Transcript Slide 1

10 Years of Successes and
Experiences with SAP at PSEG
Stephen Roche
Public Service Enterprise Group
© 2008 Eventure Events. All rights reserved.
PSEG – Corporate Overview
• Public Service Enterprise Group is a
publicly traded energy and energy services
company:
– PSEG Energy Holding
– PSEG Power
– PSEG Services Corporation
– PSE&G (Public Service Electric and Gas)
• Total assets: $28.9- billion
• Total revenues: $12.2 billion
• Ranked 178 on Fortune 500
• Ranked 249 on Forbes 400 Best Big
Companies
• Employs nearly 10,000 people – 98% in
New Jersey
PSEG – Corporate Overview
Traditional T&D
Regional
Wholesale Energy
Domestic/Int’l
Energy
2008E Operating Earnings: $1,420M - $1,560M
Assets (as of 9/30/07): $28.9B
Market Capitalization (as of 2/6/08): $23.6B
Leveraged
Leases
PSEG Operating Companies
Public Service Enterprise Group (PSEG) is a publicly traded (NYSE:PEG), growing energy and energy services
company headquartered in New Jersey. Its main subsidiaries are: PSEG Power LLC, Public Service Electric and Gas
Company (PSE&G) and PSEG Energy Holdings LLC
• Total assets: $29.8 billion
• Total revenues: $12.4 billion
• Employees: 10,500
In 2003, PSEG celebrated its 100th anniversary. PSEG has paid a dividend annually since 1907
PSEG is ranked 199 on the 2005 Fortune 500 list
Public Service Electric and Gas
Company
• Electric customers: 2.1 million
• Gas customers: 1.7 million
• Service Territory: 2,600 sq. mi.
• Other products and services: appliance
repair business, relocation assistance
programs, and energy conservation
programs
• Received the prestigious ReliabilityOne
award for superior electric system
reliability in mid-Atlantic region
PSEG Power LLC
PSEG Energy Holdings
• Owned Capacity: more than
14,636 MW
• PSEG Global operates 25
generation plants primarily in
North and South America
• Percent of PJM capacity:
about 20%
• An integrated regional electric
trading floor
• Total assets: more than $7.0
billion
• Total Megawatts (MW) in
operation: 3,000 MW net
ownership
• Total service area of distribution
companies: 155,000 square miles
PSE&G Delivery Territory
New Jersey
Public Service Electric and Gas Company is
NJ’s oldest & largest regulated electric &
gas delivery utility:
•Traditional transmission and distribution utility
N
W
•150,000 miles of wire
E
S
•33,000 miles of pipe
•2,600 sq miles of service territory
STATEN
ISLAND
• 3.6 million customers
•2.1M electric customers
•1.7M gas customers
•2,600 sq miles in service territory (300
communities)
KEY:
COMBINED ELECTRIC & GAS TERRITORIES
ELECTRIC TERRITORY
•$7.6B in revenues
•6,100 employees
•Four major unions
•24/7 operation
GAS TERRITORY
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10 ml
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PSEG Power – Generating Assets
MW Capacity
NEW YORK
EASTERN
INTERFACE
Albany
CONNECTICUT
<100 MW
100 - 500 MW
500 - 1,000 MW
Yards Creek
Keystone
> 1,000 MW
PENNSYLVANIA
Conemaugh
Peach Bottom
Mercer
Burlington
National Park
Bergen
Salem
MARYLAND
Hope Creek
Kearny
Essex
Hudson
Bayonne
Linden
Sewaren
WEST VIRGINIA
VIRGINIA
DELAWARE
PJM West
EASTERN
INTERFACE
Edison
PJM
The bulk of PSEG Power’s generation fleet is positioned to serve the most populated
markets during times of transmission constraints
PSEG Power – Diversity and Scale
13,751 MW Operating Portfolio
Fuel Diversity
(MWs)
Market Segments
(MWs)
Nuclear
41 %
Nuclear
Baseload
Oil
14 %
Energy Produced
(GWhrs)
Peaking
25 %
18 %
Pumped
Storage
2%
57 %
22 %
35 %
12 %
43 %
Gas
Coal
Gas & Oil
Pumped
Storage
1%
30 %
Coal
Load Following
The majority of Power’s output is from low-cost nuclear
and coal assets
Recent Events, Awards and Records
PSE&G
 2006 Reliability One Award- PSE&G named America’s most reliable electric
utility for the second year in a row
 Best Electric Reliability Mid-Atlantic Region - 2001-2007
 Best Electric Reliability in the Nation - 2005 and 2006
 BSC Hall of Fame Award - 2007
Power
 2006 INPO CEO Conference- Most Improved Nuclear Plants Award
 2005 World Record –Refueling Outage with Reactor Head Replacement
Duration 25 days
 2006 Salem Unit 2 Best Ever Outage Duration 21 days
Corporate SAP Initiatives
• Phase 1 – Enterprise (PS, FICO) Completed 1/97
• Phase 2 – Fossil Generation WM (PM) – Completed 1/98
• Phase 3 – HR, MM – Completed 1/99
– Nuclear Work Mgt. – Completed 6/99
• Phase 4 – Transmission/Distribution Work Management
(PSE&G)
– Electric and Gas Transmission and Fleet – Completed 12/99
– Electric Distribution - Completed 9/02
– Gas Distribution – Completed 3/03
• Phase 5 – Portal, SEM, BW (yyyy)
• Phase 6 – GRC, xRPM, SSM, BPC
PSEG SAP Business Integration Journey
SAP-COE
Business Integration Team
1996
1997
CIO – PSEG, Services Company
CFO - PSEG
COO - PSEG
1998
1999
Enterprise
Design
2000
SAP Program Mgmt
2001
Albany
Plant
Fossil Work
Management
2002
2003
Mid-West
Plants
2005
2006
2007
2008
Landscape on hold
due to
pending
Merger
Connecticut
Plants
Corporate Business
Processes
2004
CPI
(SEM)
HR
Decoupled
Nuclear Work
Management
Utility CIS,
CRM,
Portal/UCES,
MAM/MAU
Utility Delivery WM
Utility Inside Plant
Quarterly Released-Based Management Program
ERP / ERM 3.1h
EAM 3.1h
EAM 4.6 c
ERP 4.6b
Legend
Exec
Sponsor
Support Org
ERP/EAM
ERP
EAM ECC 6.0
ERP 4.7
ERP ECC 6.0
EP 6.0, SEM 3.2, BW 3.01b
EP,BI 7.0
EAM
Go Live
How we “Run” our systems
• Organizational Design
• Production Support Methodology
• Landscape and Transport Management
• Product Management Process
Organizing IT for Results
VP IT / CIO
Operational
Excellence
Architecture,
Engineering,
and
Compliance
Manage
Infrastructure
and
Operations
Business
Solutions
Enabling
Technologies
Run
Improve
Enable
• Business
Needs and
Strategies
• SAP COE
• Product Pricing
• Strategy
• Hosting
• Product Billing
• LCP’s
• Production
Support
• BI CC
• Integration /
Portal CC
What ??
How !
Organizational – Learning’s
• Best practice to have Business led implementations, but with IT
participation
• The IT support and development resources need to learn on the
implementation
• Seamless handover between project and support org is
essential….formal knowledge transfer
• Keep the momentum that the project created in order to drive
increased usage in the long run, you cannot just go on to the next
project
• Be clear and concise or resource roles between the business, IT,
and vendors.
• If accountabilities for ongoing management are not in one
organization, you still need single point of oversight and
accountability to ensure tactical and strategic are balanced
Who do you want to be, an order taker, or a enabler of the future?
Production Support – Learning’s
• Outsourcing both Hosting and Production Support has reduced our
TCO
• Do not outsource your core skills (Business Process Knowledge)
• SLA’s are key to a successful outsourcing
• Manage outsourced resource turnover
• Manage escalation from outsourced vendor to your internal staff
(clear roles and accountabilities)
• Manage and understand impact of application scale-out and
additions upon your TCO
• Manage “Changes” slipped in as “broke fix” to keep your cost low
• Mine the help desk inventory for higher level process training
opportunities
• Ensure your COE knows what your users are doing / not doing
Size for the core basics, outsource the peaks in the demand!
Landscape and Transport Management
• As you add more current technology the more complex the
landscape will get.
– 14 three tier systems (Enterprise ,HR, BW, SEM, EP (2), xRPM,
GRC, XI (2), SSM, BPC, CRM, MI
– Do not underestimate the level of effort to keep in sync and at
compatible support pack levels
– Moving to HA and 12 hr DR for core systems
• We use a dedicated landscape management team including
transport oversight
• Beginning use of Solution Manger and the “CHARM” process for
seamless transport approval and processing
• Routine schedule system maintenance window, max 8hr month.
– Annually published schedule
– key business stakeholder approval process for off normal
shutdowns
Stay Connected
Landscape and Transport Mgmt - Learnings
• Monday Production Meeting (Hosting, Prod Support, COE)
• Routine weekly transports
– Normal, Wednesday afternoon
– Quiet Period, Friday afternoon
– Emergencies as needed (minimize)
• Weekly integrated landscape management meeting
– 12 week landscape look ahead
– Spare / Sandbox instance request management
– Development / Project status and landscape needs
• Pre-approved transport “types” that do not require full integration
review
• Integrated Development / Broke Fix “Configuration Start” approval
process
• Continuous Improvement Process utilizing SAP Quality Notifications
Be relentless and consistent….Do not compromise the process
Product Management Process
• It is a balancing act to attain and maintain the lowest level
TCO, while deploying new technologies / assets
• While budgeting is done is separate towers, OPS, Engr,
COE…..COE maintains overall cost picture
• Product costs include
– Annual maintenance fees
– Hosting and Production Support outsourcing fees
– Internal labor billed to the product
– Depreciation and interest for Capital Product improvements
• Billed to operating companies and Service Corp Practice
areas using weighted average of HR Headcount and User
ID Count
• Allocation includes application / Module usage
In order to keep costs low, you need to know all your costs!
Improving the applications and Enabling
Further Business Process Performance
• Governance Model
• Architectural Strategies and Life Cycle Plans
• Development Process
• Foundational and Transformation Projects
• New Technology Introductions
• Reporting and Analytics
Governance Process
Decisions, based on business value, controlled by business leaders, will
provide the foundation for sound investment decisions.
Decision Model
IT Capital Investment
Plan
LOB IT Capital
Investments
LOB
Governance
Councils
Investment Prioritization
& Value Realization
Decide how much and where to
invest and how to validate results
Business-IT Principles
Describe role of IT and business
uses of IT
Investment Funding,
Pricing & Cost Recovery
Investment Funding,
Pricing & Cost Recovery
Align information, technologies and
IT services to business processes;
optimize performances and capture
synergies
Investment Prioritization
& Value Realization
Describe the approach for securing
and expanding the enterprise
foundation
CIO
How
• IT Strategy & Roadmap
• IT Service Offerings
Investments to run, improve or enable the business
Program
Management
Strategy
Decide how to fund investments,
price services & recover their
charges
IT Supply Management
What
Capital Review
Committee
IT Demand Management
IT Governance Model
Life
Cycle
Planning
Enterprise
Architecture
Business-IT Principles
Deploy the IT resource for
supporting IT strategy
Business-IT governance involves six major decision types, divided
across two high-level decision domains. Demand decisions are based
on strategic business value while Supply decisions are guided by IT
strategy and architecture that enables developing solutions the “Right
Way”
Separate the what from the how !
Governance Process- Initiative Planning
Technology Councils
Supply Chain
Finance
HR
Utility
Utility - Customer
Power
New Initiative
Client Plan
Engage
Tech.
Council
Tech. Council
Review
Technology
Governance
Approval
Schedule
and budget
identified
Governance Process- Technology Council
Responsibilities:
SCM Technology Council
Virtual IT Team
SPONSOR
• Provides, at a high level,
resources, and overall
sponsorship and direction for
Technology initiatives.
Dir, Enabling
Technologies
VP, SCM
Business Partner
Tier 1 – Steering Committee (Supply Lead Team)
• Provides resources, and overall
sponsorship and direction for
Technology initiatives.
• Approve SCM Technology
Strategic Plan.
• Develop and maintain
SCM Technology Strategic
Plan and prioritize
business requirements that
support the Business
Outcome Model/
Roadmap.
• Prioritize Technology
enhancement requests.
• Provide detailed business
requirements and support
testing for technology
enhancements, day-to-day
pain points and break-fix
issues.
Dir, Delivery
Sourcing
Dir, Fossil
Sourcing
Dir, Nuclear
Sourcing
Dir, Strategic
Sourcing
Mgr, Supply
Excellence
Dir, SAP
COE
Nuclear
Strategic
Sourcing
Excellence
IT Team
Lead
Strategic
Sourcing
Excellence
IT – SCM
Mgr
Integration
COE
Mgr Data &
Business
Intelligence
Tier 2 – Technology Lead Team
Delivery
Fossil
IT Team
Lead
IT Team
Lead
Tier 3 – Subject Matter Experts/ Business Input
Delivery
Fossil
Nuclear
Non-SCM personnel
Round them up routinely!
IT –
Integration
Team
IT – Data &
BI Team
Architectural Strategies and Life Cycle Plans
• Domain based 5 year LCP’s for core systems
• Include support pack, HW and Software upgrade
plans
• Form the basis of the 5 year product price plan
from an architectural perspective
• Revised annually to reflect changes in and
integrate with:
– Changes in business direction, goals, and needs
– Changes in developing, emerging, and maturing
technologies
Development Process
• Bundle enhancements (<$100k) into Quarterly releases.
Presently on FR26
– Allows for gating of requirements, prioritization, and realization 4
times a year
– Multiple go live windows during quarter
– Leverages integrated testing
– Facilitates integration of support packs and system maintenance
needs
– Levels work load
• 4th Quarter SOX applications / controls freeze
• Limit transports / configuration changes (soft freeze) during
critical business periods (Nuclear Plant Refueling Outage)
• Rigorous development and production acceptance process
• KPI’s for “Right Work”, “Right Way”, and “Right Results”
Focus on the value provided beyond the original request
Foundational and Transformation Projects
• Utilize discovery period prior to formal project start
to reduce risk and identify unanticipated basis /
hardware needs
• If you have an older 3.x based security design,
pay attention, test everything and be prepared for
impact
• Avoid bundling work, split out (early) as much as
possible to control the risk
– Gui upgrades
– DB upgrades (Oracle)
– HW upgrades
Break the effort into manageable pieces!
New Technology Introductions
• Research and understand emerging technologies
– Understand SAP’s on-boarding plan for newly acquired assets
– Leverage your existing licensed applications when purchasing the
targeted replacement platform with SAP
– Do you want to be an early adopter / ramp-up customer or do you
wait until the kinks are worked out
• Be willing to us niche vendors to accelerate your
implementation and knowledge transfer to your internal
resources and support vendors
• Be careful not to oversell what you can deliver to your
customers until you really know exactly how the application
works. Make sure the business requirement are CLEAR!
• Will require additional PM oversight to ensure success
No pain, no gain….but be careful !
Reporting and Analytics
• Determine what you client wants and give them
what they need….
– Do they want a data mart to write their own reports?
– Are there reports mature or dynamic?
– Or do they want to automate what is routine to them?
• Limit your toolset to keep development and
support costs low
• If you build it they will come….does not work!
• Better user tools coming onboard …. BO, etc
allows usability beyond BEX
• BW/BI requires significant attention / intefacing
with the ultimate end user to be successful
Listen, Listen, Listen………………..then start !
Summary & Questions
Who do you want to be, an order taker, or a enabler of the future?
Size for the core basics, outsource the peaks in the demand!
Be relentless and consistent….Do not compromise the process
In order to keep costs low, you need to know all your costs!
Separate the what from the how !
Round them up routinely!
Focus on the value provided beyond the original request
Break the effort into manageable pieces!
No pain, no gain….but be careful !
Listen, Listen, Listen………………..then start !
Stephen Roche
Public Service Enterprise Group
© 2008 Eventure Events. All rights reserved.