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DIP: Data, Information and Process Integration with Semantic Web Services

DIP: Data, Information and Process Integration with Semantic Web Services. Alexander Wahler, NIWA WEB Solutions Frankfurt 17.1.2003. Content. NIWA WEB Solutions Tiscali Österreich GmbH Case Study ISP NIWA, Tiscali objectives and expectations to DIP. NIWA WEB Solutions.

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DIP: Data, Information and Process Integration with Semantic Web Services

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  1. DIP: Data, Information and Process Integration with Semantic Web Services Alexander Wahler, NIWA WEB Solutions Frankfurt 17.1.2003

  2. Content • NIWA WEB Solutions • Tiscali Österreich GmbH • Case Study ISP • NIWA, Tiscali objectives and expectations to DIP

  3. NIWA WEB Solutions • NIWA founded in 1998 by Alexander Wahler & Klaus Niederacher • Background: Research in Internet based Information Systems at University of Technology, Vienna. Experience in EU founded projects • IT-Service Provider • Success Stories: Sony Austria, Porsche Austria, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanova Pharma, T-Systems, ...

  4. NIWA WEB Solutions • IT-Consulting • Innovation and Product Development • Knowledge Transfer • Focus on “Semantic Web Services” • Current Research and Development • MIKSI – Web-Services for Marketing, Information and Communication for Cultural Institutions • CFA – Contemporary Fashion Archive • Site Management & IT-Services

  5. Tiscali Österreich GmbH • Subsidiary of Tiscali S.p.A. • Tiscali S.p.A. – leading pan-European Internet Communication Company • Local Operations in 15 European countries • Providing: Access, content, applications, innovative communication services • 20,5 registered subscribers; 7 million active users (06/2002) • Strong position on the Austrian B2B market • NIWA consultant of Tiscali Österreich

  6. Tiscali Österreich GmbH • Leading Internet Service Provider (ISP) in Austria • Focus on Business Customers • Expansion by acquisition of Nacamar/World Online, SurfEU, Vianet,... • Product power spectrum: connectivity, VPN solutions, hosting, housing, security • Expansion to Eastern European Countries planned • CEO Dieter Haacker

  7. Semantic Web Services – Impact on ISP BusinessCase Study

  8. Content • Motivation • Measures • Model • Solutions • Methods of E-Commerce • Examples of E-Commerce • Conclusion

  9. Motivation • Strong displacement competition • Low turnover and cost effectiveness • Saturation of the market for standard services

  10. Economic Measures • Set new measures to rise turnover and cost effectiveness • Automation of product selling • Enhancements and improvements in provisioning • Expansion of sales channels • Optimisation of offered product portfolio • Creative configuration of existing basic services into new bundles of products and services

  11. Technical Measures • Achieving these measures implies: • Flexible and dynamic set-up and organisation of product portfolio • Possibility of permanent adaptation to market needs • Cross linking, communication and data-exchange of all involved applications (e.g. billing, accounting, provisioning, CRM, ...)

  12. Model

  13. Solutions • Semantic Web Services – problems to solve (selection): • Determination of applications exposing as web service -> definition of criteria • Bridging semantic differences in web-service description • Easy to use and invocation of semantic web services • Flexibility in building new semantic web-services

  14. Methods of E-Commerce • Business Model: • Virtual Internet Service Provider (VISP) • B2B Services • ISP offers new portal services

  15. E-Commerce - VISP • Virtual Internet Service Provider • Classical reseller principle • Third Party Companies sell Tiscali services under their own label • VISP offer their customers individual products based on Tiscali services according to their business policy • High automation level of trading • Examples of VISP: portal operators, electricity supplier,expansion to other countries

  16. E-Commerce - VISP • Critical success factors: • Processing of the product catalogue (current > 4000) • Heterogeneity in the product catalogue • Promote the product catalogue to VISP • Flexibility and dynamic in handling of different trading modes with each customer (e.g. pricing, product bundles, level of data-exchange) • Automation of accounting, billing

  17. E-Commerce – B2B services • Services for business customers: • ISP-Portal as gateway for new business services • Customers may invoke related services according to their business needs • Customers composite and configure their individual business services consisting of other services, which are provided by the ISP or other suppliers over the Web • Automated billing and accounting

  18. Examples of E-Commerce • Marketing manager of a pharma company introduces new product. The following process has to be modelled and should be executed automated by one Web Service • Check of available internet domains for product name (.at, .com, ...) • Check of available patent for product name • If check=true, then ... • Register domains • Register patent (external service) • Order webspace (vhost)

  19. Examples of E-Commerce • Web Services for monitoring data-sources from the web and alert, when special events occur: • E.g. send me an SMS, when YEN declines under x.x Euro and company X in Singapore announces insolvency

  20. Conclusion • Success in E-Commerce depends on successful EAI process of heterogeneous information systems • Billing and accounting of invoked services is a driving force • Easy to use and reusable • Easy definition of new temporary Web Services according to my business needs, which discover and invoke existing Web Services

  21. Objectives in DIP • Analysis and development of new e-commerce methods for ISP based on semantic web-services • Development of ISP product descriptions and catalogues (ontology) • Development and implementation of „real world“ Semantic Web Services • Participation in training activities

  22. Tiscali in DIP • Implementation of DIP methods and models of Semantic Web Services • Case studies and applications in: • Enterprise Application Integration • E–Commerce • Exploitation

  23. NIWA in DIP • Knowledge transfer university –industry • Case studies and applications in: • Knowledge Management • E–Commerce • Dissemination

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