B2B E-COMMERCE: THE THIRD WAVE
By Harsha Kumar, Tarun Sharma and Peter Fingar
In July 1997, the White House released a document declaring a revolution, “…a
revolution that is just as profound as the change in the economy that came with
the Industrial Revolution.”
The Internet is bringing profound change to the business world and has
enabled a new way of conducting business. To compete in the emerging digital
economy of the new millennium, companies will need to change their business
models, rethink the way they work and form new relationships with their trading
partners and customers. Even though e-commerce has just arrived on the business
scene, this new business framework is changing rapidly. For some
forward-thinking companies, the third wave of e-commerce has already begun.
Evolution
In its first wave, e-commerce was little more than” brochureware.”
The Web created a global repository for documents and other forms of multimedia,
enabling everyone to be a publisher of information with as little as an
HTML-enabled word processor, a free file transfer program and a $19-a-month ISP
account.
The second wave of e-commerce is well underway, giving companies the
capability to handle transactions electronically. Companies like Cisco, Dell and
Amazon.com have been successful in creating electronic storefronts for selling
while GE, Bellcore and John Hancock have streamlined purchasing of indirect
materials.
With experience as their teacher, forward-thinking companies riding the wave
of e-commerce, have come to realize that B2B e-commerce is neither just a
buy-side nor sell-side package. To them, e-commerce is an infrastructure for a
whole new way of doing business and gaining competitive advantage.
The third wave of e-commerce involves Inter-enterprise Process Engineering
(IPE). While Business Process Reengineering (BPR) was about streamlining
business processes internal to the enterprise, IPE is about streamlining and
automating business processes that unite an enterprise with its trading partners
(customers, suppliers, distributors, and so on). ERP applications sought to
streamline and link intra-company processes and systems. B2B e-commerce
applications, on the other hand, streamline and automate inter-company
processes.
Opportunities and challenges permeate the enterprise affecting R&D,
engineering, manufacturing and production, supply chains, marketing, sales, and
customer care. From this perspective it becomes clear that B2B e-commerce is not
something a corporation can just go out and buy off-the-shelf. It requires
careful thinking and planning by each company in order to identify opportunities
for streamlining interactions with its trading partners to create new business
or improve operational efficiencies.
Any two B2B e-commerce implementations, therefore, are as different as the
businesses they support. However, there are four major categories into which B2B
e-commerce applications can be roughly classified: vendor management, extended
value/supply chain, I-market and customer care.
In the vendor management category, maintenance, repair and operations (MRO)
procurement is the most common, business-to-business e-commerce application. MRO
procurement is used to reduce costs in the purchasing of office supplies and
other non-production materials needed by a business. As an example in the
procurement category, Telcordia Technologies (formerly Bellcore) implemented an
online MRO procurement system to reduce the $135 processing cost per purchase
order. In the first year alone, the company realized cost savings of $6 million
in this area.
Meanwhile, in the extended value/supply chain category, GE Aircraft Engines
used its integrated logistics solution to reduce order cycle time by 15 to 30
days and reduced the cost of creating a purchase order from $100 to $5. To be
successful, buy-side initiatives will have to deliver such breakthrough
efficiencies and achieve dramatic cost reductions.
Online catalog sales such as Cisco are examples of B2B I-Markets. As of
December 1998, Cisco conducted almost 70 percent of it commerce transactions via
the Web, expecting to generate pver $6 billion of its $10 billion revenue for
1999 over the web! Further, more than 45 percent of Cisco’s volume is directly
fulfilled from third party production lines to customers!
McKesson, a $17 billion pharmaceutical wholesaler, has developed such a
comprehensive customer care system on the Web that it has transformed itself
from a drug distribution company to a value-added provider in the healthcare
industry. To be successful, sell-side initiatives have to focues on revenue
growth opportunities, holistic customer relationship management, engineering
consumer processes that delight the user and building communities-of-interest.
Challenges In Implementation
Most companies, of course, engage in both roles
of buyer and seller, sometimes simultaneously in a single commerce transaction.
For example, an online order placed on Dell.com for a custom PC immediately
flows up Dell’s extended supply chain, thus enabling them to build-to-order
rapidly without carrying extremely high inventory costs.
Thus, extending a company’s existing business processes from the inside out
must begin with a thorough analysis and understanding of customers’, suppliers’
and trading partners’ business needs and requirements; e-commerce systems must
be designed from the outside in.
Several key challenges in implementing B2B commerce are:
- Integration of enterprise and legacy applications across enterprises:
There are a host of enterprise and legacy applications that support a
company’s business, for example:
- Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), e.g. SAP, Baan, PeopleSoft, Oracle
- Supply chain Management (SCM), e.g. i2, Manugistics, SupplyBase
- Sales Force Automation (SFA), e.g. Onyx, Siebel
- Customer Relationship Management (CRM), e.g. Silknet, Siebel
- Responsiveness to changing business requirements: The integration
nightmare described above is exacerbated by the fact that business
relationships can, and do, change on a regular basis. For example, a supplier
might decide to launch a new digital marketplace, requiring its customers to
access its products through the marketplace instead of via electronic
catalogs. Because such dynamic business interactions need to be supported by a
dynamic B2B e-commerce platform, the B2B e-Commerce implementation must be
rapidly adaptable.
- Implementation is expected in Internet Time: Unlike implementations of
traditional client-server systems that take several years to complete and
several months to upgrade, e-commerce platforms must morph dynamically as the
business needs to evolve. Release cycles measure in weeks are expected and
even necessary in order to compete.
- Lack of resources with required technical and process skills: There is an
acute shortage of the skill sets required for implementing complex dynamic B2B
applications. Technical expertise in new technologies, such as Java, EJB, XML,
application servers and security are a scare commodity. Also, the processes
required to rapidly develop, host, operate, maintain and evolve these dynamic
B2B application platforms need to be significantly more dynamic than
traditional software delivery approaches.
To summarize, implementing B2B e-commerce involves developing multiple
e-commerce applications that are customized to the unique business requirements
of the enterprise and integrating these applications with existing
legacy/enterprise applications. In addition, these applications need to be
delivered in the shortest possible time frame, keeping them adaptable and
extensible to meet evolving business requirements.
It is clear that neither traditional software platform delivery approaches,
i.e., build-from-scratch or buy-a-package applications, nor newer approaches
like renting a package application from an ASP are sufficient to support the
requirements of “dynamic e-business models”. These traditional approaches lead
to “static software”. A new unified approach to deploying and continually
evolving dynamic B2B e-commerce platforms is required.
Implementing B2B e-commerce is not an option – it is an imperative! Companies
that ignore this imperative do so at the risk of their own peril. Enterprises
must begin by defining their B2B e-commerce strategy, and act, by quickly
implementing a small piece of the puzzle, followed by a series of rapid
incremental releases. Wherever required, enterprises should get assistance from
experts in the field and out-source whatever is not their core competency in the
field of implementing e-Commerce, be it in the areas of strategy, or delivery
(development, hosting and evolution).
The time to act is now… According to Vinod Khosla, co-founder of Sun
Microsystems and partner at the top VC firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield &
Byers, “Iterate, not plan; discover, not ‘focus research’!”
Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved. The above article was
written by Harsha Kumar, Tarun Sharma, and Peter Fingar and submitted to Silicon
India magazine’s March 2000 issue. Harsha Kumar is co-founder of EC Cubed and
serves as director of product strategy. Tarun Sharma is co-founder of ED Cubed
and serves as director of product management. Peter Fingar serves as technology
advocate at ED Cubed.