Download - b2b
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B2B
• E-Procurement
• Metamediaries
• Intermediation Opportunities
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B2B Buying
Problems
Sourcing: Search Costs due to large number of sellers
Ordering: Workflow and transaction costs from many orders & dependent demand
Replenishment: Continued reliance on old source
Fulfillment: Monitoring costs to avoid errors
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Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
Definition.
- First developed in the late 1960s
- Business to Business exchange of standardized documents in electronic form (e.g., Invoice, Purchase order)
Background.
• Early barriers: lack of standards, telecom infrastructure
• New national (X.12), international (EDIFACT) standards
• Used heavily by large companies (e.g., Fortune 1000)
• Enables re-structuring business relationships
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Common EDI Applications in B2B Commerce
• Quick Response (QR): POS data to supplier
• Model Stock Replenishment: Supplier manages inventory
• Materials Management: JIT systems
• Efficient Customer Response (ECR): Grocery industry chain
• Evaluated Receipt Settlement: No invoice
• Collaborative Forecasting and Replenishment: Sharing forecast
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Value Added Networks (VAN)
• Advantages: Translation, security, auditability, integrity
• Disadvantages: High price, Connect time + mailbox charges
Translateincomingdocument
VAN
Translate X.12
EDIFACT
Compliance checking
Route to mailbox
Buyer Bank
Transport company
Seller
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Why EDI was not sufficient?
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The e-Procurement Cycle
Web based Procurement Process
Old Approach: Task orientation (slow and error prone)
New Approach: Process orientation (Faster and cheaper)
1. Browse online
catalogs
2. Create Requisition
3. Check availability
7. Receiving
8. Accounts Payable
9. Route to Recipient
6. Ship Product
5. Supplier Fulfillment
4. Online Approval
5a. Check status
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Production Vs. Non-Production Items
Production Items Non-Production Items
Raw materials and components Office & computer supplies;
MRO supplies; Travel
Scheduled by production runs
Ad hoc, not scheduled
Professional buyer initiatesEmployee initiates
No approvals required Approval required
High degree of automationLittle automation
Design-spec driven Catalog driven
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Requirements of e-Procurement Systems
Purchasing Management
Quality Evaluation
Supplier Selection
Purchasing Contracts
Accounting
Order Mgt, Quotations, Negotiations
Goods Received, Source Quality
Identification, Price, Lead Time
Quantity Contracts, Discounts
Budgeting, Overheads, Costing
Most systems provide a subset of these functions!
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B2B• E-Procurement
• Metamediaries
• Intermediation Opportunities
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Large Market size
Fragmented supply chain
Some product differentiation
High search costs
Product comparison hard
High workflow costs
Markets ready for
intermediaries
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B2B Trading Models
1. Multi-vendor catalogs• Price posted, Product comparison, Customization
• Chemdex, e-Chemicals, PlasticNet, NetBuy
2. Post and Browse • Bulletin Board accessible by pre-qualified users
• One-on-one negotiation of non-standard products
• Catex (insurance), PaperExchange, CreditTrade
3. Auction• Seller driven liquidation of surplus inventory (MetalSite)
• In reverse auction, buyer specifies items and lot-sizes
• Popularized by FreeMarkets, VerticalNet, Tradeout
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B2B Revenue Models• Transaction fees
Often paid by seller (e-Steel), sometimes shared by parties Difficulty of collecting fees in post and browse exchanges Pressure to waive fees to achieve acceptance
• Membership fees (visitors with restricted privileges)
• Order posting fees with volume discounts
• Supplier listing fees (VerticalNet)
• Auction Commissions
• Selling content, trading and historical data (Manheim Online)
• Advertising
• Software licensing
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Intermediary
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Buying guides
Credit verification Risk management
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Intermediary vs. Metamediary
A successful marketplace does more than matching buyers and suppliers!
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Value Creation by Intermediary
Improve Information Flows
Improve Price / Quality
Build Liquidity
Reduce Costs
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Improve Information
Flows
Increase communication
channel efficiency
Increase the number of buyer-seller channels
Decrease the number of
communication channels
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Reduce Costs
Carrying Cost Carrying Cost
Fulfillment Cost Fulfillment Cost
Transaction Cost
Transaction Cost
Workflow Cost
Workflow CostSearch Cost
Search CostProduct Cost
Product Cost
Bulk Chemicals Office Supplies
Different industries provide different cost
reduction opportunities!
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Improve Price / Quality
Price / Quality
Number of Sellers
Savings from more
sellers
Traditional cost of search Internet cost
of search
Value Added
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Build LiquidityTransaction
automation leads to Improved
Velocity
Central marketplace leads to
Improved Reach
Improved Reach + Improved Velocity
= Liquidity
Market liquidity brings more buyers and sellers
Product liquidity helps sell goods / services
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B2B• E-Procurement
• Metamediaries
• Intermediation Opportunities
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Origins of Intermediaries
Buyers
Sellers Third Parties
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Origins of Intermediaries: Sellers
Electronic catalog, transaction capabilities
Access to product information and transaction automation
Migration from one seller to multi-vendor catalogs
Global Healthcare Exchange (J&J, GE Medical, Baxter, Abbott)
MetalSite by steel producers
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Industry
World market over 750 million tons, US Share 10%
Founders: Weirton Steel, LTV Steel, Steel Dynamics, Bethlehem Steel, Ryerson Tull
History
- First provided industry news and product information
- Next introduced e-commerce capabilities
- New services (banking, logistics, billing,…) added later
- 2000 Results: 50,000 transactions; 22000 users; 2 million tons; 30,000 products listed
- Closed June 2001, MSA buys Metalsite in August 2001
Sellers Initiated Exchange: MetalSite
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Rules
• Open, neutral marketplace, confidentiality
• Users must register, MetalSite to check legitimacy
Sellers’ Goals
• Expand customer base
• Improve selling efficiency
• Increase inventory turnover
• Reduce non-value added tasks
Buyers’ Incentives
• Locate and purchase products effectively
• Cut costs and time
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Major Functions
• Marketplace Products: Auction, Product guide, QuoteFinder
• System Integration services
• e-Business consulting services
• Fulfillment products (Transportation, Financing, Collaborative forecasting, Advance order status notification)
Revenue Model
• Transaction fees 0.25%-2% on auctions and product guide, small fee to use QuoteFinder
• Difficulty in collecting transaction fees
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Origins of Intermediaries: Buyers
Buyers want catalogs or reverse auction
Gain access to product information and availability
Migration from one buyer to multi-buyer market place
GEIS TPN procurement to marketplace
Automakers’ Covisint
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Industry
• Procurement market for Automakers, over $350 billion
• Major Players: DaimlerChrysler AG, Ford, GM, Nissan, Renault
History
• Announced in Feb 2000
• 200 catalogs; 1000 users; 20,000 transactions by June 2001
• Total volume in 2001 is expected to be $129 Billions
Major Functions
• Procurement
• Catalogs
• Buyer / Seller auction
Buyers Initiated Exchange: Covisint
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Auto makers’ Goals
Cut time and costs
Exchange engineering data
More suppliers
Custom cars
Tier-1 Suppliers’ Incentives
• Cut costs
• Buyer pressure
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Regulatory Issues
- Auto makers not to combine requirements
- Auto makers can’t see needs of others
- Export regulations enforcement
- No loss in tax revenue
Requirements
- Currency conversion
- Language translation
- Supplier order management capabilities
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Industry
Aviation ($500 Billion)
Major Players: Nine airlines and three aerospace manufacturers
History
• Airlines announced AirNewco as their B2B marketplace in 4/00
• Suppliers announced MyAircraft.com in 2/00
• AirNewco and MyAircraft merge to become Cordiem in 3/01
• First major B2B marketplace supported by buyers and sellers
• Partners - i2 Technologies, Ariba
• Competes with Exostar led by Boeing, Lockheed & Raytheon
• More than two dozen aerospace marketplaces
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Major Functions
• Online catalogs
• Reverse and forward auctions
• Inventory and supply chain management tools
• Transaction support
Revenue Model
• Transaction fees on auctions, small fee for catalog listing
• Subscription fees for supply chain management services
• Both buyers and suppliers pay
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Rules
– Neutral, global e-marketplace
– Open to any airline and supplier
– No requirement on membership or exclusive use
Sellers’ Goals
• Focus on selling after-market products and services
• Reduce inventory, errors, costs
Buyers’ Incentives
• Maintenance & engineering, fuel & fuel services, catering & cabin services, airport support services & general procurement
• Locate and purchase products quickly
• Cut costs and time
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3rd Party Intermediaries
– Exploit inertia in product markets
– Speed, neutrality, but acceptance?
– Internet players: (e-Steel, Chemdex, FreeMarkets)
– Infomediaries: Create virtual community, no
procurement experience (Asian Sources, SeaFax)
– Software Provider: Trusted name, but no market
experience (Ariba, Commerce One, Oracle Exchange)
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Industry
Initial market - industrial intermediate components ($600 Billion)
Large order size - $3 million per transaction
History• Launched in 1995 as an independent B2B marketplace• Reduce price and transaction costs• Worldwide expansion in 55 countries
Score Card 2000
– Market volume $9.9 B, saved $2.7 B
– 9200 auctions, 9300 suppliers
– Revenue $91.3 m, loss $44m
3rd Party Initiated Exchange: FreeMarkets
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Value Creation for Buyers
ConsultingPurchase
Outsourcing
Distribution Intermediary
TechnologyEnabler
Price reduction
Purchasing cost reduction
Research product, outsource RFQ
New suppliers identification
• Identify potential saving
• Prepare specs, RFQ
• Identify + Qualify suppliers
• Buyer’s agent• Suppliers compete
• Conduct auction• Train buyer• Post-auction analysis
REVERSE
AUCT ION
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Find new buyers
Bid preparation
TechnologyEnabler
New buyer identification
Reduce sales costs
But face more competition!
Reduce transaction costs
• Respond to inquiry
• Receive certification
• Conduct auction• Train seller• Award preparation
MORE
SALES
Value Creation for New Suppliers
• Respond to RFQ
• Complete specs
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Challenges Facing Intermediaries
Acceptance by buyers and sellers
Revenue generation
Sales and marketing costs
infrastructure and operating costs
Intense competition!
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B2B Myths
• The middleman must go!
• Speed is everything!
• EDI will vanish!
• Old economy companies don’t get it!
• Throw away your old systems!
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Private Exchanges
• Limited access!
• Pre-existing business relationship
• Higher level of integration
• Order confirmation, tracking
• Seller / buyer auctions
• More volume than public exchanges ($b 242 >
43 in 2000)!
• Example: Buyer GE $ 20b
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What went wrong with Public Exchanges?
– Bias. Many exchanges required standardized product descriptions by sellers, and often allowed price comparison by buyers.
– Funding. Many independent exchanges were funded by the financial community who pulled the plug when they did not sufficient revenue.
– Technology. Lack of integration between the exchange and supplier ERP system. Buyers had to call the supplier anyway!
– Complexity. Too many terms (specs, pricing, availability, delivery dates) require direct negotiation between buyers and sellers.
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Its not the technology, stupid!
• Its about redesigning workflows, processes and structures (BPR / Change Management)!
• Its about collaboration between various parties inside and outside the company! Its about the cross-functional approach.
• Its about changing decision making! Multi-million dollar contracts today are decided by higher ups who act in weeks!
• The cost of training and process redesign exceeds technology costs.
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Market Dynamics
� Cost of connection proportional to participants
� Value of market proportional to buyer-seller relationships
� Value increases if each participant can be either buyer or seller
� Value accelerates if multiple transactions occur before consumption
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Key Points
• E-Procurement is a must!
• Searching for a B2B revenue model!
• More online business, fewer exchanges?