SAP's Approach to the Retail Market
P.J. Jakovljevic -
10/2/2004
Introduction
There
are some interesting dynamics within the retail market segment. On one hand,
the market is much less penetrated by enterprise applications than most other
economic sectors, in part since retailers have largely been remiss in leaving
mainframes and other legacy technologies behind. Also, the sector has shown
some resilience even during the recent and possibly still ongoing economic malaise,
in part as the consumers have been stretching their credit card balances and
limits. Generating more than $3 trillion (USD) annually in sales, retail is
the second largest industry in the US, as reported by the US Census
Bureau in April 2003.
However, on the other hand, the sector has been demanding on both the software vendors' and their prospective customers' capabilities, since retail organizations and their suppliers alike are constantly facing intensifying competition, fluctuating demand whether or not due to seasonality, picky and fickle customers, evolving retail channels, and increasing globalization, whereby sales are pressured, margins are compressed, and almost all participating companies have to try to achieve improved results with fewer people. As a result, retail organizations seek enterprise applications and other information technology (IT) solutions to better manage their increasingly complex businesses that have to cut across different enterprise business disciplines instead of focusing only on a particular one in an isolated manner (e.g., procurement, marketing, finance, customer service, etc.), and thereby improve their operating efficiencies and financial performance, and strengthen their relationships with customers and suppliers.
Therefore,
companies in the retail market do have specific IT requirements to support and
optimize their operations. To that end, general enterprise resource planning
(ERP) solution providers have traditionally been unable to fully meet the demands
of these organizations, but recently some major ERP players have been developing
in-house, buying, or partnering with vendors that have retail point solutions
to increase their appeal to retailers. Although the retail and wholesale customers
have typically invested a low proportion of their total revenues in IT, as the
leaders in this industry begin to demonstrate an ability to achieve market advantage
through effective use of specialized enterprise applications, the requirement
for all retailers to increase their investment in IT and adopt best practices
has thus grown. For a detailed discussion of what software vendors face when
addressing the retail market, see "Retail
Market Dynamics for Software Vendors."
SAP Embraces RFID
There
is also a threat of traditional ERP providers that have lately made serious
strides in the retail sector. For example, SAP, which has since the mid-1990s
corralled a broad retail enterprise suite, with traditional ERP as a core, has
recently revamped and tightly integrated retail applications designed to address
a gamut of requirements for store operations, workforce management, merchandising,
and advanced planning for companies in the consumer packaged goods
(CPG) and general merchandise and apparel (GMA) sectors.
What
should help its retail segment cause is the fact that SAP has also been tacitly
researching radio frequency identification (RFID) enabled processes
since the late 1990s, within which time it has created an RFID customer council
with over eighty customers, and was one of the first software suppliers to join
the erstwhile Auto-ID Center (now EPCglobal,
an organization which is designing the critical elements and creating global
standards for the next generation barcodes as a mainstream method of business
to business [B2B] product identification—called the electronic product
codes [EPC]), and has created proof of concepts with retailers METRO
Group and Procter & Gamble, whose live projects in
early 2003 were far ahead of the still mainly experimenting and pondering rest
of the SCM vendors' pack, bringing the technology and the related software to
a further degree of stabilization (for more info, see RFID—A
New Technology Set to Explode?).
Having
been an overall enterprise applications leader, SAP has a more holistic view
of where RFID should fit and is building capabilities that will enable it to
have more flexibility in how RFID is applied for specific customer requirements
across the entire value chain. To that end, the solution provides out-of-the-box
support for packing and unpacking, goods issue, receiving, and track and trace
business processes. SAP applications bundled to provide these capabilities include
SAP's Web Application Server, SAP Auto-ID Infrastructure,
supply chain event management (SCEM), and SAP Enterprise Portal.
The Auto-ID Infrastructure, which links RFID data to disparate back-end systems,
includes a Business Rule Configurator for creating new business
processes, while SAP Event Management aims at monitoring exceptions
to business processes triggered by data coming from RFID-tagged products or
other sources.
The
core data structure of the solution will be built on the Shipping and
Receiving Module within SAP Warehouse Management (WM),
to which SAP has added RFID adaptors to integrate the data with its core ERP,
SAP APO (advanced planning and optimization),
and other supply chain management (SCM) applications. In addition to
the inbound and outbound delivery processes, SAP supports automated operations
through its Handling Unit Management module which is integrating
packaging data into end-to-end logistics processes, starting from production
through warehouse and transportation operations. SAP's concept of a "handling
unit" (i.e., a distinctively defined entity that can capture a nested setup
of sub-elements, such as a mixed palette or multiple items in a case) is aimed
at deploying RFID at various levels (e.g., palette, case, individual item),
which will be important as RFID technology matures to support these intricate
requirements. This RFID infrastructure with the handling unit concept appears
a bit more ambitious and thus heavier and more expensive in terms of implementation
services than that offered by supply chain execution (SCE) best-of-breed-vendors,
but will eventually allow for the practical usage of RFID data across more and
broader processes and applications within the value chain.
Further, the real benefits of RFID will be achieved when the integration of the EPC data will be a substantial part for the control of business processes. For example, the SAP solution could be applied in warehousing, manufacturing, transportation, and at touch points between these (e.g., production line replenishment of the warehouse, cross-dock from receiving to production line, shipment verification in warehouse, to manifesting, control of yard movements, and then in-transit visibility up to a final proof of delivery in transportation).
Strategy Analysis
For
the above reasons, SAP has become a force to be reckoned with in the retail
sector, especially in Europe and within certain retail sectors like fashion
and apparel where it has gathered hundreds of customers (see SAP
Learns The Ropes of Fashion and Outfitting). SAP and its ERP peers
appear to understand that continuously improving the way enterprise information
is presented and by marrying analytics, optimization, and retail operation systems
on top of an ERP platform is starting to win over retailers. By building out
its retail offering atop its enterprise platform and by tapping its maturing
portfolio of SCM, e-commerce, portal, product lifecycle management
(PLM), and customer relationship management (CRM) offerings, the likes
of SAP can provide the building blocks for retailers.
Still,
SAP's challenge, as it expands its global reach as a dedicated solution provider
for the retail sector, will be to penetrate the US retail market with the similar
success it has achieved in Europe, but which is more fiercely defended by the
likes of JDA and Retek. The success will also
require more than simply repackaging existing applications with appealing retail
sector wrapping paper, but rather to provide many of the above-depicted deep
retail-specific nuggets of functionality. Therefore, the latest or upcoming
components of the SAP for Retail suite already do or will contain what the deep
retail-specific functionality retailers require, which will be the topic of
a more detailed research note in the future. Further, much of this functionality
is available on a modular basis, much like a point solution, meaning that retailers
could get best-of-breed functionality with complete built-in integration capabilities
from SAP.
Indeed,
the decision to base the enterprise application backbone on an ERP system or
piece together a best-of-breed strategy has never been an easy decision in any
industry and in any functional area like business intelligence (BI),
CRM, SCM, PLM, and so on, at least given that there are a number of possible
package combinations alternatives in most of these. Also, the ERP vendors had
long ignored the retail sector to only recently move more aggressively into
the wide-open market, striving to thereby provide greater industry-specific
functionality if they are to displace today's still popular approach of opting
for integrating best-of-breed software. Yet, with SAP's modular approach and
its near best-in-class functionality in many areas, it soon might no longer
be a question of best-of-breed versus ERP, but rather it will be the best of
both worlds with a phased approach, with SAP's strong retail functionality complete
with integration to retailer's other enterprise systems (e.g., via the SAP
NetWeaver platform) and the availability of SAP's core enterprise applications
down the road. For instance, retailers can start with merchandise and assortment
planning then obtain forecasting and replenishment and then when they're ready,
move into financials and HR. This way, retailers could tackle their IT needs
on a phased approach rather than a giant ERP-like implementation.
This
brings us to the fact that the ERP vendors are making their way into the retail
market by bundling, acquiring point solutions (as in the case of Lawson
Software, see "Lawson's
Approach to the Retail Market"), or partnering strategically to embed retail-specific
functions within their suites. Like in all other enterprise applications markets,
eventually albeit not any time soon, the retail market too will come down to
a showdown between the pure retail vendors and the enterprise application vendors
(e.g., Oracle, SAP, Lawson, PeopleSoft, SSA
Global, Geac, Intentia, etc.), which
have been striving to natively embed more retail-specific capability into their
products. As usual, the enterprise vendors will bet on leveraging existing customers
who will have deeply invested in them, and have even reorganized operations
around their ERP systems.
The
promise of retail products from ERP vendors is the link to financial and manufacturing
systems (albeit mostly the vendors' own, which is logical at this stage) and
include collaborative supplier relationship management (SRM) and PLM
capabilities, and links to customer data in CRM systems. A single-vendor approach
by ERP providers could produce other benefits too, like integrated and consistent
processes throughout the supply chain, consistent data-model for the entire
enterprise, and easier estimation of overall project cost and implementation
management through primary relationship (i.e., "one throat to choke"). The business
opportunity is to move from supply- to demand-driven retailing, via merchandizing,
replenishment, pricing, promotions, consumer loyalty schemes, and multichannel
management systems, all working off the single ERP platform.
However,
the retail vendors' Holy Grail has become working with information from heterogeneous
sources, an order du jour' within many large organizations, which often have
more than one ERP system or various retail point solutions and legacy systems,
albeit SAP will claim that much of this issue might be addressed and solved
with SAP NetWeaver. This is analogous to the enterprise applications integration
(EAI) market, since in larger corporations, customers still may prefer integration
vendors with renowned product strength, vertical expertise, financial viability,
and savvy in extensible markup language (XML)-based business-to-business
(B2B) integration, multi-platform integration, and workflow management. The
best-of-breed approach could still often provide the selection of a functionally
richer system for each business area from a more specialized vendor, elasticity
and exit strategy against a particular vendor's failure or demise, and greater
flexibility in terms of substitution of individual elements as to accommodate
any adaptation needs.
The current retail leaders' superiority, like in the case of the SCM and CRM markets, will eventually diminish as the ERP vendors continue to improve their retail-specific functionality, collaborative capabilities and accessibility, and add universal interfaces, including the new web service standards to facilitate access and integration of data outside their own environment. Thus, the retail vendors need to establish as strong a hold on the market as possible before the enterprise and platform vendors catch up. Especially the remaining Tier 2 and 3 retail point solution vendors, if they cannot gain significant traction and distinctive differentiation, could find themselves in a position of needing to either be acquired or join forces with a complementary functional or platform technology vendor via alliance or acquisition.
On a more general note, retailers will have to find a fine balance between investments in emerging technologies and their ability to tactically stake out effective competitive differentiation in what seems to be challenging times for all. The winners will be those who can align their investments with the ever-changing preferences of their customers, who may prefer in-store or off-store channels, or both. On one hand, technology investments that facilitate speed of checkout, self-service, multiple sales channels, inventory availability, and personalized content are what will engage customers and make them feel close to being the only customer. On the other hand, strategic technology investments in historical data analysis, demand-based forecasting and replenishment (store- and distribution center [DC]-level), seasonal profiling, allocation, and space planning, measuring shelf space performance, will be the pedestals on which growing revenue and improving margins will be built.
Whether considering new enterprise applications based on a single-vendor offering or constructing a best-of-breed portfolio of retail applications, prospective users should espouse a consistent technology infrastructure to avoid the pitfalls of too many supported platforms, while ensuring open and broad integration functionality that focuses on common product and pricing data sources and the necessary, ubiquitous connections to trading partners. In retail companies where employees have more autonomy and initiative, best-of-breed approach will typically let employees work with the best tools for their peculiar needs and talents. On the other hand, the sweeping changes imposed by usually more rigid single-vendor solutions (particularly from unified ERP offerings) may work better in more autocratic companies.