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The Electronic Data Interchange Aybar C. Acar Software R&D Center Middle East Technical University Ankara Turkey. Outline. A Brief definition of EDI History of EDI Structure of EDI systems Value Added Networks The International EDI Language: EDIFACT Examples of EDI use

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  1. The Electronic Data InterchangeAybar C. AcarSoftware R&D CenterMiddle East Technical UniversityAnkara Turkey METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  2. Outline • A Brief definition of EDI • History of EDI • Structure of EDI systems • Value Added Networks • The International EDI Language: EDIFACT • Examples of EDI use • The benefits and drawbacks of EDI • XML-EDI • EDI and ebXML METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  3. Definition of EDI • It is not easy to define EDI in strict terms. • EDI defines the paradigm of exchanging data electronically more than anything else. • It is easier to describe the commonly used EDI practices. The collection of these common practices amounts to what is known today as EDI. • EDI can be thus described as an information sharing system utilizing an intermediate message store-and-forward entity and premeditated message syntax and interaction processes which are modeled by trading partners around standard templates. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  4. The Main Requirements of EDI • The interchange has to be hardware independent. • The message syntax has to be unambiguous, although not always self-describing. • It has to reduce labor intensive tasks of exchanging data such as data reentry. • Should allow the sender to control the exchange, including knowing if and when a recipient has received the message. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  5. History of EDI • The earliest implementation of a system compliant with EDI is the British Automated Clearing Service (1970). • Many organistions that had a significant amount of regular payments used the BACS. • BACS users would record information they would otherwise have printed as cheques, on to magnetic tape reels and courier them to the BACS center. • Later an online submission facility was added • Other early examples include LACES (1971-1981), a freight clearing system used at Heathrow and WMO, the World Meteorological Office system used to share weather information. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  6. History of EDI • Preliminary initiatives of trading groups increased and standardization in Europe soon became needed. • The first effort is TRADACOM, a UK standard developed by ANA in 1982 for general trade. • Other European countries developed similar standards such as SEDAS in Germany, and GENCOD in France. These standards have since migrated to EDIFACT. • North America had similar problems with industry groups making up their own standards rapidly. • In the beginning of the 80s ANSI took up the task of standardizing the EDI messages, in order to make cross-industry trade possible. The resulting standard is called ANSI X12. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  7. Partner A Internal System Partner B Internal System VAN EDI Software EDI Software VAN The Structure of EDI Systems • The basic EDI structure is given below. • Each partner has their own internal software systems. • Special EDI adapters have to be implemented which will be able to interface with the internal system as well as communicate with the value added network. • The particulars of the message syntax and interaction process are negotiated between partners in advance. Sometimes a dominant partner will impose its standards on smaller partners. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  8. Internal System Internal System Digital Signatures / Encryption EDI Adapter EDI Adapter EDI Checks Comms Comms Protocol Checks EDI Acknowledgement (physical) EDI Acknowledgement (logical) Security and Privacy in EDI METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  9. Value Added Networks • Value Added Networks are the go-between in EDI communications. • The VAN is responsible for routing, storing and delivering EDI messages. They also provide delivery reports • Depending on the VAN type, messages may need extra envelopes or may be routed using intelligent VANs which are able to read the EDI message itself. • VANs may be operated by various entities • Telecom companies • Industry group consortiums • A large company interacting with its suppliers/vendors METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  10. EDIFACT • EDIFACT stands for EDI for administration, commerce and transportation. • It has been introduced by the UN center for the facilitation of administration, commerce and transportation (UN/CEFACT) in the mid 1980s. • Older European EDI standards such as TRADACOM, GENCOD, SEDAS and ODETTE have all migrated to EDIFACT. • EDIFACT has furthermore has become an international standard as ANSI has stopped all work on X12 since 1997 and X12 systems are migrating to EDIFACT. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  11. Interchange I’change Header Message Message Message I’change Header Message Header Data Segment Data Segment Data Segment Message Header Data Element Data Element Data Element EDIFACT: Structure • EDIFACT Interchanges consist of messages which are in turn composed of data segments. The segments themselves consist of data elements. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  12. Interchange Message 1 Message 2 EDIFACT: Message Syntax Sample EDIFACT Message: UNB+UNOA:1+6464:XX+1141:XX+BEN0273’ UNH+000001+ORDERS:2:932:UN’ BGM+220+AC6464’ DTM+4:20000305:102’ NAD+BY+6464326::91’ NAD+SU+1149646::91’ UNS+D’ LIN+1++PT-1073-R:VP’ QTY+21:1600’ LIN+1++PT-1073-S:VP’ QTY+21:1200’ UNT+13+000001’ UNH …. UNT UNZ+1+BEN0273’ METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  13. Everyday Uses of EDI • Financial and monetary. • Systems like SWIFT and EFT all use EDI. • Governmental. • Payroll operations. • Official information sharing (e.g. For motor vehicle information, visas etc.). • Transportation. • IATA system is built on EDI. All airplane booking and ticketing operations done over EDIFACT. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  14. A Case in EDI: Alcatel-Bell Telephone • Alcatel Bell Telephone is Belgium’s most prominent exporter of telecommunications equipment and systems for both private and public networks. • The key strategies employed by the company for its dominance were flexibility and short lead times. • In order to increase its flexibility towards customers the company decided to increase its flexibility towards suppliers. • It therefore started deploying EDI in several phases from 1990 to 1994. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  15. Alcatel Bell: Facts • The company was first founded in 1882 as a subsidiary of Bell Co. in the US. After the antitrust cases of 1928 the European divisions formed ITT which later became Alcatel in 1982. • Operates 10 plants in Belgium, 4 abroad and 12 overseas offices. • 50% of its turnover (1 Billion $ in 1991) comes from exports to over 80 countries. • Purchases of materials and components accounted for 60% of the costs of goods sold. • There existed about 1250 suppliers, 100 of which generated about 70% of all orders. 22 suppliers were critical for the supply chain. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  16. EDI project details • The main aim of Alcatel was to perform 80 – 90% of all financial, transport and commercial transactions over EDI. • The project started in 1989 and lasted until 1994. The first phase aimed to build the buyer-supplier EDI relationships. • By mid-1992 all 22 critical suppliers had implemented purchase order functionality • 4 of these links were totally ‘paperless’. • 3 of the 22 also employed Price Sales Catalog functionality. • By mid-1993 the remaining 18 key suppliers had joined. • By the end of 1994, 100 suppliers were linked with processes such as Price Sales Catalog, Purchase Order, Purchase Order Response, Purchase Order Change Request, Delivery Schedule, Dispatch Advice and Invoice METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  17. Impact of EDI on Alcatel • Shorter lead times, more flexibility and less inventory • A purchase negotiation which used to take 2 weeks now took 24 hours. • About 1 million $ reduction in the inbound inventory • Greater Accuracy • Reduced Manpower • Logistic buyers decreased from 12 in 1982 to 3 in 1992. • Single Sourcing • Instead of splitting orders among suppliers an order is now given to a single supplier, since backup supply is not hard to arrange anymore. • Total annual tangible benefits to Alcatel: 0.5 M$ with annual incurred costs for installation and operation being only 30000 $. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  18. Benefits of EDI • EDI is a well developed system with a lot of organizations using it extensively. • Contrary to popular belief EDI is not obsolete. The explosion in EDI started occurring in the mid 1990s and EDI use is still growing. • Large organizations will probably continue to use EDI for the foreseeable future due to increased security and existing infrastructure investments. • Companies doing business with large organizations will need to implement EDI. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  19. Drawbacks of EDI • EDI adapter software is too expensive for most organizations. • The software has to be practically rewritten for different combinations of VANs, internal hardware and trading scenarios. • The software is also subject to change when there is a revision in EDIFACT • VAN subscription costs and dedicated line costs are prohibitive for most SMEs • The EDI system is highly static and every business process has to be meticulously negotiated between partners. • Since there is no common registry or discovery mechanism, partners have to retain information on institution codes, product codes, up-to-date catalogs etc. associated with everybody they do business with. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  20. XML - EDI • XML-EDI is the collection of five core technologies: • XML: provides the foundation and replaces EDI segment identifiers with XML tokens. • EDI: Provides the business methods and existing process data formats and specifications. • Templates: Define the rules by which the data is to be processed. They provide the glue which holds the process together. • Agents: Interpret the Templates to perform the work needed, and also interact with the transaction and the user to create new templates for each new specific task, or look up and attach the right template for existing jobs. • Repository: This component provides the semantic foundation for business transactions and the underpinning that the Agents need to correctly cross-reference entities. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

  21. EDI and ebXML • Both the ANSI X12 group and the EDIFACT group have joined in the ebXML initiative as of July 2001 • The EDI groups will be work in the development of the core components of ebXML dealing with business process integration. • ANSI has about 300 different business processes and EDIFACT contains about 1200 processes. Process definition is key. • The business processes outlined in EDI use standardized message segments which are re-usable. • The main problem is defining the EDI business processes currently in use with an unambiguous format. When this is done, the processes will become syntax independent. • Once this is done (est. 2 years), EDI and ebXML will be able to use the same processes and be able to communicate regardless of syntax. METU-SRDC, Jan., 2002

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