The below example explains a few of the important terms and concepts
used in the Oracle E-Business Suite. This would be a good starting point for
the beginners to better understand the concepts behind Oracle
Applications.
Say Vinoth is the owner of a wholesale fruit shop. He buys various
fruits like apples, oranges, mangos and grapes etc from farmers directly and
sells them to retail shop owners and also to the direct customers.
The farmers are referred to as VENDORS/SUPPLIERS in Oracle
Applications. Vinoth keeps track of all his vendors’ information
like addresses, bank account and the amount he owes to them for the fruits
that he bought etc, in a book named PAYABLES.
Vinoth gets an order from a retail shop owner of Fruit Mart, for a
shipment of 11 bags of apples, 25 bags of oranges and 32 kgs of grapes. In
Oracle Apps, bags and kgs are referred to as UOM (unit of measure),
Fruit Mart is called CUSTOMER and the order is referred to as SALES
ORDER. Vinoth maintains a book called ORDER MANAGEMENT where he writes down all the details of
the SALES ORDERS that he gets from his customers.
Vinoth will raise a PURCHASE ORDER to
his VENDORS/SUPPLIERS for purchasing fruits which is referred to as PURCHASING
in Oracle Applications.
Say the fruits have been shipped to the customer Fruit Mart. Vinoth now
sends him the details like cost of each bag/fruit, the total amount that the
customer has to pay etc on a piece of paper which is called INVOICE /
TRANSACTION. Once the INVOICE has been sent over, the customer then
validates this against the actual quantity of fruits that he received and will
process the payments accordingly. The invoice amount could be paid as a single
amount or could be paid in installments. Vinoth’s customer, Fruit Mart pays him
in installments (partial payments). So Vinoth has to make a note of the details
like date received, amount received, amount remaining, amount received for what
goods/shipments/invoice etc, when Vinoth receives the payments. This detail is
called RECEIPT, which will be compared to the invoice by Vinoth to find
how much Fruit Mart has paid to him and how much has to be paid yet. This
information is maintained in a book named RECEIVABLES to keep track of
all the customers, their addresses (to ship the items), what and how much he
has shipped to his customers and the amount his customers owe him etc.
Vinoth’s fruit business has begun to improve and has attracted more and more
customers. As a result, Vinoth decided to buy a cold storage unit where he could stock more fruits. In Apps, this cold storage unit is known as
WAREHOUSE and all the fruits are referred to as INVENTORY. Due
to increase in customers, Vinoth needs to hire more people to help him out in
his business without any hiccups. These workers are called EMPLOYEES. At
the end of every month, Vinoth pays the salary for all his employees through
Checks. These checks are nothing but PAYROLL in Apps.
At the end of every month, Vinoth prepares a balance sheet in a book called GENERAL LEDGER to
determine how much profit/loss he got and keeps track of the money going out
and going in.
As the business grows, it becomes impossible to record everything on a
paper. To make everybody’s life easier, we have very good tools in the market,
which help the business men to keep track of everything. One such tool is
Oracle E-Business Suite.
Oracle Applications is not a single application, but is a collection of
integrated applications. Each application is referred to as a module and has it
own functionality trying to serve a business purpose.
Few of the modules are Purchasing, Accounts Payables, Accounts
Receivables, Inventory, Order Management, Human Resources, General Ledger, and
Fixed Assets etc.
Here is a high level business use of various modules:
Oracle Purchasing handles all the
requisitions and purchase orders to the vendors.
Oracle Accounts Payables handles
all the payments to the vendors.
Oracle Inventory deals with the items you maintain in stock, warehouse etc.
Order Management helps you collect all the
information that your customers order.
Oracle Receivables help you
collect the money for the orders that are delivered to the customers.
Oracle Human Resources helps
maintain the Employee information, helps run paychecks etc.
Oracle General Ledger receives
information from all the different transaction modules or sub ledgers and
summarizes them in order to help you create profit and loss statements, reports
for paying Taxes etc. For Example: when you pay your employees that payment is
reported back to General Ledgers as cost i.e. money going out, when you
purchase inventory items and the information is transferred to GL as money going
out, and so is the case when you pay your vendors. Similarly when you receive
items into your inventory, it is transferred to GL as money coming in, when
your customer sends payment, it is transferred to GL as money coming in. So all
the different transaction modules are reported to GL (General Ledger) as either
“money going in” or “money going out”, the net result will tell you if you are
making a profit or loss.
All the equipment, shops, warehouses, computers can be termed as ASSETS
and they are managed by Oracle Fixed Assets.
There is a lot more in Oracle applications. This is the very basic
explanation just to give an idea of the flow in ERP for the beginners.
Terminology
often used in Oracle Applications:
- Invoice
- Receipt
- Customer
- Vendor
- Buyer
- Supplier
- Purchase Order
- Requisition
- ACH: Account Clearance
House
- Sales Order
- Pack Slip
- Pick Slip
- Drop Ship
- Back Order
- ASN: Advance Shipping
Notice
- ASBN: Advance Shipping
Billing Notice
- ATP: Available to
Promise
- Lot/Serial Number
- DFF: Descriptive Flex
Fields
- KFF: Key Flex Fields
- Value Sets
- Organization
- Business Unit
- Multi Org
- Folders
- WHO Columns
- Oracle Reports
- Oracle Form
- Workflow Builder
- Toad
- SQL Developer
- SQL Navigator
- Discoverer Reports
- XML/BI Publisher
- ADI: Application
Desktop Integrator
- Winscp
- Putty
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