Operating Units and Multiple Organizations

Operating units are another type of organization classification. You use operating units to partition data for a subledger application such as Oracle Payables, Oracle Receivables, or Oracle General Ledger. When an enterprise utilizes more than one operating unit, it is said to have a "multiple organization installation."

The implementation of multiple organizations in Oracle Projects supports multinational enterprises and enterprises with complex organizational structures.

This section explains how operating units enable Oracle Projects to charge to multiple organizations in a single installation. A multiple organization installation enables you to:

Note: If you plan to use reporting currencies with Oracle Projects, see information about reporting currencies in the Oracle Financials Implementation Guide and the Oracle General Ledger Implementation Guide.

About Multiple Organization Installations

A multiple organization installation in Oracle Projects works like this:

Understanding the Resource Operating Unit

For security and forecasting reasons, each resource in Oracle Projects is associated with an operating unit. This operating unit is initially defaulted from the organization operating unit. The operating unit of the resource is active for the duration of an assignment. It drives forecasting based on the transfer price defined for the operating unit if the resource is assigned on a project under a different operating unit, in other words, a borrowed resource.

Oracle Project Resource Management updates the resource operating unit whenever there are changes to the employee assignment or the default operating unit originally set up for the employee. Oracle Projects tracks these changes for record-keeping purposes and allows date-specific operating unit defaults for the resource.

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