Typically, companies deploy a different solution for each of their environmental management needs. Need to measure greenhouse gas emissions (GHG)? Get software for GHG management. Need to report waste? Buy another solution that can measure and report waste. It makes sense, right?
Not so much.
As environmental guidelines become more complex, implementation of various solutions – either developed in-house or purchased externally – to meet regulatory needs is proving cumbersome for companies. Acquiring or building these technology solutions for management of a single environmental type is costly. Companies are significantly overpaying for too many systems that cannot integrate with their infrastructure, or even communicate with each other to convey the organization’s overall environmental performance.
To address these challenges, we just released a new white paper entitled “More Bang, Less Bucks: Why One-Stop Environmental Systems Make Better Sense,” which explores the business benefits and value of using one environmental enterprise resource planning (EERP) platform. This paper demonstrates how a one-stop, comprehensive environmental ERP system can meet all of an organization’s environmental management needs, by:
- Providing a single, centralized platform for organizations to manage ALL of their environmental programs;
- Offering economies of scale, enabling more thorough analysis of environmental data across an organization;
- Creating the foundation required to manage one, or even 20 or more environmental initiatives as the need arises.
In this whitepaper, you’ll uncover many other benefits made possible by the use of a single environmental system, pertaining to both IT and business settings across an organization. In an era where environmental solutions are required for regulatory purposes, it’s crucial for companies to find the most all-inclusive system that will meet their needs, while saving time and money to reduce the bottom line.
Read white paper here.
Activities like this should be spread all through out different regions. People should now be aware of the impacts human activities are doing to our planet.
Posted by: Environmental report | November 8, 2011 at 05:52 PM
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Sincerely,
The Enviance Team
Posted by: Enviance Team | March 26, 2012 at 02:02 PM