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Title: Lecturer: Ellis E' Confer


1
Internet Supply Chain Management ECT 481
Spring 2006
  • Lecturer Ellis E. Confer
  • E-mail econfer_at_cs.depaul.edu
  • Office Hours Monday 400 530 pm

2
Session Number 1
  • Session Date March 27, 2006
  • Session Objectives
  • Introductions Administrative Items
  • Course Overview
  • Initial Course Topics
  • Assignments
  • Session Topics Introduction to Supply Chain
    Management B2B Systems
  • Course Administration Overview
  • Historical Perspective on Internet Ecommerce
    Evolution
  • B2B Ecommerce Overview
  • Supply Chain Management Overview     

3
ECT 481 Course Objectives
  • To examine the links between business strategy,
    information system technology architecture, and
    technical platform implementation as it relates
    to Supply Chain Management and Business-to-Busines
    s E-Commerce.

4
Course Description
  • ECT 481 - Internet Supply Chain Management
  • This course examines e-business strategies,
    architectures, technologies, approaches, and
    infrastructure requirements in the context of
    supply chain management (SCM). The focus is on
    the design, development, and implementation of
    e-business systems that facilitate the
    collaboration of an enterprise with its buyers
    and suppliers. Topics include SCM, global
    logistics management, messaging-based
    collaboration framework, extensible markup
    language (XML), extensible style sheet language
    (XSL), document type definition (DTD), and web
    services. This course also examines the
    integration of e-business systems and back-end
    systems such as enterprise resource planning
    (ERP) systems, virtual private networks (VPN),
    and internet security. Students will implement a
    collaborative extranet system component in team
    projects. Prerequisite ECT 425. Programming
    knowledge of or experience with ASP, ASP.NET,
    Java, Visual Basic, or VB Script will be helpful
    and is highly recommended.

5
Prerequisites Text and Supplementary Reading
Materials
  • Prerequisites ECT425, Technical
    Fundamentals of Distributed Information Systems,
    is a required prerequisite. Programming knowledge
    of or experience with ASP, ASP.NET, Java, Visual
    Basic, or VB Script will be helpful and is highly
    recommended.
  • 1. Building B2B Applications with XML by Michael
    Fitzgerald published by John Wiley Sons, Inc.,
    Wiley Computer Publishing 2001, ISBN
    0-471-40401-2.
  • 2. Introduction to Supply Chain Management, by
    Robert B. Handfield and Ernest L. Nichols, Jr.,
    Prentice Hall, 1999, ISBN 0-13-621616-1
  • 3. Other books will be referred to and handouts
    and web-links will be given as appropriate.

6
Grading Procedure
  • The students final grade will be based on a
    weighted average of the exam score, the project
    report deliverables, project presentation, and
    class participation. Weights are as follows
  • Weight
  • HW Assignments 20
  • Project 35
  • Midterm Exam 20
  • Final Exam 20
  • Class Participation 5
  • Grades will be determined as follows
  •  
  •  

7
Procedures and policies
  • 1. No makeup exams will be given.
  • 2. Homework assignments must be turned in on
    time.
  • Late homework assignments will not be accepted.
  • Turning in a hard copy version of an
    assignment is the most reliable way to ensure
    that assignments are received on time. When
    transmitting a soft copy of an assignment via
    email, make sure to give yourself adequate time
    for the mail to be delivered by no later than the
    day when the assignment is due. Email delivery
    problems do occur, please ask for a receipt of
    delivery.

8
ECT 481 Tentative Schedule of Discussions
  • Session 1 Course Administration
    Overview
  •          Supply Chain Management Overview
  •          B2B Ecommerce Overview
  •          Business Trends Opportunities
    Challenges
  •  
  • Session 2 Supply-Chain Management ERP
  •          Supply Chain Value Chain
    Considerations (continued)
  •          Enterprise Requirements Planning
  •          Technical and Process Architectural
    Considerations
  •  
  • Session 3 B2B Systems Architecture Key
    Technology
  •          Architectural Considerations
    (continued)
  •          Design Development Processes
  •          Key Technology
  •          XML

9
ECT 481 Tentative Schedule of Discussions
(continued)
  • Session 4 1st Homework Assignment Due
  •   XML
  •          XML as a Content Development Tool
    Internet-based EDI
  •          Syntax Document Structure 
  • Session 5 MIDTERM EXAM
  • XML (continued)
  •  
  • Project Abstracts Due
  • Session 6 XML (continued)
  • Web Services
  •         
  • Session 7 Web Services (continued)

10
ECT 481 Tentative Schedule of Discussions
(continued)
Session 8 Middleware Security
Considerations Future Trends Emerging
Techniques and Technology - Independent Supply
Networks - Collaborative Planning and
Forecasting - Collaborative Transportation
Planning - Impact of Radio Frequency
Identification Devices (RFID) - Impact
of Wireless Cellular Technology Session 9
FINAL EXAM Session 10 No
class Session 11 Project
Presentations
11
Logistics
  • Class time Monday evenings from 545 pm to 900
    pm.
  • Class location Downtown Campus, Room (TBD)
  • Rest periods (two options to choose from)
  • Option 1 One thirty (30) minute break _at_ 730 pm
  • Option 2 Two fifteen (15) minute breaks _at_ 715
    pm 830 pm
  • Office hours - Monday, 400 pm 530 pm in room
    TBD
  • Email address econfer_at_cti.depaul.edu

12
Instructor background Who Am I?
  • Professional experience
  • 20 years experience as consultant and
    entrepreneur
  • Stints with Accenture, IBM, Sybase, Tandem, CNA
    Financial
  • Presently senior executive with consultancy
    software development firms
  • Educational training
  • BSEE from University of Michigan
  • Concentration in digital design and solid state
    physics
  • MBA from Indiana University
  • Concentration in finance operations research
  • Leisure interests/hobbies
  • gardening, music, fine dining, motorcycling,
    reading (non-fiction)

13
Introductions
  • Who are you?
  • Please send me an email message with the
    following.
  • Your name?
  • What is your profession (student or otherwise)?
  • What is your major?
  • Where are you in your graduate/undergraduate
    program?
  • Why are you taking this course?
  • What do you hope to learn from this course?
  • Rated skill profile (project manager, process
    analyst, designer, developer, etc.) from 1
    (novice) to 5 (expert).
  • Favorite websites (2 or more) and (briefly)
    reasons why.
  • Anything else you feel is interesting and
    appropriate.

14
E-commerce B2B Marketplaces Origins and
Evolution
Discussion Agenda
  • Objectives
  • Discussion Baseline
  • Evolutionary Perspectives Industry Comparisons
  • Brief History of Ecommerce B2B Systems
  • The BIG Picture B2B Market Perspective

15
E-commerce B2B Marketplaces Origins and
Evolution Evolutionary Perspectives Industry
Comparisons
But first..Lets put everything into perspective.
  • There is no new thing under the sun
  • Ecclesiastes, Chapter 1, Verse 9
  • He who forgets the past is condemned to repeat
    it.
  • Jorge Santayana

16
An Interesting Quote
  • "Let us not forget that the value of this great
    system does not lie primarily in its extent or
    even in its efficiency. Its worth depends on the
    use that is made of it..For the first time in
    human history we have available to us the ability
    to communicate simultaneously with millions of
    our fellowmen, to furnish entertainment,
    instruction, widening vision of national problems
    and national events. An obligation rests on us to
    see that it is devoted to real service and to
    develop the material that is transmitted into
    that which is really worthwhile."
  • Who said this? Bill Gates? Newt Gingrich? Al
    Gore? Alvin Toffler?

17
Perspective on the Internet, Ecommerce and
Earlier Technology Innovations
  • Internet is a change agent in global commerce.
  • There have been comparable periods of industrial
    change.
  • Internet and Ecommerce evolution expansion is
    similar when compared and contrasted with
  • railroad,
  • telegraph,
  • telephone, and
  • radio.
  • In all cases, early pioneers (practitioners,
    inventors, etc.) knew they were on to something.

18
E-commerce B2B Marketplaces Origins and
Evolution
Parallels between the evolution of telegraph,
radio, and the Internet.
  • Each transmits intangible items (i.e.,
    information).
  • Each shortened the time to transfer info.
  • Their utility (i.e., their ability to deliver
    products services) is dependent on the efficacy
    and efficiency of their underlying network.
  • All had initial usability, training,
    infrastructure problems.
  • All have or are experiencing the S-curve in
    lifecycle product development.

19
E-commerce B2B Marketplaces Origins and
Evolution
Discussion Objectives
  • Establish a discussion context regarding
    Ecommerce B2B marketplaces.
  • Discuss historical and market perspective for
    the evolution of Ecommerce B2B marketplaces.

20
Mission Critical (Important) Terminology
  • E-Commerce
  • Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
  • Business-to-Business (B2B)
  • Supply Chain Management
  • Business Process Re-engineering (BPR)
  • Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
  • Intranet
  • Extranet
  • Security
  • Firewall
  • Virtual Private Network

21
E-commerce B2B Marketplaces Origins and
Evolution
Discussion Baseline Terminology Defined
  • Electronic Commerce or E-commerce - the conduct
    of a financial transaction by electronic means
    more recently, the purchase of goods and services
    over the Internets World Wide Web. Includes the
    following types
  • Business-to-Business or B2B E-commerce -
    inter-organizational E-commerce
  • Business-to-Consumer or B2C E-commerce -
    electronic commercial interaction between the
    enterprise and the end consumer.
  • Business-to-Employee or B2E E-commerce-
    intra-organizational E-commerce.

22
Distinguishing B2B B2C
  • B2B E-commerce is the exchange of products,
    services, or information between businesses
    rather than between businesses and consumers.
  • e-Business.
  • Suppliers and Big Cs - transactions between
    businesses.
  • Focus on transaction efficiency.
  • B2C E-commerce the retailing of goods and
    services directly to end consumers via the
    Internet.
  • Suppliers little Cs transactions between
    goods and service providers and end consumers.
  • Dis-intermediation.
  • (theoretically) lowers inventory and
    distributions costs.

23
Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) defined
  • EDI Inter-company, computer-to-computer
    communication of data which permits the receiver
    to perform the function of a standard business
    transaction and is in a predefined standard
    format.
  • Enabled Old-school B2B E-commerce. It still
    works.
  • Enables electronic intra-company exchange of
    purchase orders and other transaction documents.
  • EDI based on standards-based protocols.

24
Distinguishing Intranet Extranet
  • Intranet defined
  • An intranet is a corporate LAN or WAN that
    functions with Internet technologies behind the
    companys firewall.
  • Extranet defined
  • An extranet is a network that links the intranets
    of business partners using a virtually private
    network on the Internet.
  • Designing extranets is difficult.
  • Complexities of security, performance, management
    and policy.
  • Extranet and B2B are not synonymous. Extranets
    can apply to B2C as well.

25
E-commerce B2B Marketplaces Origins and
Evolution
Supply Chain - all organizations and processes
related to products and services sourced by
buying organizations, typically from raw
materials through consumption.
B-to-B
B-to-C
Warehouse and Inventory Management
ProductDevelopment
Supplier Management
Transport
Category Management
Store Management
Customer Relationship Management
ProductDevelopmentManagement
E-ProcurementSoftware
Supply ChainManagement
CategoryManagement
  • Product design
  • Product development
  • Vendor capacity
  • Quality
  • Sample management
  • New product introduction
  • Invoice processing
  • Payment
  • RFI/RFP
  • Catalog development
  • Vendor certification
  • Item management
  • Product availability
  • Production planning
  • Technical specifications
  • Second- and third-tier suppliers
  • Order management
  • Product tracking
  • Capacity management
  • consolidation
  • Replenishment
  • Reverse logistics
  • Goods-in scheduling
  • New product introduction
  • Planning for seasons and events
  • Allocation

Supply Chain Context of E-commerce
26
E-commerce B2B Marketplaces Origins and
Evolution
Brief History of E-commerce and B2B marketplaces.
  • E-commerce and B2B are not new concepts.
  • Current systems emanated more directly from
    Electronic Data Interchange (EDI).
  • EDI provides for the exchange transaction
    information over proprietary Value-Added Networks
    (VANs).
  • EDI participants realized benefits such as
  • reduction in process costs, and
  • enhanced profitability.
  • EDI participants also incurred significant
    expenditure in
  • EDI deployment costs, VAN charges.
  • EDI limited to a few very large wealthy
    organizations.
  • Enter the Internet, B2B Marketplaces
    Internet-based EDI!
  • B2B extranet system deployment on the rise.
  • Third-party B2B Market Makers are key movers in
    evolution of internet-based EDI.

27
B2B Electronic Commerce Key Characteristics
  • How is B2B conducted?
  • B2B commerce can be conducted directly between a
    buyer and seller or via an online intermediary.
    The intermediary can be
  • a person or
  • an organization or
  • an electronic system
  • What are the types of transactions?
  • Spot Buying
  • buying goods and services at market prices
  • often facilitated by a third party exchange
  • Strategic Sourcing
  • long-term contracts that are usually negotiated
    to get a good cost
  • advantage
  • often this is done by streamlining your supply
    chain

.
28
B2B Electronic Commerce Key Characteristics
  • The key B2B entities include
  • Selling Company
  • Buying Company
  • Electronic Intermediary
  • Deliverer
  • Network Platform
  • Protocols and communication
  • Back-end information system - including ERP
    (Enterprise Resource Planning)

29
B2B Electronic Commerce Key Characteristics
  • What is the essential information processed in
    B2B Ecommerce?(i.e., what should you to expect
    to be sent back and forth between the buyer,
    seller and the intermediary)
  • product details
  • customer profile
  • supplier conditions
  • product process - capacities
  • transportation, times, costs
  • What are the primary B2B business models?  
  • Company Centric Models 
  • which would include
  • Supplier Oriented Marketplace
  • Buyer Oriented Marketplace
  • Intermediary Oriented Marketplace (the Market
    Makers)
  • Many-to-many Marketplaces also known as
  • Trading Communities
  • Trading Exchanges or Exchanges

30
B2B Business Cycle Primary B2B Business
Processes Key Applications
  • B2B Business Processes
  • Information Transfer
  • Data Sharing
  • Ordering
  • Payment
  • Customer Support Service
  • Key Applications
  • Distribution Control
  • Inventory Management
  • Supplier Relationships
  • Payment Management
  • Channel Management

31
E-commerce B2B Marketplaces Origins and
Evolution
The BIG Picture B2B Current Market Perspective
  • B2B E-commerce participants include
  • Existing prominent, well-established firms that
    sell directly to business customers.
  • Emerging Market Makers a new breed of
    intermediaries
  • Market Makers further segmented as
  • Vertical hubs industry-specific focus.
  • Functional hubs business process focus.
  • Catalog models demand/supply aggregation.
  • Auction exchange models engaging in matching
    buyers sellers.
  • Barter models reciprocal value exchange.

32
B2B Supplier Marketplace Model Characteristics
  • Supplier offers an e-store to promote sales.
  • Customers are both consumers and business buyers.
  • Popular type of initial e-marketplace.
  • Auctions are becoming popular used to clear
    surplus inventories.
  • ordered information.

33
B2B Buyer Marketplace Model Characteristics
  • Buying company opens a bidding site to enhance
    its purchasing procedure.
  • Model is unique to B2B not found in B2C.
  • Online bidding can reduce the purchasing cost and
    cycle time.

34
B2B Intermediary-oriented Marketplace Model
Characteristics
  • This is the Market Maker segment
  • Consists of 3rd party player that opens an
    intermediary e-store for
  • buyers and sellers.
  • E-store may also be used for consumers and
    individual business
  • buyers.
  • Auction and bidding market making sites are
    gaining in
  • popularity.
  • Example might include an assembly company acting
    as an
  • intermediary between allied customers and
    suppliers.

35
E-commerce B2B Marketplaces Origins and
Evolution
Emergence of online exchanges - three forces
shaping the B2B marketplace
B2C (Business to Consumer) B2B (Business to
Business)
Industry-Centric Exchanges
B2B Market Opportunity 4.5 - 8 trillion by
2004 IDC Gartner 2002
Market Makers
  • Aerospace (Boeing)
  • Automotive (GM/Ford)
  • Agricultural (Cargill)
  • Chemical (DuPont)
  • Foods (GMA)
  • Retailing (Wal-Mart)
  • Utilities
  • Vertical
  • Foodbuy.com
  • First Index (custom manufactured parts)
  • Horizontal
  • Commerce One Market Site
  • Ariba Network

8000
1500
1000
500
0
1999
2002
2003
2004
2005
Technology Providers and Engines
Ariba Commerce One Oracle SAP I2 Manugistics EAI
Software Manufacturers
36
Ariba was First B2B Firm to Profitability!
Wall Street Journal Friday, January 12, 2001
37
E-commerce B2B Marketplaces Origins and
Evolution
So what should we expect?
  • Currently experiencing re-vitalization (post
    recession).
  • E-commerce has become mainstream and
    internalized by old economy
  • firms.
  • B2B uptake will continue with improved economy,
    probably tied to supply
  • chain management improvements.
  • A number of small technological,
    micro-improvements will impact the E-
  • commerce and the internet over the short-term.
  • Last-mile infrastructure improvements
    (ubiquitous broadband) has had
  • significant impact on level of internet usage.
  • Security will continue to be of paramount
    concern and will garner
  • significant expenditure. An outstanding area of
    entrepreneurial opportunity.

38
B2B Critical Success Factors
  • Plenty of buyers and sellers you need both to
    make a market.
  • Liquidity value of a market make r is a
    multiple of the value of the transactions flowing
    through it market makers (MMs) must be focused
    on generating industry-leading liquidity.
  • Fragmentation MMs add most value in highly
    fragmented markets.
  • Inefficiency MMs must add value to both sides
    of the trade.
  • Management with domain expertise senior-level
    industry relationships and creditability
    facilitate industry buy-in.
  • Early mover advantage Ebay only had a year
    head start in the C2C auctions business, but that
    was enough.
  • Partnerships for distribution and logistics
    UPS doesnt transport lumber, resin, or HCL acid.
  • Neutrality few business opt to do business
    with their competitors or with subsidiaries of
    competitors do not sacrifice liquidity to gain
    neutrality.
  • Public currency with a billion dollar market
    cap, if you dont yet have a real business, then
    go and buy one in the end, real value/dollars
    count.

39
Key Technology
  • Key Ecommerce technology architecture components
    include the following
  • web browsers
  • application servers
  • secure file transfer servers
  • customer account management systems
  • remote administration tools
  • directory servers
  • authentication systems
  • commerce systems
  • distributed computing infrastructures and
    databases
  • messaging systems middleware
  • firewalls and proxies
  • security scanners

40
Remaining Mission Critical Terms
  • Business Process Re-engineering (BPR) -
    fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of
    business processes to achieve dramatic
    improvements in critical performance measures
    such as cost, quality, service, speed.
  • Security the combination of technology and
    policies designed to protect sensitive business
    information and to prevent fraud.
  • Firewall a security screen placed between an
    organizations internal network and the external
    Internet.
  • Virtual Private Network a wide-area network
    (WAN) created to link a company with external
    users (including mobile users, field
    representatives, or strategic allies).

41
Evolving B2B Trends XML
  • XML (Extensible Markup Language)
  • enables sharing of interactive documents across
    the Internet.
  • offers format for representing data, a schema
    for describing data, and means for extending
    HTML.
  • Key to transition from traditional EDI to
    Internet-based EDI.
  • Processes most affected have been order
    fulfillment, production, logistics, and
    inventory.
  • Electronics industry has taken the lead in XML
    use in the supply chain.
  • Toshiba, Solectron, Intel, Ingram Micro ,
    American Express, Federal Express, and Cisco are
    key practitioners.

42
Supply Chain Considerations
  • What is the Supply Chain?
  • All organizations and processes related to
    products and services sourced by Buying
    Organizations, typically from raw materials
    through consumption.
  • What is Supply Chain Management?
  • Supply Chain Management (SCM) is the management
    of all activities along the supply chain from
    suppliers to internal logistics within a company
    and to distribution to customers.
  • Contrasted with the Value Chain
  • Value chain is a series of activities a company
    performs to achieve its goal by adding additional
    values as each activity proceeds to the next one.
  • The value chain looks at every step in the supply
    chain management process - from source materials
    to delivery of the final product to the customer.
  • The objective of the value chain is maximum value
    (to the customer) at the least possible cost (to
    the business).
  • The supply chain focuses on getting source
    materials into manufacturing operation smoothly
    and economically.

43
Supply Chain Considerations
B-to-B
B-to-C
Warehouse and Inventory Management
Customer Relationship Management
ProductDevelopment
Supplier Management
Transport
Category Management
Store Management
ProductDevelopmentManagement
E-ProcurementSoftware
Supply ChainManagement
CategoryManagement
  • Product design
  • Product development
  • Vendor capacity
  • Quality
  • Sample management
  • New product introduction
  • Invoice processing
  • Payment
  • RFI/RFP
  • Catalog development
  • Vendor certification
  • Item management
  • Product availability
  • Production planning
  • Technical specifications
  • Second- and third-tier suppliers
  • Order management
  • Product tracking
  • Capacity management
  • consolidation
  • Replenishment
  • Reverse logistics
  • Goods-in scheduling
  • New product introduction
  • Planning for seasons and events
  • Allocation

44
Key Components of SCM
Courtesy of Network Computing magazine December
8, 2005
45
SCM Objectives
  • Optimize the sharing of information across
    organizational boundaries
  • Focus on value of time, efficiency.
  • Attempt to gain time-based competitive advantage.
  • Potential linkage to greater customer
    satisfaction, increased sales, enhanced product
    quality, and profitability.

46
Supply Chain Performance Metrics
  • Products services offered
  • Sales
  • Market share
  • Cost
  • Quality
  • Delivery
  • Cycle times
  • Assets utilized
  • Responsiveness
  • Customer service

47
New Imperatives of Supply Chain Management
  • Build flexibility.
  • Plan and measure accurately.
  • Develop logistically separate operations where
    appropriate.
  • Get lean by emphasizing simplicity and speed.
  • Optimize timely information transfer.
  • Mass-customize, treat customers unequally
    segment and stratify.
  • Operate globally.
  • Practice virtuality and collaborative management.
  • Exploit electronic commerce.
  • Leverage people,
  • Operationalize new product introductions and
    phaseouts.

48
Supply Chain Example Apparel Industry
Customer
Retailer
Apparel Manufacturer
Information
Product
Textile Producer
Yarn Maker
49
Supply Chain Example Health Care Products
Customers
Hospitals/Drug Stores
Distributors
Information
Product
End Product Manufacturer
Raw Material Supplier
50
SCM Success Factor Effective and Timely
Information Management
  • Successful SCM often times tied to
  • coherent information technology strategy and
    appropriate architecture.
  • information systems that diffuse organizational
    boundaries.
  • Supply chain links suppliers, distributors,
    buyers, assemblers, etc. as virtual organization
  • Embraces concept of the Inter-organizational
    Information Systems (IOIS)
  • Systems that cross organizational boundaries.
  • Requires technology that enables electronic link
    between organizations.
  • Automates manual and paper-bound work.
  • Earliest forms of these systems were time-sharing
    services, online databases, EFT, EDI.

51
Technology-based Applications for SCM
  • Internet-based Ecommerce
  • EDI
  • Intranet/Extranet
  • Traditional EDI
  • Bar Coding and Scanning
  • Data Warehouse
  • Decision Support Systems

52
SCM Hype Cycle
53
Next Session Highlights
  • Review of Supply Chain Concepts
  • Reading Assignment covering first 3 sessions
  • Introduction to Supply Chain Management
    Handfield Nichols Chapters 1 5
  • Building B2B Applications with XML Fitzgerald
    Chapters 1
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