Last week I had a review of our mapping process with our lead data mapper. Ken is a man of over 20 years experience in the EDI and data mapping world. He has contributed to international EDI standards and even written a standard for the Paper industry. He knows what he is talking about. He is also a strange being who delights in the minutiae of data mapping and he enjoys nothing better than solving the problems inherent in getting one computer system to talk to another.
We were looking, as we do on a regular basis, at how we could improve the mapping process, automate more and therefore offer a better service for our customers, which of course leads to better profit. One thing we homed in on was the number of different mappings we have created for our customers and their partners.
Having looked at that number, we then looked at the number of standards available that users either are or could use. The numbers are staggering. In EDI in the UK and Europe we mainly see Tradacoms and EDIFACT. Of course there are various versions of each and in particular with EDIFACT one persons EDIFACT D96a order is not the same as another persons.
We then looked at XML, once touted as the great hope for simplifying EDI. Over 500 standards, and a lot of the standards are varied by the end user.
We then looked at ways we send and receive messages, 10 basic methods (AS2, EDI VAN, FTP, email etc) and most FTPs have slightly different requirements (e.g. do we delete the file when download or archive it) and HTTPS is different for each user we implement for.
Now we actually enjoy all this variety but we then thought about users, not our users, but users that were trying to implement EDI themselves. Don't get me wrong, we do not do anything our users could not do for themselves BUT the question is at what cost. Given the variety of message standards and comms methods around your average customer that either buys or supplies goods to and from various parties will need at least one, more likely two specialist to handle any significant EDI initiative.
If they have an IT department the skills may be present but here's the question. If you business is buying, selling, manufacturing or distributing widgets do you want your IT team spending their time trying to integrate with one of your trading partners or do you want them to concentrate on adding value to your core business activities? Integrated EDI will add to your bottom line, but not if it is diverting you and your team from your main business.
This is where the value of outsourced EDI can be found. Firstly does EDI make sense for your business. We do a simple activity based costing exercise with some of our customers to identify when EDI will add to their bottom line. Once this is done we can then look at the costs of "Do it yourself" against outsourced EDI. For any significant EDI program, outsourcing wins easily.
A friend of mine in the pub on Friday asked me why I don't do DIY at home. My answer was simple, I know what I am good at, and DIY isn't one of those things. When I did try DIY in the past I would find I would have to buy tools and materials, most of which I would never use again and then I would have to pay someone else to correct what I have done anyway, so there is no saving. The same should apply in business, do what you are good at, and leave the nasty world of EDI to someone that enjoys it, it will save you money.
Sunday, March 16, 2008
The Complexities of EIPP or EDI make it prime for Outsourcing
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