What is SAP Fiori ?

 

If you work with SAP S/4HANA and still think SAP Fiori is “just a UI,” you are overlooking one of the most important skills recruiters actively look for today.

SAP Fiori is not a cosmetic layer. It is SAP’s strategic User Experience (UX) framework that reshapes how users interact with enterprise systems — making them simpler, faster, role-driven, and business-focused.

For consultants, functional leads, and S/4HANA professionals, understanding SAP Fiori is no longer optional. It is foundational.

At the core of this understanding lies a simple but powerful concept:
SAP Fiori apps are classified into three types based on their purpose and usage.


Why SAP Fiori Matters for Modern SAP Careers

Before Fiori, SAP users worked with complex transaction codes, cluttered screens, and steep learning curves. Training costs were high, user adoption was low, and productivity suffered.

At SAPPHIRE 2014 (Orlando), SAP introduced Fiori as the new UX standard for all SAP products. This marked a fundamental shift:

  • From transaction-driven to role-driven UX

  • From technical screens to business-oriented tasks

  • From training-heavy systems to intuitive applications

Fiori is not about screens.
👉 It is about how people actually work.

Today, Fiori directly impacts:

  • User adoption

  • Operational efficiency

  • Business productivity

That is why recruiters expect SAP professionals to understand not only what Fiori is, but how it supports business processes.


The 3 Types of SAP Fiori Apps

Based on purpose and usage, SAP Fiori apps are classified into:

  1. Transactional Apps — Run the Business

  2. Analytical Apps — Analyze the Business

  3. Factsheet Apps — Understand the Business Objects

Each type plays a distinct role in end-to-end business execution.


1. Transactional Apps — Run the Business

Purpose:
Transactional apps support day-to-day business operations. They are used to create, change, and process business data.

These apps are the modern replacement for classic SAP GUI (ABAP) transactions. Instead of navigating complex T-codes, users execute tasks through role-based, task-focused applications.

Key characteristics:

  • Replace traditional SAP GUI transactions

  • Support high-volume operational processing

  • Role-based and task-oriented

  • Available in:

    • SAP S/4HANA

    • SAP ERP 6.0 (any database)

Example:
Change Sales Order → Web version of transaction VA02

Why recruiters care:
Transactional apps demonstrate your ability to handle:

  • Core business processes

  • Operational execution

  • Day-to-day system usage

This reflects strong functional execution skills.


2. Analytical Apps — Analyze the Business

Purpose:
Analytical apps enable real-time insight and decision-making.

These apps are powered by SAP HANA in-memory processing, allowing users to analyze live transactional data without delays or batch jobs.

They provide real-time KPIs, trends, and performance metrics that support management decisions.

Key characteristics:

  • Real-time analytics on live data

  • KPI-driven dashboards

  • Drill-down and trend analysis

  • Available in:

    • SAP S/4HANA

    • ERP on HANA

Example:
Sales Order Fulfillment overview app

Why recruiters care:
Analytical apps reflect:

  • Business insight capability

  • Analytical thinking

  • Management reporting skills

They show that you can move beyond execution to decision support.


3. Factsheet Apps — Understand the Business Objects

Purpose:
Factsheet apps provide object-level information and contextual drill-down.

They are built on HANA Enterprise Search and deliver detailed views of business objects such as customers, materials, vendors, and orders.

Factsheet apps are typically launched from transactional or analytical apps to support end-to-end navigation.

Key characteristics:

  • Object-centric view (Customer, Material, Vendor, Order)

  • Contextual navigation across processes

  • Not standalone — support other apps

  • Enable cross-functional understanding

Example:
Customer Factsheet
Material Factsheet
Sales Order Factsheet

Why recruiters care:
Factsheet apps demonstrate:

  • End-to-end process understanding

  • Cross-functional navigation

  • System integration awareness

They show that you understand how processes connect across modules.

Core Design Principles of SAP Fiori

SAP Fiori is built on five core UX principles that explain why users prefer it and why businesses adopt it.

1. Role-Based UX

Fiori is built around business roles, not technical transactions.

  • Modular, task-focused apps

  • Business language instead of SAP jargon

  • Context flows across apps

Example:
An AP accountant sees only:

  • Post Invoice

  • Approve Payments

  • Track Exceptions

Not 50 unused T-codes.


2. Responsive UX

One codebase. Multiple devices.

  • Works on desktop, tablet, and mobile

  • Adaptive layout based on device and user

  • Consistent experience everywhere

Work from office, home, or on the move — seamlessly.


3. Simple UX

Simplicity is the hardest design challenge — and Fiori delivers it.

  • Only essential functions

  • Reduced clutter

  • Automation with user control

  • Continuous system feedback

Less noise. More impact.


4. Coherent UX

The Fiori Launchpad unifies the experience.

  • Single entry point

  • Unified navigation, search, and personalization

  • Consistent behavior across all apps

One system. One experience.


5. Delightful UX

Powered by SAPUI5, Fiori delivers a modern experience.

  • Smooth visuals and animations

  • Proactive assistance

  • Insight-driven interactions

Not just a tool — a digital coworker.

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