1 / 17

Configuring the MM Structures

Configuring the MM Structures. Review of the Procurement Process. Purchase Requisition. Purchase Order. Internal Demand. Goods Receipt. Vendor. Invoice Receipt. Pay Invoice. Materials Management (Functions). Purchasing activities Goods receipt Storing materials Issuing materials.

Download Presentation

Configuring the MM Structures

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Configuring the MMStructures

  2. Review of the Procurement Process Purchase Requisition Purchase Order Internal Demand Goods Receipt Vendor Invoice Receipt Pay Invoice

  3. Materials Management (Functions) • Purchasing activities • Goods receipt • Storing materials • Issuing materials

  4. Materials Management (Integration) • MM is integrated with FI • Materials are described in MM • Vendors are described in both MM and FI

  5. Materials Management (Valuation) • SAP can value materials differently (called the valuation level • At the company-code level, the same material has the same value across all plants • At the plant-level, each plant maintains prices separately • Note that the valuation level-is set once for the entire client and cannot be changed

  6. Materials Management (Valuation)

  7. Organizational Units • A company code has one or more plants • A plant has one or more storage locations • A purchasingorganization is responsible for purchasing goods for one or many plants • A purchasing group is a group of buyers responsible for purchasing specific kinds of materials

  8. Organizational Unit (Plant) • A plant is typically a physical place but does not have to be • Typically a manufacturing facility, distribution center or other physical place where the company does business • A plant applies to one and exactly one company code • A plant is used to determine the shipping point for goods • A plant can have several shipping points (loading docks) • A shipping point can be assigned to several plants

  9. Organizational Unit (Plant) • Plants are created (defined) from the IMG • Plants have a factory calendar • Once created, plants must be (assigned) to a company code • Back to definement and assignment • A plant belongs to exactly one company

  10. Organizational Unit (Plant Factory Calendar) • SAP defines most country calendars • 3 parts • The factory calendar • Holiday calendar • Derived from public holidays • Transaction code SCAL

  11. Organizational Unit (Plant) • Remember a business area is a FI organizational unit used to categorize areas operations • A single business area can be assigned to a plant • A plant can be responsible for several sales organizations and distribution channels • MRP is performed at the plant organizational level • A Plant has its own material master records

  12. Organizational Unit (Storage Location) • A storage location identifies where a material is stored • It might be as simple as raw materials / work in progress / finished goods • Or as complex as a unique bin at an Amazon.com • Requires enabling the warehouse management subsystem • Storage locations can be physical or logical

  13. Organizational Unit (Storage Location) • Storage locations are created using the IMG • A storage location applies to exactly one plant

  14. Organizational Unit (Purchasing Organization) • Responsible for the procurement of materials and/or services • A purchasing organization is assigned to one or more plants • A purchasing organization has • Its own vendor master data • Its own pricing conditions • Its own external purchasing documents

  15. Organizational Unit (Purchasing Organization) • Purchasing organizations can be configured differently • Centralized • Distributed • Hybrid

  16. Organizational Unit (Purchasing Organization) • A purchasing organization is assigned to one or many plants • Centralized • Responsible for many plants • Assigned to multiple plants possibly having different company codes • Decentralized (Company-specific) • Purchasing organization assigned directly to a company code

  17. Organizational Unit (Purchasing Organization) • Plant-specific purchasing • A purchasing organization is responsible for one and only one plant • Again, purchasing organizations are created from the IMG • They are then assigned

More Related