Spar Group Ltd.’s chief information technology executive Mark Huxtable has resigned from the South African food and liquor retailer, not long after a rocky implementation of a 1.8 billion rand ($95 million) software system.
(Bloomberg) — Spar Group Ltd.’s chief information technology executive Mark Huxtable has resigned from the South African food and liquor retailer, not long after a rocky implementation of a 1.8 billion rand ($95 million) software system.
The move to the SAP software resulted in various integration and distribution issues that caused interruptions in stock deliveries to stores and lost sales. The SAP software project cost Spar about 786 million rand in lost first-half wholesale turnover. Operating profit fell 18% in the six months through March.
Huxtable’s departure is for personal reasons and he will leave the Durban-based company at the end of the month, it said Friday in an e-mailed response to questions. The problems with the SAP systems have been worked on and stores are again being serviced, it said.
Spar’s South African national information technology executive Brett McDougall will step in to support the team, Chairman Mike Bosman said in the e-mail. Huxtable did not respond to requests for comment and SAP said it was unable to comment on behalf of its customers.
The grocer has lost a number of executives this year, including its former chief executive officer Brett Botten and ex chairman Graham O’Connor who resigned over governance issues.
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