year, we added a new category for outstanding projects using SAP
SuccessFactors to recognise African enterprises’ efforts in the on-going global
talent war,” said Pillay. “Judging by the quality of submissions in
the new category, African enterprises are making great strides toward
attracting and retaining the continent’s growing talent pool, one that is
expected to be the world’s largest in the coming decades.”
Overall winners at this year’s awards include Ugandan electricity distributor
Umeme, which walked away with Gold in the Fast Delivery category; Standard Bank
South Africa, which took Gold in the Business Transformation category; the City
of Cape Town, which took top honours for Innovation; and Discovery Group, which
claimed Gold in the newly-introduced SuccessFactors category.
Roger Bentley, CIO at Umeme, said: “This
was a business project, not an IT project, and it has supported the business by
introducing completely new functionality. This project was such a success that,
for our next phase, we will simply try to repeat the success of this first
phase.”
Kammy Sing, Head of HR Operations at Discovery Group, said the implementation
team worked seamlessly with the Discovery team. “Most importantly, they
understood what our end-goal was: to build the best people capabilities by
combining data, skills and technology to attract and retain the best
talent.”
Dawn Msibi, Manager: ERP Support Centre at the City of Cape Town said:
“Well done to the implementation team, who integrated the value of our
assets, the cost of work done and the scheduling of the work to create a single
view that has empowered the City of Cape Town to improve service delivery to
its citizens.”
Karuna Kuni, SAP Platform Manager at Standard Bank, said: “Together with
our partners including SAP, we took on a big undertaking with this project.
Without their help and support, and that of our executive sponsors, we would
not have been able to achieve this success in such a short space of time.”
Pillay adds: “What set these projects apart was the extent of business
value achieved through each implementation, their time to value, how well they
employed change management throughout and to what extent the implementations
have achieved business readiness. The fact that we’ve nearly doubled our
winners’ list compared to last year only reasserts the level of quality
inherent in this year’s group of nominees.”
According to Cathy Smith, Managing Director at
SAP Africa, the quality of entries points to a bright future for Africa’s
public and private sectors. “The Fourth Industrial Revolution will create
enormous opportunity – at the same time it brings immense challenges.
Encouragingly, African public and private sector leaders are taking up the
challenge and are deploying technology in innovative and ground-breaking ways
to solve problems and future-proof their business strategies. We look forward
to continuing our close collaboration with customers and partners in the years
ahead.”
The winners
Fast Delivery:
* Umeme Limited (Gold)
* MWEB (Silver)
* Dangote (Silver)
* Mukwano (Bronze)
* Builders Warehouse (Finalist)
Business Transformation:
* Standard Bank SA Limited (Gold)
* RCL Foods (Silver)
* Rossing Uranium Limited (Bronze)
* Britehouse (Finalist)
* Delta State (Finalist)
* Rural Electrification Authority (Finalist)
Innovation:
* City of Cape Town (Gold)
* The Royal Swaziland Sugar Corporation (Silver)
* Sodiam (Bronze)
* KCB Group (Finalist)
SuccessFactors (new):
* Discovery Group (Gold)
* AECI (Silver)
* Liberty Group (Bronze)
* PG Group (Finalist)