Title: Ebusiness Second presentation
1E-business Second presentation
- E-business and value chain integration
- Case
- E-business in the automotive value chain
- 11.9 2003
- Anders Hellebust
- Institutt for ledelse og organisasjon
- BI
2Agenda
- E-commerce and e-business - relations to value
chain integration - Main dimensions of e-business and core areas
- Status and trends
- It is in e-business and B2B the revolution will
come and it is the development of e-business
driven value chains that is most important - Transaction costs
- The functions of market places hubs (value
chain networks) - The development towards total e-business in value
chains - Case studies
- The Automotive industry
- The oil and gas industry
- Discussion
3E-business and the value chain
- E-business is the transformation of key business
processes through the use of Internet
technologies - E-business management is the planning and
execution of front-end and back-end operations in
a supply chain unsing the Internet - E-business will have a significant impact on
supply chain integration we have only scratched
the surface
4E-business and impact on value chain integration
- Information integration
- Planning syncronization
- Workflow coordination e-collaboration
- New business models
5E-Business and Supply Chain Integration H. Lee
and S. Whang, Stanford University
Table 1 Supply Chain Integration Dimensions
6Ronald Coase and transaction costs
Ronald Coase first introduced the concept of
transaction costs in the late 1930s. He tried to
determine why some industries are organized into
only a few large firms, while others are
organized very differently He tried to find out
the boundaries of the firm
7Ronald Coase today
- Today, transaction cost economics is used largely
to explain phenomena such as vertical
integration, outsourcing, corporate governance
and the boundaries of the firm - What is my companys core area, what can other
companies to cheaper than my firm and could be
outsourced, and what should be merged and
integrated? - That means vertical integration or virtual
integration
8What are transaction costs?
- There is often a large amount of effort that goes
into choosing, organizing, negotiating and
entering contracts. The costs associated to
these efforts are called transaction costs, and
are generally independent of the price of the
contracted product or service itself. - Transaction costs are also to find the best
companies to collaborate, outsource or merge with - On Internet, companies may get secure information
about suppliers and partners in minutes. Lower
transaction costs may therefore lead to rapid
changes in alliances, outsourcing and merging - Transaction costs are enormous lower on internet
and companies must evaluate what are their core
area, what should they outsorce and what
alliances should be preferred
9Transaction costs in procurement and in the value
chain
- Transaction costs are also costs to search and
find products and services to buy (market
communication) , to negotiate on prices and
delivery conditions - There are also transaction costs in collaboration
among companies in value chains on development of
product design, product development, operation
and maintainance
10The Impact of the Internet on Transaction Costs
- The most significant impact of the Internet on
the business community is the reduction of
transaction costs both for e-commerce and
e-business - and it is precisely these cost reductions that
have made the Internet such a perplexing medium
in which to conduct business. - Paul Sholz What are Transaction Costs?
http//www.firstmonday.dk/issues/issue6_5/sholtz/
author
11Transaction costs
- Transaction costs are so firmly ingrained in the
physical world that we largely take them for
granted and naturally incorporate their effects
into our business thinking when we move online. - In the physical world, most industries are
arranged into long and complex value chains, the
shapes of which are largely organized by
transaction costs. - These value chains are populated with middlemen
who prosper by taking a "cut" out of every
transaction they organize within their sphere of
influence. - Since the process of changing key suppliers and
distributors in the physical world is so lengthy
and involved, most buyers and sellers simply live
with the "cut" imposed by middlemen rather than
attempt to economize on transaction costs
12Transaction costs on the Internet
- On the Internet, the transaction costs associated
with most forms of commerce largely disappear (or
at least decrease by several orders of
magnitude). - This does not necessarily imply that middlemen
have no place on the Internet - there is ample
evidence to suggest that many new types of
intermediaries will prove quite successful
online. - Online enterprises that attempt to artificially
integrate and profit from transaction costs have
had the most trouble staying in business
recently. Business-to-business exchanges are
perhaps the most visible example of this
phenomenon.
13Internet and market places (hubs) reduces
inefficiencies and transaction costs
14E-business will dramatically reduce the
transaction costs
- Transaction costs stem from a wide variety of
sources and are believed to represent over one
third of all economic activity in the United
States.(McKinsey) - Can be reduced to 1/5 by
- Digitising and webitising of transaction
processes - Building common technological platforms hubs (VC
networks) and applications for collaboration - Standardisation and best practice
15Different market places/ hubs and categories of
products
- Hubs (market places)
- Horizontal
- Vertical
- Products
- Direct (strategic)
- Indirect
16Trends
Value Chain Network (Net Supply Chain)
S Supplyer B Buyer M Market place/ hub
Brochure-warepublicize on-line,
sell off-line Basic eCommerceone-to-one
selling from website
B2B eCommerceenabling commerce through
many-to-many commerce
S
B
B
S
S
B
B
S
M
M
S
B
M
M
B
S
EDI Networksexpensive, closed, non-scalable
S
B
S
B
B
B
S
M
S
S
B
B
S
B
S
B
S
S
B
B
S
K
S
B
B
Market efficiency
S
Real time integration among byers and sellers
systems SupplyChain Integration and
e-collaboration
S
S
Time 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
Source Morgan Stanley Internet Research
17Trends
Value Chain Network (Net Supply Chain)
S Supplyer B Buyer M Market place/ hub
Brochure-warepublicize on-line,
sell off-line Basic eCommerceone-to-one
selling from website
B2B eCommerceenabling commerce through
many-to-many commerce
S
B
B
S
S
B
B
S
M
M
S
B
M
M
B
S
EDI Networksexpensive, closed, non-scalable
S
B
S
B
B
B
S
M
S
S
B
B
S
B
S
B
"B2B is about much more than matching buyers and
sellers... it is about connecting the shared
business and information processes of the
extended trading networks, including multi-party
product design, manufacturing planning, strategic
sourcing, shipping and logistics, inventory
management and customer management, to name a
few.
S
S
B
B
S
K
S
B
B
Market efficiency
S
Real time integration among byers and sellers
systems SupplyChain Integration and
e-collaboration
S
S
Time 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
Source Morgan Stanley Internet Research
18Trends
Value Chain Network (Net Supply Chain)
S Supplyer B Buyer M Market place/ hub
Brochure-warepublicize on-line,
sell off-line Basic eCommerceone-to-one
selling from website
B2B eCommerceenabling commerce through
many-to-many commerce
S
B
B
S
S
B
B
S
M
M
S
B
M
M
B
S
EDI Networksexpensive, closed, non-scalable
S
B
S
B
B
B
S
M
S
S
B
B
S
B
S
B
S
S
B
B
S
K
S
The possibilty to share information with value
chain partner may give enourmous reductions of
transaction costs The problem today is
technological standards for communication and
information management. Suppliers and buyers use
different standards and have problems to see the
win win by collaboration.
B
B
Market efficiency
S
Real time integration among byers and sellers
systems SupplyChain Integration and
e-collaboration
S
S
Time 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
Source Morgan Stanley Internet Research
19What Companies are Asking For?
The Value of E-Marketplaces (hubs)
Source AMR Research
20Buyer Benefits
- Lower transaction costs
- Greater negotiation power
- Streamlined sourcing
- Faster time to market
- Real time access to market information
- Collaboration
21Seller Benefits
- Increased exposure to new sales opportunities
- Overcome inefficiencies in channel or
manufacturing process - Reduce costs of excess and obsolete inventory
- New partnership potential
22- The barriers to procuring online are
- requires face-to-face interaction (34,6 )
- suppliers do not sell online (32,6 )
- concerns about data protection and security
issues (30,6 ) - technology is expensive (24,2 )
- cost advantage is insignificant (20,6 )
- suppliers technical systems are not
compatible (11,9 ) - and who benefits most from e-business?
- 11,4 SME will benefit most
- 38,4 Large enterprises will benefit most
- 43,6 Will benefit equally
- 2,1 No one will benefit
23Three main trends for the company developments
towardstotal e-business suite
- Companies integrate their applications,
especially - ERP (Enterprice Resource planning)
- CRM (Customer Relationship Management)
- SCM (Supply Chain Management)
- Webifisation (Internet) of these company
internal applications - Webifisation and standardisation of proprietary
product development and managing systems - CAD (Computor Aided Design) 3D-models
- CAM (computor Aided Management)
- CAE (Computor Aided Engineering)
- Gives enormous possibilities for collaboration in
a value chain within a common hub
24Three main trends for the company developments
towardstotal e-business suite (cont.)
- When all processes or transactions are digitised
and webifised, companies may collaborate with
other companies through market places
(e-collaboration) - The market place develops to be an information
hub (value chain network) for all business
processes (transactions) - Supply chain management (SCM) better Demand
chain management (DCM) is what all is about
(pull not push) - Value Chain management
25A market place is more than buying and selling
...
- It is about e-collaboration to drastically ease
the information process in the whole value chain
to develop, produce and deliver products - It is the connection of the companies internal
digital business processes (ERP, SCM, CRM, and
the product development systems (CAD,CAM, CAE)
with the hub and other companies corresponding
processes, that gives the gains and may result in
the transformation of the value chain - Remember e-business management is the planning
and execution of front-end and back-end
operations in a supply chain using the Internet
26Problems Stem From
Need to integrate and optimize business
processes Organizations boundaries are no longer
fixed
27Actually Want This
Sell Space
Business Processes
Customer Support Selling
Internal Space
Manufacturing Legal Finance Assembling
Online Systems
Buy Space
Integrated information and Access to that
information
Design Systems
Procuring
ERP/MRP Systems
Requirements Systems
Systems
Procurement Systems
28But Have This
Sell Space
Business Processes
Customer Support Selling
Internal Space
Manufacturing Legal Finance Assembling
Online Systems
Buy Space
Silos of information and Limited single point
access to that information
Design Systems
Procuring
ERP/MRP Systems
Requirements Systems
Systems
Procurement Systems
29Trends in the development of vertical hubs
experiences so far..
- One three hubs will dominate within each
industry sector (auto industry, oil- and gas
industry, etc.) And they will be integrated with
horisontal marketplaces - The hubs will be dominated and owned by heavy
players within the industry sectors (buyers and
main suppliers) - The development of overall and common solutions
(end-to end-solutions) through strategic
alliances among system integrators - The hubs will develop collaboration forms that
will transform the value chains and the
industries
30The auto industrys Covisint
- Joint venture among
- Car producers Ford, GM, Daimler/Crysler,
Nissan/Renault, PSA Pegeout Citroen og Mitsubishi
Motor (in USA) - System integrators Commerce One and Oracle
- Power battles among producers and suppliers
- Covisint is model or best practice for other
industry sectors Forrester Research Covisint
will transform the auto industry
31Covisint.com
Use Internet and common standards and
applications to receive transparency in the value
chain translate a linear model to a much more
productive and effective net work
model http//www.covisint.com
32Why Covisint?
- The main aim is through integration and
e-collaboration to reduce costs and increased
efficiency in the whole car industry - Concrete business aims
- Reduce the production costs of cars with about
Euro 3.000 - Reduce the design process of new models to 12
months - Develop customer relationship management (CRM)
that makes it possible to deliver customised cars
within few days
33The importance of reverse bidding (RB) or
strategic sourcing
- In the beginning the main emphasis was on
procurement of indirect products, but today
procurement of direct products are increasing - DaimlerCrysler with RB for 3 billion Euro om
direct products, also complex products - Total procurement on Covisint in the 9 first
months of 2001 was 17 bill Euro - RB has got enormous importance and may represent
a shift of paradigm
34Example of Reverse Bidding
35A shift of paradigm?
Reverse bidding has proved that it is an
outstanding tool of procurement, also for more
complex orders. But the conditions are detailed
specifications of the products to
auction Covisint, 2001 Johannes Rudnitzy
Mercedes Benz
36Supply Chain management before Covisint and the
Internet
- A typical car is composed of more than 200.000
components, delivered from about 200 different
suppliers (vendors) that must deliverjust in
time - Already from the seventies the car manufactorers
used CAD, CAM og CAE tools for collaboration
of design, management and engineering - These tools contributed to reduce the time to
bring a new model to the market from five to
three years - Business Week How the web is retooling
Detroit 27.11 2000.
37Supply Chain management on Covisint and the
Internet
- The next wave that takes place today is to
connect all these internal and proprietary
applications to the web start with design and
end with the customer (car buyer) - When this works, team from different locations in
the world can look at their PC displays (or
handheld devices) and make changes and
corrections that may be evaluated by all
participants (E2E) - The supply chain develops to be a value chain
where all, from the 3.tier- to the 2.tier to the
main supplier (1.tier) and the car manufatorer,
are connected directly in the development process
- upstream - The car buyer may also be connected in the value
chain (design, buying (problems with
distributors) downstream - The competition is among value chains, using the
same platform or hub (competition among the Ford,
GM and DC value chain)
38E-collaboration on design and product development
- Covisint has developed common applications for
e-collaboration on design, 3D models and product
development etc and has selected MatrixOne (used
already by big car manufactorers) - MatrixOne creates a virtual project workspace
that supports - workflow and routing of documents,
- strategic sourcing,
- 3D visualization and design,
- Engineering and product management
- Workflow and product description
- Possible to develop aut models 30 40 faster
than earlier
39The Engineering Process
Goal Quality, Time, Costs
Concept Development
Design
Quote
Industrial Engineering
Production
Quality Control and Project Management
40E-collaboration in SCM
- Common applications for SCM (SupplySolution
Product) - Ford has connected its supply chain to Covisint
with this tool (4200 suppliers) - GM and DaimlerCrysler are now doing the same
- Delphi the worlds biggest auto main supplier
are connecting its 5500 suppliers to Covisint -
its cheaper to connect to the Covisint
infrastructure, that already exists , than
starting from scratch. - Johnson Controls Inc, that delivers components to
23 million cars, are connecting its 86 factories,
plus thousands of part suppliers to Covisint
41Supply chain management (cont.)
- The whole value chain from raw material
suppliers, 3. 2 and 1tier (main) suppliers and
the auto makers, are connected in a common hub
(and later the car buyer?) - The auto producers inform the suppliers in real
time about status of sales and give statistics
so that the suppliers automatically may maintain
their stores - Makes a platform for e-collaboration
42Competition to make the best products from the
same platform not the best technological
solutions
- You want to win the bigger game of running the
best car and truck company, not the technology
game of whom has the best solutions. There are
certain things in this industry that will make
the industry move faster if we standardize it." - A lack of standards could mean each auto company
and its respective suppliers would spend millions
of dollars on information technology to build
separate pipelines to communicate with one
another - Ralph Szygenda, GM and board member of Covisint
43Covisint has reached critical mass
- 11 global auto producers are members
- One hundret millions transactions each month
among 2000 suppliers and car producers - 30 of 40 main suppliers take part
- Toyota and VolksWagen have different hubs, but
may join Covisint or develop common standards and
applications
44Who benefits most from Covisint?
- The auto producers Fords claims to have saved
more money in efficiencis than they have plowed
in the hub during the last year (2001) (for
instance cost from 300 to 15 20 for an order) - What about the main suppliers (1.tier)
- Earlier heavy resistance and
- The main suppliers are now members of the board
and have influence in the development of Covisint - What about the part suppliers?
45What about the suppliers that do not use
Covisint?
- Covisint expects that all main suppliers takes
their part suppliers to the hub - 77 of the main suppliers expects that the
number of part supplier will be reduced
considerably next year - Only the suppliers who can do business
Covisint-style will survive - AMR Research
46Importance for Norwegian industry?
- Large parts of Norwegian industry are affected
- Raw material production Hydro Aluminium and
Bjølvefossen - Main suppliers
- Hydro Automotive Structure Raufoss (bumpers)
- Kongsberg Automotive (Chassis)
- And their part suppliers
- Will they do e-business Covisint-style?
- Will we have the same problems in other
industries and for Norwegian companies in
general?