ERP Management cert — is the SAP module section as hard as everyone says?
I'm about five weeks into studying for the ERP Management certification and the SAP configuration section is making me feel like I've never touched enterprise software in my life. I work with NetSuite day-to-day so the SAP-specific terminology and menu structures feel completely foreign, and my practice scores in that domain are stuck around 55% while I'm at 74% on everything else.
The broader ERP concepts — master data management, procure-to-pay cycle, record-to-report — feel pretty natural since I live in those processes at work. It's the vendor-specific implementation questions that are dragging my overall score down. I'm studying 2 hours a day and at this point I'm not sure whether to go deeper on SAP or try to compensate with stronger scores elsewhere.
My exam is booked for 5 weeks from now. Has anyone passed the ERP Management cert coming from a non-SAP background? I'd love to hear whether the SAP section is weighted heavily enough that you need to really nail it, or if strong fundamentals can carry you through despite weak SAP-specific scores.
I came from a Dynamics 365 background and passed on my first try at 81%. The exam is testing ERP principles more than any one platform. Deep fundamentals in MRP logic, intercompany transactions, and period-end close procedures were worth far more to my score than SAP specifics.
The SAP terminology questions have a pattern — they're mostly testing whether you know what transaction codes map to what functions, and there are maybe 15-20 commonly tested ones. If you memorize those specifically rather than trying to understand the full system, you can pick up 8-10 extra points without deep SAP knowledge.
Coming from Oracle EBS, the SAP questions were my weak spot too. I passed with a 78% by accepting I'd get maybe 60% of the SAP-specific questions right and making sure I got near-perfect marks on process flows and integration concepts. The SAP section isn't weighted so heavily that you can't compensate elsewhere.