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SAP S/4HANA is the latest generation of the SAP Business Suite, scheduled for full migration among clients in 2027. It provides the digital core to propel businesses toward their objectives, helping organizations unlock opportunities, evolve processes and solve their biggest challenges. However, migrating to S/4HANA is hardly a matter of just flipping a switch. It’s a complex undertaking that requires a substantial amount of planning and forethought before the first tactical steps are taken. Organizations must begin by evaluating the health of their current operating model and their readiness to make the move.
To help understand the context of those questions, PwC developed the S/4 Journey Guide, a survey-based assessment that helps clients quickly determine how they can use S/4HANA to reimagine their business's operating model and drive value creation. We polled hundreds of clients to determine and analyze the likely outcomes, barriers and operating model component readiness work involved with the transformation to S/4HANA. Here’s a selection of those findings.
A quarter of SAP clients surveyed are already at the proof of concept stage in their migration to S/4HANA, and another quarter already have the system live and fully deployed. Another 35% of SAP clients say they expect to have S/4HANA live in the next year. Less than 20% of all SAP clients report that they are due to complete their migration in 2022 or beyond.
Our survey also asked respondents what they expected to gain from their migration to S/4HANA, and, for those businesses that had completed their migrations, whether those benefits had been realized. The overall results showed exceptionally high expectations across the board. Yet almost all respondents agreed that S/4HANA was actually exceeding those expectations.
Organizations that have not yet completed their migration to S/4HANA can learn from the lessons of those who have. Nearly all respondents reported some measure of challenges in moving to the new platform. The most common issues: The transition took longer than expected, required a higher level of training, and cost more than originally budgeted.
The road to S/4HANA may appear difficult, but in general those who’ve completed the journey agree that it isn’t as difficult as expected. More importantly, real benefits await those who make the move to the latest generation of SAP—including improved and more modernized processes, better operational control and more streamlined reporting operation. All of this can be put to work in your organization, too. With a few years left to make the transition before SAP’s 2025 deadline arrives, there’s plenty of time to complete the job, even if you haven’t taken the first step.