Thursday, March 12, 2026

An EMP elevates Transformation to Reinvention

I've been saying for years that every major technology wave brings with it a new set of acronyms and a new generation of enthusiasts eager to deploy them. ERP. CRM. SCM. We built careers orchestrating the implementation of these systems. We transformed companies, changing the way employees worked, how customers engaged, how products moved through supply chains. We were proud of it, and rightly so.

But I want to propose something different today. A new frame. A new acronym. Allow me to introduce the concept of an EMP, an Enterprise Management Platform.

Here's why it matters, and why it's categorically different from everything that came before.

When we implemented ERP, we were transforming a company. We were changing how people worked.
Humans were still there, in greater numbers than before, in fact, just working differently, more efficiently, supported by technology. The technology served the workforce. The workforce ran the business. That's been the paradigm for decades.

AI in general, and agentics in particular, changes that equation entirely. We are no longer talking about orchestrating a transformation of select processes, or even an enterprise-wide transformation. We are talking about orchestrating the operation of the business itself through agents and robots. Technology doesn't support the workforce in this model. In many cases, technology becomes the workforce.

Think about what it meant to implement an ERP. You had a business. You had people running that business. You were asked to improve how they operated. Success was measured by adoption, efficiency gains, cost reduction. You were, in essence, a very sophisticated tool-giver. And a good one at that.

Now think about what the EMP requires. You're not being asked to improve how people work. You're being asked to envision an organization where the agents are the workers. Your procurement agent negotiates. Your finance agent approves. Your logistics agent schedules. Your customer service agent resolves. The CIO, or whoever owns this portfolio going forward, is no longer primarily a technology implementer. They are an organizational architect. They are designing and operating a digital enterprise.

That is a fundamentally different job description.

This mean for those of us who have spent our careers implementing ERPs, managing CRM rollouts, optimizing supply chains? It means we need to elevate our thinking. The era of the technical specialist, the person who is valuable because they know SAP modules or Salesforce configurations, is giving way to the era of the digital enterprise architect. Someone who can envision a company that runs on agents and robots, design the oversight structures that keep it honest, and preserve space for the human creativity that no model can replicate.

That's the EMP. And if you're a technology leader today, you'd better start getting comfortable with it.

The horizon isn't ten years out. It's next quarter.

Captain Joe Follow me on Twitter @JPuglisiLLC