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Title: Concepts in


1
Concepts in Enterprise Resource Planning 2nd
Edition Chapter 8 ERP and Electronic Commerce
2
Chapter Objectives
  • Describe business-to-business e-commerce
  • Explain why ERP is essential to the success of a
    company engaged in e-commerce
  • Describe what an application service provider
    (ASP) does
  • Describe how ERP is delivered to users by an ASP
  • Describe Web services and SAPs NetWeaver
  • Describe the unique components of NetWeaver
  • Explain why accessing an ERP system through a Web
    browser is efficient
  • Define XML and its significance to ERP
  • Define RFID and its future role in logistics and
    sales

3
Introduction
  • Competing effectively in high-volume e-commerce
    may not be possible without the infrastructure
    provided by ERP
  • Integrating ERP systems with the Internet is
    becoming easier with new technologies like Web
    services and XML
  • ERP systems are becoming more affordable as
    smaller companies rent ERP services

4
Electronic Commerce Background
  • E-commerce is the conduct of business over the
    internet
  • Most business growth on the Internet has been
    business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce, rather
    than business-to-consumer (B2C) e-commerce
  • B2B sales are expected to approach 1 Trillion in
    Europe by 2006
  • B2B e-commerce is transforming the way companies
    work with each otherespecially for commodity
    products

5
Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
  • Companies have been able to transfer purchase
    orders electronically since the 1960s through a
    system known as Electronic Data Interchange
    (EDI), originally using telephone lines
  • EDI networks are expensive, so many companies
    subscribe to value-added networks (VAN), an
    intermediary Internet-based network
  • EDI messages are standardized business
    transactions that follow a specific computer
    protocol

6
Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
  • Benefits of EDI include
  • Costs of paper, printing, and postage have almost
    disappeared
  • Errors are minimized as orders are not manually
    entered into the suppliers information system
  • Ordering is fast and efficient
  • Large companies may require suppliers to use EDI,
    and may pay EDI costs for small suppliers
  • EDI tends to lock buyers and suppliers into a
    long-term relationship
  • An advantage as long as both parties remain
    satisfied

7
Internet-Based Procurement
  • Internet-based procurement
  • Is less expensive than private EDI networks
  • Reduces purchasing costs further as suppliers
    compete for orders on the buyers Web site
  • Locking in suppliers often does not occur in
    Internet-based procurement
  • Internet-based procurement has led to electronic
    marketplaces
  • Marketplaces provide advantages for both buyers
    and sellers
  • Exchanges are B2B marketplaces that typically
    focus on a single industry

8
ChemConnect.com
  • Buyers and sellers of chemical products can use
    the ChemConnect marketplace
  • Buyers can find the best prices without
    traditional negotiations
  • Contracts are completed faster between buyers and
    sellers
  • Buyers and sellers can gain access to new
    worldwide markets and trading partners
  • Instant market information is available to all
    parties

9
Private Exchanges
  • Companies like Siemens, Volkswagen and IBM have
    set up private exchanges
  • Membership is restricted to select participants
  • Volkswagen has slashed procurement costs in half
    and cut negotiations from three months to a day
  • Jupiter Research estimates that one-third of all
    businesses with revenues over 1 billion will
    operate private exchanges

10
Internet Auctions and Reverse Auctions
  • Companies can use standard auctions to sell
    products or obsolete equipment
  • Reverse auctions, with one buyer and many
    sellers, can be used to purchase commodity
    products that are widely available at recognized
    quality standards
  • Internet auctions are challenging the role
    previously filled by traditional intermediaries
  • Epsilon Products has used ChemConnect to reduce
    raw material costs by 5
  • Increased competition from marketplaces creates a
    new emphasis on supply chain flexibility and costs

11
Electronic Commerce Security
  • E-commerce is threatened by security breaches
  • Large firms have been shut down by various types
    of system attacks, such as denial-of-service
    attacks
  • Denial-of-service (DoS) attacks occur when
    attackers block a Web site by a variety of means,
    including bombarding the system with messages
  • Buy.com, Amazon, CNN.com, eBay ETrade, ZDNet and
    Yahoo were all shut down temporarily in February
    200 because of DoS attacks
  • Yahoo lost approximately 500,000 from a
    three-hour attack
  • Security is an on-going effort

12
E-commerce and ERP
  • E-commerce and ERP technologies are complements
  • If the competition is using the Internet
    effectively, then a company needs to develop an
    Internet strategy
  • Without integrated information systems, companies
    cannot support e-commerce effectively
  • In 1999, eToys.com announced a week before
    Christmas that it would not be able to fill all
    Web orders
  • Toys were in the warehouse, but the systems were
    not in place to process orders

13
Application Service Providers
  • An Application Service Provider (ASP) provides
    management of application programs over a network
  • Companies using the ASP do not have to purchase
    the hardware or software or higher people to
    operate systems
  • ASPs can also provide consulting services for
    software applications like ERP
  • ASPs can provide access to expensive applications
    like ERP with much lower startup costs

14
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15
Application Service Providers
  • ASP Advantages
  • Affordability Many companies that previously
    couldnt afford ERP systems can now afford to
    lease it through an ASP
  • Shorter implementation times Implementation time
    is shorter because the company does not have to
    purchase hardware and software and train
    technical staff
  • Expertise ASPs are more likely to be able to
    hire and retain competent technical personnel
    than a small company can

16
Application Service Providers
  • ASP Disadvantages
  • Security Companies turn their critical
    information over to a 3rd party
  • ASP must be able to insure data integrity
  • ASP may have better security and controls than a
    small company
  • Bandwidth/response time Telecommunications
    channel between ASP and company must be able to
    handle volume of transactions
  • Flexibility The ASP must be flexible in working
    with users and satisfying requests for
    modifications

17
Application Service Providers
  • ASP Disadvantages
  • No frills An ASP may not be willing to support
    3rd party software or develop custom applications
    (e.g. ABAP programs)
  • Technical, not business An ASP may know the
    technical aspects of the software but may not be
    capable of helping customers with business
    process and configuration decisions

18
Another LookUsing ERP through an ASP
  • In the 1990s, Universities that joined SAPs
    University Alliance program had to purchase a
    server (costing over 50,000) and had to train
    its own system administrators
  • SAP had to provide technical support for over 100
    university installations
  • SAP developed a hosting concept known as the
    University Competency Center (UCC)
  • Five Universities serve as ASP for other members
    in the Alliance, providing customer technical
    support for educationa specialized task

19
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20
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21
NetWeaver
  • Web Services is the combination of software tools
    that lets various programs within an organization
    communicate with other applications
  • NetWeaver is SAPs Web services platform
  • FedEx built its package tracking system on Web
    services
  • FedExs cost per inquiry has been reduced from
    2.14 to 0.04
  • Travelers Insurance Company has cut its auto
    glass claim processing costs by 30 percent using
    Web services

22
NetWeaver
  • NetWeaver is a collection of components that
    supports business processes over the Internet
  • Modules include
  • Enterprise Portal
  • Mobile Infrastructure
  • Business Intelligence
  • Master Data Management
  • Exchange Infrastructure

23
NetWeaver
  • Enterprise Portal (mySAP.com)
  • Gives users complete access (a portal) to all
    work on a single screen
  • A portal is a customizable Web site that links
    to
  • Internet
  • e-mail
  • Calendar
  • SAP R/3 system
  • Other systems
  • Users can access all required information with a
    single sign-on
  • Provides drag-and-relate capabilities

24
NetWeaver
  • Mobile Infrastructure
  • Allows users to access and work with data
    through
  • PDAs
  • Cell phones
  • Pagers
  • Provides access to data within SAP and other
    company information systems
  • A partnership between SAP and VoiceObjects AG
    will add voice capability to NetWeaver

25
NetWeaver
  • Business Intelligence (BI)
  • BI incorporates data warehouse and data mining
    tools
  • BI can be delivered in a personalized manner with
    Enterprise Portal
  • Can integrate information from various sources
    within and outside the firm
  • BI works with any database management software
    and any operating system

26
NetWeaver
  • Master Data Management
  • Provides data consistency within a companys SAP
    system
  • The grocery industry could save 25 to 50
    billion if suppliers could synchronize their
    data, such as product numbers, with retail
    outlets
  • Exchange Infrastructure
  • Allows different applications to share data
    without writing code

27
Accessing ERP over the Internet
  • ERP vendors offer access to their systems over
    the Internet using a Web browser
  • Easier to administer than special-purpose GUI
    software
  • Software upgrades are easier to administer, as
    only server (and not end-user) software needs to
    be upgraded

28
XML
  • Extensible Markup Language (XML) is the new
    programming language of the Internet
  • XML uses tags to define the data contained in Web
    pages
  • XML tags give specific meaning to data
  • HTML only specifies how information will look on
    a Web page
  • XML-coded data can go directly from a Web page to
    a database without the need for middleware
  • ERP systems are now ready to accept data in XML
    format

29
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30
Another LookXML, ERP and E-commerce
  • OxyChem realized tremendous customer service
    benefits when it linked its SAP system with a
    customers SAP system
  • This experience caused OxyChem to embark on a
    mission to link its SAP system with the
    information systems of its 5,000 customers
  • OxyChem has developed four linking strategies
  • XML-based ERP to ERP
  • Physical probes in customers raw material
    containers
  • ChemConnect Web site
  • OxyChems own Web portal

31
Radio Frequency Identification
  • Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology
    is becoming an efficient way of tracking items in
    the supply chain
  • An RFID device is a small package, or tag, with a
    microprocessor and antenna
  • Information from the RFID tag is transmitted via
    radio waves to a receiver when interrogated by an
    RFID reader
  • Does not require line-of-site contact like a bar
    code reader

32
Radio Frequency Identification
  • Wal-Mart is driving the implementation of RFID
    with its suppliers
  • Wal-Mart will connect RFID data with its Retail
    Link system, where buyers and suppliers can check
    inventory levels, sales and more
  • Proctor Gamble is using RFID technology to
    improve demand management in its supply chain to
    avoid the bullwhip effect
  • SAPs R/3 software is RFID ready
  • With NetWeaver, SAP can link RFID with both SAP
    and non-SAP systems

33
Summary
  • E-commerce is transforming the way companies do
    business. Business-to-consumer e-commerce can
    streamline a companys ordering operations and
    record information about customers that can be
    used to plan marketing campaigns, making the
    company more competitive.
  • Business-to-business e-commerce is changing the
    way companies buy and sell goods. New forms of
    procurement such as auctions, reverse auctions,
    and trading exchangesall with dynamic
    pricingare replacing the traditional
    intermediary.
  • ERP is an essential component for all forms of
    e-commerce. An integrated information system is
    required to provide speed and consistency in
    transaction processing and other back-office
    operations.

34
Summary
  • Application service providers (ASPs) are allowing
    companies to use ERP without a large initial
    investment, making ERP systems available to
    smaller companies. There are risks associated
    with using an ASP, however, and the decision to
    buy or lease must be weighed carefully.
  • Web Services, a combination of software tools
    that lets various programs within an organization
    communicate with other applications, are gaining
    popularity.
  • SAP's Web services platform is NetWeaver, which
    includes those tools for seamless Web
    connectivity, and also modules such as Business
    Intelligence, Mobile Infrastructure and Master
    Data Management.

35
Summary
  • Users of ERP systems often access those systems
    through a Web browser rather than the ERP
    systems' graphical user interface (GUI).
  • XML, extensible markup language, defines data on
    a Web page. ERP systems are using XML to
    integrate systems between suppliers and customers
    for easy data transfer.
  • RFID devices, or radio frequency identification
    devices, are used in tracking items in transit.
    RFIDs are particularly useful in supply chain
    processes for shipping and receiving cases and
    pallets of items. ERP vendors are developing the
    capability to incorporate RFID technology into
    ERP software.
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