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E-Business Textbook

E-Business Textbook. Chapter 3 What is Application Integration?. Introduction. What happens if eBusiness applications do NOT interact with company’s core line of business systems? Company’s goals for eBusiness will not be met Customers will become frustrated

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E-Business Textbook

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  1. E-Business Textbook Chapter 3 What is Application Integration? E-Business Instructor Guide

  2. Introduction • What happens if eBusiness applications do NOT interact with company’s core line of business systems? • Company’s goals for eBusiness will not be met • Customers will become frustrated • eBusiness project will be a failure • Stages 3 and above in eBusiness solutions: • Extending enterprise systems to the web • eBusiness cannot be disconnected from these core systems • Commitment, planning, investment of time and money • eBusiness is typically implemented in phases • Commitment to maintenance and growth is essential E-Business Instructor Guide

  3. eBusiness Objectives • Motives for moving toward eBusiness: • Increase Market Share and Revenues • Improve Customer Service • Increase Operational Efficiencies • Competitive Advantage • Objectives and priorities must be clearly identified and agreed upon at the onset of an eBusiness project • Quick and dirty eBusiness interfaces, which do not integrate with the core legacy applications, often will not truly address the business objectives E-Business Instructor Guide

  4. Integrated eBusiness Solution • Before marrying eBusiness with enterprise systems, get to know what these legacy systems are all about • Parts of a legacy application suite • Database file structures • Business Rules, Data Integrity Constraints • Business Functions • User Interface E-Business Instructor Guide

  5. Sample Legacy Application Parts E-Business Instructor Guide

  6. eBusiness Integration Approaches • Direct access to legacy system database files • Legacy screen capture techniques • API calls to legacy application modules • Import/Export mechanisms or files • Custom, transformation routines • Dynamic, object messaging interfaces E-Business Instructor Guide

  7. Direct access to legacy system database files • eBusiness applications could read and write data directly to the corporate database, as shown below: E-Business Instructor Guide

  8. Legacy screen capture techniques • Browser Screen Scraping • Legacy screens are displayed over the web, with technology that makes them look more web-like and operate in a browser friendly manner • Batch Screen Interaction • Where an eBusiness application can call the screens (like an API) of a legacy system and retrieve output E-Business Instructor Guide

  9. API calls to legacy application modules E-Business Instructor Guide

  10. Import/Export mechanisms or files • Often set up for bringing standard transactions into packaged software • A common example is EDI Order Import files and related programs E-Business Instructor Guide

  11. Custom, transformation routines • Can be run at regular intervals to: • Convert legacy database information into smaller, simplified, eBusiness database files • Upload web transactions from the eBusiness system back to legacy database • This approach is common for integration: • eBusiness system is hosted using different technology and possibly a different platform (or even an external company) from the core business systems E-Business Instructor Guide

  12. Dynamic, object messaging interfaces • Newer technology in which application components can be reused between modules and even external applications • Example: • Providing the capability for XML messaging between programs E-Business Instructor Guide

  13. Application Integration and Stages of eBusiness • Stage 1: Web Presence • Stage 2: Basic Intelligence • Stage 3: eBusiness • Stage 4: Innovation • Stage 5: Trading Partner Relationships • Stage 6: Distributed Application Componentry E-Business Instructor Guide

  14. Stage 1: Web Presence • No need to integrate with back end business systems • However, a company planning to grow their site would begin setting up eBusiness infrastructure internally by: • Selecting hardware platform to be used for eBusiness • Selecting web serving software (then install and configure it) • Addressing networking requirements • Connecting web server to Internet via ISP and register domain name • Establishing standards for visual look and feel, corporate image, navigational style • Developing initial HTML pages, graphics, directories, and configuration for serving up static pages E-Business Instructor Guide

  15. Stage 2: Basic Intelligence • Requirement to use back office application suite and databases starts to come into play • Minimal programming on server side • Minimal integration with server apps and databases • Development primarily consists of: • HTML and client side objects that can be downloaded and run on the client browser • Initial data capture pages and inquiries against back end information structures • Search capabilities on the site for visitors to more easily find what they are looking for • Meta tags within HTML for search engines to find content E-Business Instructor Guide

  16. Stage 3: eBusiness • NOW, the need to integrate with back office systems becomes critical • As the site evolves to provide full online capabilities, such as order processing, order status, product catalogs, A/R inquiry, manufacturing specifications, inventory availability… • Must implement one or more of the integration approaches discussed in the previous slides E-Business Instructor Guide

  17. Stage 4: Innovation • Level of eBusiness integration becomes more sophisticated to achieve innovative eBusiness and electronic Customer Relationship Management • Integration should be tight, well-defined, and efficient • Emphasis on more access to historical data on customers and their buying patterns • This involves more advanced data capture techniques and the use of the history data from both the legacy and eBusiness applications to help drive the eBusiness site E-Business Instructor Guide

  18. Stage 5: Trading Partners • Dynamic interaction between trading partners’ business application suites demands tight back end integration • Emphasis on immediate allocation of inventory and immediate shipping notices: • Orders should go directly from the customer system into the vendor’s back end order processing system • To accommodate direct interaction: • Integration approaches involving direct database access or direct API calls will often be required E-Business Instructor Guide

  19. Stage 6: Distributed Application Componentry • Traditional legacy applications will need to be significantly re-architected • Integration will be tight at all levels • The integration approach involving dynamic object messaging will likely be required E-Business Instructor Guide

  20. State Management Techniques • Dynamic and event-driven web interfaces are stateless • For example, a user may start down the process of placing an order or changing a shipment date and then bail out at the last minute and jump to another site • From an application development perspective, the statelessness of the web may seem somewhat limiting: • A typical business system generally has a series of input and output screens and various paths that an application can take • Each screen is presented based on previous user input or results E-Business Instructor Guide

  21. State Management Techniques • Parameter passing • Cookies • Environment variables • User authentication • Transaction processors E-Business Instructor Guide

  22. Scalability of Legacy Applications • To easily migrate legacy apps to an eBusiness framework, consider the following factors: • Database • Encapsulation • Modularity • Technology • Skills Availability • End Application E-Business Instructor Guide

  23. Tips for Moving to eBusiness • Using the six factors from previous slide, realize the effects of your design decisions on scalability of your web application • Options for back-end eCommerce database: • Model an entirely new database • Use a mixture of the existing database (for display data) and new files (to store transaction data) • Develop the entire e-commerce application over the same database that is used for other corporate systems as in the integration approach of directly accessing legacy files E-Business Instructor Guide

  24. Tips for Moving to eBusiness • Maintaining object business rules, for use by various applications, is important when extending a system to the web • Design site so that both visual and functional components can be easily maintained and reused • Plan and budget for the inevitable maintenance, support, and skills transfer that needs to occur: • It is important that the tools and platforms used for the project will fit in with the organization’s existing IT environment and skill sets E-Business Instructor Guide

  25. Tips for Moving to eBusiness • The new site should provide the company with the opportunity to not only process their transactions but to market and upsell to their customers at the same time • The user interface must be very easy to use and visually pleasing, with a sales and marketing orientation • The application must be flexible enough so that it can easily be changed and grow as marketing demands and as new technologies become mainstream • Maintenance will be constant E-Business Instructor Guide

  26. Summary • Key to the success of any eBusiness strategy lies in how well the integration between legacy applications and eBusiness solutions is orchestrated • Various methods for integrating eBusiness and legacy applications were discussed • eBusiness application architects have big challenges: • Figure out how the integration works • Figure how the front end user interface will behave in a dynamic, “web-like” manner while staying true to the procedural aspect of business transaction processing in the back end • A state-of-the-art eBusiness solution will have: • Standards of how the site will operate and appear to the user • Requirements documented and agreed upon • Considerations for how future needs and technologies will be accommodated E-Business Instructor Guide

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