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20.
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Lastly, such software has arisen from the blend of high code quality, well-judged architecture and use of free technologies. In fact, you may be surprised (if you're an IT person) to find that the download size of OpenERP is only around 6 MB. When that's expanded during installation its size is mostly attributable to all the official translations that are packaged with it, not the operating code. We've moved a long way from the days when the only people who could be expected to benefit from ERP were the owners of a widget factory on some remote industrial estate.
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
../../source/book/0/index.rst:100
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21.
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Why this book?
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
../../source/book/0/index.rst:105
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22.
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Many books set out to tell readers about the management of enterprise, and equally many aim to instruct the reader in the use of a piece of specialized software. We're not aiming to add to those lists because our approach is intended to be different.
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
../../source/book/0/index.rst:111
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23.
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Having restructured and reorganized many businesses, we wanted our management experience to generate a work that is both instructive and practical. It was important for us not to write a manual about OpenERP, but instead a work that deals with advanced management techniques realized through these IT tools. You'll see what management practices might be useful, what's possible, and then how you could achieve that in OpenERP.
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
../../source/book/0/index.rst:115
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24.
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It's this that we'll consider OpenERP for: not as an end in itself but just the tool you use to put an advanced management system into place.
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
../../source/book/0/index.rst:121
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25.
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Who's it for?
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
../../source/book/0/index.rst:125
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26.
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Written by two CEOs who have been successful with new technologies, this book is aimed at directors and managers who have an ambition to improve the performance of their whole company's management team. They're likely already to have significant responsibilities and possess the influence to get things done in their company.
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
../../source/book/0/index.rst:127
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27.
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It's likely that most readers will come from small- and medium-sized enterprises (up to a few hundred staff), and independent companies, because of the breadth of functions that need to be analyzed and involved in change. The same principles also apply to larger companies, however.
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
../../source/book/0/index.rst:132
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28.
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Structure of this book
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
../../source/book/0/index.rst:133
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29.
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Part One, :ref:`part1-steps`, starts with the installation of OpenERP. If you have already installed OpenERP you can directly take your first steps on a guided tour in the :ref:`ch-guided` chapter. If you're already familiar with OpenERP or Tiny ERP you can use the :ref:`ch-real` chapter to find out how to create a new workflow from scratch in an empty database with nothing to distract you. Or you can skip directly to the :ref:`ch-crm` chapter in the :ref:`part2-crm` part, to start with details of OpenERP's functional modules.
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(no translation yet)
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Located in
../../source/book/0/index.rst:139
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