Title: Commerce Chain Management
1Commerce Chain Management
- Stan Lepeak
- Vice President
- Electronic Business Strategies
2eBusiness Marketplace
G2000 Org
3What Are the ebusiness Pressures?
What are the critical skillsets required to
deliver effective EB solutions? What role should
external parties play? How should EB initiatives
be managed?
- Partner/Customer Demands
- Collaboration
- Design requirements
- Supply requirements
- Corp. Mgmt. Demands
- Revenue vs. efficiency
- ROI???
- Time to market
- LOB/Constituency Demands
- Evolving user requirements
- Greater accountability/scrutiny
- Financial clout
EB Team
- Staffing/Personnel Challenges
- Constrained talent pool
- Retraining/re-skilling required
- Technical skills far outweigh sales/marketing
skills
- Technology Challenges
- New business/application functionality
- Tools are not mature
- Legacy service levels must be maintained
4How Do I Determine eBusiness Effort Value?
- Construct potential scenario(s) from identified
opportunities threats - Derive value case(s) for each scenario
- For each value case, develop an associated
tactical plan - Highly iterative process
5Innovation Portfolio
- Tactical plans created for each e-opportunity
value case - Each tactical planning exercise includes
- Course(s) of action
- Limiting-factors analysis
- Time-phased planning
- Goal is speed in decision making amid incomplete
information
6How Do I Organize for ebusiness?
CEO/ Board
Partners Customers
Influence
Influence
Influence
Other LOBs
IT
Influence
Product Development
Influence
Influence
Influence
Sales, Service, Marketing
Supply Chain Management
CIO, CTO, CFO, CCO, etc.
7E-organization Components
8How Important is Content to ebusiness?
Collection Approval
B2E
Content
Intranet/ Portals KM
B2B
Product Info
Commerce
Sharing
Collaborate
Document Management
Integration
Analytics
Catalog
Community Services
Personalization
Search
B2C
9What Comprises a Corp.com Strategy?
10What Are Key ebusiness Technologies?
- Integration
- Collaboration
- Analytics
- Process optimization
- Personalization
- Supply Chain Mgt.
- Content Management
- Security
- Services
- Infrastructure and ops flexibility
11What Comprises Sell-Side Commerce?
- Managing channels
- Understanding demand
- Enabling customers to buy
- Leveraging in place infrastructure
- Integrating best-of-breeds
- Product/service lifecycle mgt.
- Appointing service provider(s)
- Time to volume
- Integrated CRM, logistics
How Effective Is the Backbone?
Sell Maturity Model
12Sell-Side Architecture
- Leverage in-place infrastructure and applications
when possible - Enable catalogs, configurations, processes,
prices content to change dynamically - Integrate applications and data to present a
personalized experience
Outside In vs. Inside Out
Leveraging the ERP Web
Database Business Logic
App Server
App Server
Web Browser
Web Browser
Traditional C/S
13What Comprises Buy-Side Commerce?
- Understanding types of procurement
- Indirect
- Direct
- Managing suppliers and components
- Participating in marketplaces (suppliers and
buyers)
14Procurement Politics
- Focus on internal costs and processes for
commodity procurement - Focus on asset management/maintenance for MRO
procurement - Focus on SC efficiency and product management for
direct procurement - Tactics first, then strategy
- Integrated procurement by 2001
No Wonder Its So Difficult . . .
New Product Development
Manufacturing
Asset Management
SourcingDesign
MaintenanceRepair Operations
Production Maintenance Execution Quality
Accounts PayableAccounts ReceivableGeneral
Ledger
Customer Self-Service
SupplyChainPlanning
Customer ServiceField ServiceProduct Config
PurchasingDistributionInventory
Customer Management
Logistics
Financial
15Direct Procurement More Bang for the Buck?
- Focus direct procurement efforts on
- Supplier management
- Component rationalization
- Integration with product life cycle
- Supply chain visibility
16What Are Characteristics of Net Markets?
- Equity investment
- Regulation
- Finance
- Staffing
- Globalization
- Channel mastery
- Channel/customer relationship management
- Co-opetition
Trusted Intermediary Components/Services
17Why Net Markets Are Critical
- Matchmaking
- Reduce friction between suppliers and buyers
- Add value to complex processes
- Decrease cost of commodity products/services
- Extend reach to unserved markets
- But dont expect huge revenues all the time
All Net Markets Are Not Created Equal
Net Market Maturity Model
Tasks
Product categories, text, e-mail communications
E-Classifieds
1
Better links to suppliers, fulfillment
transactions
E-Mail
2
Buyer-market-supplier integration,mostly
comms/trans
E- Market
3
E- Hub
EPI for market/industry
4
Phases
Results
Catalogs, price history,in-depth product
info,links to fulfillment, offlinetransactions
Advertisment/Listing
Commerce Chain Optimization
End-to-endelectronic bond/process integration
Online transactions,integrated fulfillment
Buyer-to-supplierintegration viahub services
Inter-Enterprise Integration
Consolidator Model Change
Intra-Enterprise Integration
Relationships
18Net Market-tecture
- ERP vs. best-of-breed backbones
- Application integration/middleware
- Inter-enterprise integration
- Websourcing providers
- Operations sourcing
- Collaboration
- Transaction/order management
- Billing
- Catalog content management
- Content management and personalization
3-Month vs. 2-Year Deployment
Transport, Security/SSO, Availability, Uptime,
Application Mgt., etc.
Operations
19Commerce Chain Management Bottom Line
Summary
- Integrate partners, customers, content, and
commerce to drive sell-side success - Pursue buy-side commerce tactically, but evolve
toward integrated strategy - Sell side commerce equals integration, CRM, and
the other CRM. - Participate in Net markets to drive revenue,
create efficiencies, and/or maintain
relationships - Understand that the e-business end game is a sum
of all the parts