The platform is built around three parts: an SAP efficiency platform, a low-code platform, and multiple Lean applications. The idea is not to add another isolated tool, but to help existing SAP customers release more value from what they already have.
The target users are companies that have already gone live with SAP but are not satisfied with daily efficiency, companies upgrading or newly adopting S/4HANA, and groups that still have software gaps in certain business lines or countries.
Eighteen tools around SAP efficiency
The first layer is a set of configurable tools around SAP. Typical capabilities include a configurable interface center, preconfigured integration with common collaboration and banking platforms, flexible approvals for SAP business objects, dashboards on SAP data, automated regression testing, mobile or embedded access, automated notifications, monitoring alerts, task orientation, AI-assisted scenarios, bank-enterprise integration, lightweight ITSM, Lean TMS, report configuration, and form or label design.
The common logic behind these tools is simple: use configuration to replace repeated development where possible, and make some scenarios possible where traditional development would be too heavy.
Low-code, but not isolated
The low-code layer is meant to respond to fragmented business needs faster. However, it should not become a separate island. It needs architecture, integration, authorization, transport, and connection to SAP data and processes.
Lean applications for real business scenarios
The third layer is a group of focused applications such as SRM, WMS, MES, TMS, planning, quality, and related execution scenarios. These applications can solve department-level problems while still fitting into the SAP-centered enterprise architecture.
This is why the platform is described as three in one: SAP efficiency improvement, low-code agility, and scenario-based Lean applications should support each other instead of becoming separate systems.