pwshub.com

Workday wins ERP deal, replacing Oracle in Hull City Council

More than two and a half years after it began talking to vendors, a city council in northern England has awarded a contract to Workday for £10.7 million ($14 million) to create a finance and HR system that will replace the ageing Oracle ERP installation.

Unitary authority Hull City Council awarded the contract for seven years with an option to extend for an additional three years, according to a contract notice. The deal includes software as a service and implementation services, which amount to £3.1 million ($4 million), the council said.

The four suppliers bidding for the contract had already qualified for a Crown Commercial Service Back Office Software framework worth up to £1.2 billion ($1.56 billion), after encouraging suppliers to submit expressions of interest in February.

A spokesperson for Hull City Council said: "It's important that the Council has a fit-for-purpose, workable and cost-effective IT system. Workday will provide a platform to help the Council run the basics such as HR, payroll, finance, and procurement."

With the new software, the Council is expecting to accrue an estimated £1 million ($1.3 million) digital efficiency saving each year starting from 2026/27.

According to a report presented to the council's cabinet in December 2021, Oracle EBS has been used by the authority since 2002 and has needed "several key upgrades during this period to ensure it remains compliant which is costly and resource heavy for the authority."

"Oracle EBS is currently supported by a third-party provider, whom the authority moved to in 2016 following an open tender procurement," the documents said. "This expires in June 2024 beyond which the authority will have no support for its key line business system without further procurement."

When the council moved to third party support, it was no longer able to upgrade Oracle EBS from the current version, R12. "As time goes on there is an increased risk regarding security and compatibility issues," the 2021 document added.

In February 2022, the council launched procurement for SaaS-based ERP system to replace the Oracle incumbent in a deal set to be worth up to £6 million.

The latest tender document confirmed the ageing Oracle ERP system links with other 40 internal and external systems including software for benefits payments, foster carer payments, and housing rent.

However, in November 2022, that procurement was abandoned, according to an official notice.

An August 2024 notice from the council said it made the decision to replace the Oracle ERP system in December 2021 but added:

"Due to the complexity and large scope of the procurement, an extensive period of soft market testing has taken place to ensure the most effective route to market was identified and to ensure the specification requirements were refined to ensure the Authority selects the most advantageous software."

  • Why send a message when you can get your Zoom digital video clone to read the script?
  • Workday beats Oracle and Microsoft in UK 'Matrix' ERP deal
  • EU AI Act still in infancy, but those with 'intelligent' HR apps better watch out
  • HCL's back-to-office plan: Come in three days a week, or forget about holidays

The delay in the procurement came at a cost. Another notice signed in June said the council had extended support and maintenance of the Oracle E Business Suite, Browser Proxy Solution and Advanced Database Security to the existing support provider Rimini Street for a period of two years at a cost of £450,777 (c $590k) with an option to extend up to a further year.

Perhaps it will be a price worth paying: a number of UK councils, including Surrey, West Sussex, and Birmingham City Council, have experienced delays, disruption and ballooning costs during their ERP replacement projects. Taking the time to get it right may be no bad thing. ®

Source: theregister.com

Related stories
1 month ago - Set up or upgrade your office or gaming setup with an office chair. Our experts and writers at CNET have suggested the best based on experience and testing.
1 month ago - Lawmakers passed the new rule in February, but it only kicked in on Monday for employees of large enterprises. Small businesses have until August 2025 before it affects them.Read Entire Article
1 week ago - The SaaS-only provider and Cognizant snag £144.3M in gov software shake-up A cluster of government departments has opted for Workday HR and finance software, as Oracle and Microsoft make up the vendors losing out to the SaaS-only provider.…
1 month ago - Two things I believe all digital workers need are a great hotspot and streamlined productivity. So I was eager to test out another artificial...
1 month ago - Not sure if you're maximizing your caffeine quota? Consider drink sizes and types of beans to make changes to your caffeine intake.
Other stories
15 minutes ago - A short pulse of voltage rebuilds lost capacity in lithium-silicon batteries, but may not work with others.
15 minutes ago - All the news that's fit to lift "For the first time, Canada will host its own homegrown rocket...
15 minutes ago - Skip to content Migrating didn’t hurt as much as I thought it would—and dynamic DNS still...
25 minutes ago - Formerly known as Project Condor, FBC: Firebreak is a three-player cooperative first-person shooter. It's the first multiplayer game Remedy has made, though it did work on the two single-player campaigns of Smilegate's multiplayer...
37 minutes ago - Says 'limited' incident isolated to 'partner company' ESET denies being compromised after an infosec researcher highlighted a wiper campaign that appeared to victims as if it was launched using the Slovak security shop's infrastructure.…