ITworld.com
  Search  
 Home  Newsletter Archive  eBUSINESS TRENDS
eBusiness Trends January 10, 2002 - No. 90 EDI Service Providers: A Ray of Hope in Difficult Seas
Sign up for eBUSINESS TRENDS
More Newsletters
 Printer Friendly Format
 Mail to a friend

eBUSINESS TRENDS --- 01/10/2002



For the past three years, the Internet and ecommerce dominated discussions of businesses' plans for better connecting with buyers and/or suppliers. A quick comparison of current ecommerce activity with ongoing electronic data interchange (EDI) activity makes it clear, however, just how embryonic is the role of ecommerce in the world of business. Large companies in many industries depend upon EDI networks to tightly link their own and business partners' logistics, inventory, and manufacturing resource-planning (MRP) applications with minimal user intervention.
 On this topic
 Newsletters
 E-business Insights. Sign up Now!
 More news on this subject
EBay buys Taiwan's NeoCom in bid for Asian market

Internet traffic jam to be unstuck

Chilling Effects site explains Net users' legal rights

Lycos launches paid search and inclusion services

IBM recruits partners for life sciences push
 White Papers
 Laying the Foundation for Business Continuity
 IT resources to go: An annual subscription to TechNet on CD or DVD
Search the Newsletter Archives
View the eBUSINESS TRENDS Archive

Figure 1
Worldwide EDI Commerce and B2B ecommerce, 2000-2003 http://www.idc.com/en_US/images/newsletter/ebt20020110g1.gif

In 2001, the total value of goods and services businesses purchased through ecommerce systems was $0.5 trillion; for EDI systems run by EDI service providers such as GE GXS, IBM, Peregrine, and Sterling Commerce/SBC, it was $1.8 trillion.

This large difference actually understates the disparity. Internet- enabled EDI, that area of overlap between ecommerce and EDI, will account for 33.3% of all business-to-business (B2B) ecommerce in 2001. Excluding this segment, the value of goods and services purchased through EDI systems is currently six times greater than the value of purchases through non-EDI-related ecommerce systems (see Figure 1).

EDI Service Providers: A Wind at Their Back.
EDI service providers, commonly referred to as EDI value-added networks (VANs), spent the past 20 years creating and operating today's EDI solutions, but they received scant attention during the past four years of Internet and ecommerce expansion. In today's economic environment, however, the traditional EDI service providers are emerging as the critical, if not leading, builders and operators of important ebusiness solutions.

They have an installed base of large, multinational companies (both buyers and suppliers) that already depend upon them to run critical business applications and interact with business partners. They also have the customers, the network, the experience, and (most importantly in today's world of tight finance) a reliable revenue stream to fund new investments.

.but Rough Seas Loom
The critical challenge for the traditional EDI service providers relates to their perceived value -- that is, they are primarily viewed as a provider of network transport, not as a provider of value-added business services such as enabling suppliers and providing quality assurance and business process integration.

The advent of lower-cost Internet technologies and public IP networks represents both an opportunity for and a threat to EDI service providers. They can leverage these new technologies to reduce internal network operating costs and enhance the functionality of their existing EDI solutions, but they also face the risk of cut-rate Internet-based alternatives for basic EDI data transport. Such solutions are a direct threat to current cash-flow streams.

Today's EDI service providers must parlay their existing investment in network infrastructure, technical and operation expertise, and predictable cash flow into new initiatives that focus on business processes such as supply-chain management, service provisioning (e.g., telecommunications), and collaborative product design. XML will be a critical component in this strategy, but it will also require the building of tighter links between EDI service providers and the vendors of leading business application software products.

-- Rick Villars

Use this link to see the eNewsletter on our web site: http://www.idc.com/getdoc.jhtml?containerId=ebt20020110

 



www.itworld.com    open.itworld.com     security.itworld.com     smallbusiness.itworld.com
storage.itworld.com     utilitycomputing.itworld.com     wireless.itworld.com

 
Contact Us   About Us   Privacy Policy    Terms of Service   Reprints  

CIO   Computerworld   CSO   GamePro   Games.net   Industry Standard   Infoworld   ITworld  
JavaWorld   LinuxWorld  MacUser   Macworld   Network World   PC World   Playlist  

DEMO   IDG Connect   IDG Knowledge Hub   IDG TechNetwork   IDG World Expo  

Copyright © Computerworld, Inc. All rights reserved

Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of Computerworld Inc. is prohibited. Computerworld and Computerworld.com and the respective logos are trademarks of International Data Group Inc.