Phone books, paper maps, and pagers feel like antiquated relics of the past. Some executives think enterprise resource planning (ERP) software may soon join that list. More than one-third (36%) of C-suite executives believe the current traditional ERP model will soon become obsolete “in favor of a composable, modular, flexible, API-driven, best-of-breed model,” according to a recent Rimini Street report. Almost the same percentage (33%) replied that they believe the traditional ERP model will evolve with an agentic makeover in the future, while 3 in 10 said the current model will receive “incremental enhancements.” The findings are based on a Censuswide survey of 4,295 global C-suite executives. What exactly is ERP 2.0? IT Brew caught up with Eric Kimberling, CEO and founder of Third Stage Consulting Group, to understand how ERP models may evolve. Historically, he said, the ERP model was a single system that “pulled together” a company’s entire operations; however, this once-critical software may begin playing a smaller role. So, what exactly does ERP 2.0 look like?—BM |