When I first started
my SAP HCM consulting career in 1998 my goal was very simple, work hard
and hope the market stayed “hot” for another year as I thought I had
gotten in on the tail end of the SAP HR boom. As you can see my skills
at predicting the future were not very good. Like so many others my
first experience with SAP was at the five week Partner Academy and I
remember wondering if I was cut out for the career change as my
previous experience in the grocery business did not quite prepare me
for learning Human Resources as well as SAP at the same time. I passed
the Partner Academy and was now a certified R/3 HR consultant about to
start on my first payroll project. I learned several valuable lessons
on that first implementation that stick with me today even after 14
successful projects.
1. Hard Work – Nothing can replace the
ability in any career, including SAP, of being willing to put in the
time to be successful. Malcolm Gladwell’s book Outliers sums it up very
well when he says the difference between success and non-success,
genius and mediocrity is practice. Anyone from the Beatles to Bill
Gates who has succeeded has done so on the back of at least 10,000
hours of practice. I wanted to be good at my SAP career and the fact
that I loved my job made it easy to put in the hours it took to be
successful, which continues to this day. SAP is competitive industry and if you are not willing to put in the effort someone else will.
2.Information
- I realized early on that there was a lot of information available and
half the battle was being able to find it. I made a pledge that I would
build up a knowledge base of information and would document everything
that I worked on or could find that related to SAP. Some of my friends
have nicknamed my data repository "The Library" and they are glad to
have a card to access it. Make no mistake, this is a very time
consuming process and one that I have spent several hours a day on for
the last 12 years. I am now sitting on a database of 70,000 organized
SAP documents with a good portion of them being specific to Human
Capital Management. These documents have turned into a security blanket
and allowed me to make the jump to an independent consultant and later
to opening my consulting company. With SAP Help, SAP Community
Network, User Conferences, IT Toolbox, ASUG, there is a wealth of
information to help you learn and grow in your career.
3.
Adaptability
- When I graduated from the Partner Academy all I knew was that I
didn’t want to do SAP payroll as it seemed to difficult. Of course when
I found out my first assignment was going to be a large Fortune 500 SAP
payroll project I got a crash course in being adaptable. After doing
many payroll implementations I had a chance to start working in other
areas of HCM such as the Employee Interaction Center and Enterprise
Compensation Management each of which had a steep learning curve but I
wanted to continue to adapt and grow my SAP career. I believe
it is very important to take advantage of the opportunities you are
given in your SAP career as you never know where they are going to take
you.
4.
Networking - I read the other
day that SCN has over 2 million members but make no mistake the SAP
world can be very small. I have made a point to keep in touch with as
many people in the industry as possible which takes effort and a time
commitment. I have helped many people over the years by sharing
knowledge, answering SAP questions or helping people find jobs and in
return I have been helped when I needed it. A great example is Jon Reed
who I met on Linkedin and Twitter who was kind enough to review this
article. It is easy to network with your SAP peers on projects
or via Linkedin, Twitter, Facebook etc and it is something that you
should do from day 1 of your SAP career.
5.
Knowledge
Transfer - We all know individuals in the industry that try to hoard
their knowledge thinking it will make them more valuable. There used to
be a lot more of these folks before the SAP Community Network was
formed and sharing became more fashionable. I still remember during my
first month of consulting an individual who had 1 year of experience
(that was lot in early 1998 for US Payroll) who would not explain or
provide any help to either his fellow consultants or client
resources. He confided in me one day at lunch that the client would
never let him go because he had “all the knowledge”. The interesting
thing is that he was the first one to roll off the implementation and
yours truly stayed as although I had very little knowledge at the time
I was more than willing to share it with everyone. I learned very early
that the more I shared, and the more questions I got, the more I
learned. If you want to continually learn and become an
expert in your area share all your knowledge as you will get way more
back in return.
If
you work towards those five key areas above it does not guarantee that
you are going to be successful but it will put you on the right path.
We are all very fortune to be working in the SAP ecosystem and the fact
that you are reading this article shows that you are doing some of the
items discussed about above.
I
would like to hear from each person reading this blog on some of their
most valuable lessons for making the most of their SAP career.
http://www.sdn.sap.com/irj/scn/weblogs?blog=/pub/wlg/18366
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