Announcements
These
days when radio frequency identification (RFID) is constantly on everyone's
lips, and when every relevant enterprise application vendor is hedging its bets
towards becoming RFID-ready or is even convincing the market that its RFID-compliant
solution is exactly what the doctor (such as, Wal-Mart, Target,
Albertsons, the US Department of Defense [DoD])
ordered the typically quiet Provia Software (www.provia.com),
a privately-held provider of supply chain execution (SCE) software
solutions, naturally feels the time has come for it to be more vocal about its
RFID endeavors, albeit after it has already put so much effort in terms of the
proof of concept in the field.
At
the end of May, Provia announced at the Distribution/Computer Expo 2004
in Chicago, Illinois (US) that its ViaView event/alert management
and decision support product plays a key role in offering visibility to supply
chain data for companies supplying RFID-tagged products to Wal-Mart and other
retailers.
Further,
at the end of March, Provia announced that it has aligned itself with its parent
company for over fifteen years, Viastore Systems, a leading
provider of automated storage and retrieval systems (AS/RS), and material
handling control systems, with over 3,000 cranes installed worldwide.
As
for the products' functional enhancements, at the end of 2003, Provia announced
the release of FourSite 4.4, an upgrade of its fulfillment
solution oriented towards third party logistics (3PL) providers. Industry-wide
globalization is a major factor affecting logistics and supply chain management
businesses.
This
is Part Eight of an eight-part note.
Parts
One through Five detail recent announcements.
Parts
Six and Seven discuss the market impact.
Parts
One through Four were published between August 11 and 14.
Part
Five to Eight will be published August 18 to 21.
Challenges
Still,
Provia's primary challenge is overcoming its lack of market visibility. During
the twelve years that it had operated as Haushahn Systems & Engineers, the company
had established a reputation among a select group of 3PL providers and distributors.
Yet, Provia will need to broaden its appeal and to articulate more clearly its
expansions into other verticals if it hopes to fend off competition from other
warehouse management systems (WMS) and SCE vendors.
The
competition is not exactly negligible either given a slew of WMS vendors delivering
sophisticated collaboration, visibility, and event management functionality,
and many of them are consistently profitable, public, and have more visibility
and mindshare. In addition to Manhattan Associates and Yantra,
the list of these would contain Swisslog, Highjump,
Optum, RedPrairie, HK Systems,
and Catalyst International, to name some. The lack of support
for IBM iSeries (i.e., former AS/400) might
impede Provia's tack on retailers, which segment supposedly happen to have embraced
the platform, and where some vendors are happy to oblige, particularly the SCE
leader Manhattan Associates.
In
addition, Provia does not have a substantial number of alliances with complementary
software providers, such as enterprise resource planning (ERP), customer
relationship management (CRM), and enterprise application integration
(EAI) vendors. Predictably, SAP is the only major enterprise
application vendor for which Provia has coded a certified interface, while Provia
has integrated to multiple other ERP products through a standard host interface,
ViaWare Gateway. Its lack of the much mention harnessing of
Web services could also be perceived as laggard, given that the area of order
fulfillment and parcel shipping seemingly lends itself to the use of service-oriented
product architecture.
One
should never discount the competition coming from ERP "800 lb gorillas" like
SAP, Oracle, PeopleSoft, and SSA Global,
which, although still with fledgling WMS/TMS products (which is also questionable
at least for SSA Global after its acquisition of the former SCE leader EXE
Technologies, see SSA
GT to EXE-cute (Yet) Another Acquisition), are becoming more aggressive
within their large customer bases due to their ERP integration mantra. The likes
of Lilly Software, Intentia, IBS, SYSPRO,
Adonix, and ACCPAC which have also espoused
a strong WMS product in addition to their traditional ERP products, could prevent
Provia from penetrating the ERP mid-market, particularly in cases of less complex
environments, with basic case and pallet picking, straightforward task interleaving,
and selectable RF, label and paper by work area requirements. Although we do
not debate the likes of Provia's functional WMS, TMS, YMS, and SPS supremacy,
in many cases, prospective customers may like the trade-off of poorer functionality
for a one-stop-shop arrangement from their ERP provider (see ERP
Vendors Intrude on SCE/WMS Safe Haven).
Provia
should thus continue to bolster its recent realignment with Viastore
and image recognition with further marketing initiatives to penetrate mid-tier
distributors and retail companies. Top tier clients can contribute to growth
by replicating single site implementations to other parts of the organization,
but the mid-market is growing faster and offers great rewards for vendors that
stake an early claim. In addition, the market has increasingly been appreciating
the demands of managing a fulfillment network, a feat that Provia can address
with ViaWare by targeting its message appropriately.
Functionally,
Provia should consider acquiring or allying with a software vendor that offers
full support for ocean, air, and rail transportation modes to broaden the scope
of its TMS, and the company's solution footprint needs improvements in terms
of International Trade Logistics (ITL) compliance, contract management,
and payment processes. Therefore, the company might still need to make acquisitions
or partnerships to quickly provide a complete multimode transportation product
that complies with global trading.
Owing
to still the fairly recent availability of the single source code for multiple
platforms, Provia still has to improve the perception of its amenability to
the mid-market, and to increase its brand recognition within the TMS market.
Due to a fledgling customer base (less than thirty TMS customers), the company
might still be omitted in many TMS selections despite having long delivered
capabilities like order consolidation, route optimization, carrier rate management,
electronic data interchange (EDI) links with carriers, Internet based
shipment tracking, integrated payment on delivery (POD ) and claims
management, most economical mode determination (i.e., parcel, less than truckload
[LTL], full truck load [FTL], pool distribution, stops in transit), calculation
of best route for multiple stops, carrier selection, trailer capacity, and five-digit
zip code accuracy, but only for the tracking carrier transportation mode.
There
is also the challenge of differentiating in the RFID context. Namely, against
the backdrop of the ongoing RFID frenzy and vendors' attempts to jump on the
RFID bandwagon, there has naturally been a sort of a vendors' PR war of words
(as well as of true actions) in their zeal to portray themselves as an RFID
thought leader of any sort. However, while the customers should be encouraged
by the vendors' apparent interest and commendable moves, which speak volumes
about the technology's prospects, they should note that many vendors' PRs, after
cutting through customary hyped-up rhetoric, merely entail trial, pilot-stage
projects; initial participation in standards-making councils; and laboratory-based
simulations of real life, RFID-based scenarios. Although Gillette
has been a real life deployment, some other vendors have already or will soon
be able to purport similar achievements (for details on Provia and Gillette
see RFID
Case Study: Gillette and Provia).
Further,
the real benefits of RFID will be achieved, when the integration of the electronic
product code (EPC) data will be a substantial part for the control of supply
chain business processes. To that end, the SAP solution too could be applied
in warehousing, manufacturing, and transportation and at touch points between
these (including 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), which blunts the Provia's RFID cutting edge.
For additional information on EPC see Electronic
Product Code (EPC): A Key to RFID.
Nevertheless, the above announcements should keep every competitor on its toes to come up with an equivalent counteractive value proposition. Provia's international reach, attractive products and services, and highly "referenceable" customer base will continue to position it well in the highly competitive SCE market.
User Recommendations
Highly complex 3PL environments and other industries of Provia focus, needing next generation, deeply functional warehouse, yard and transportation management software that supports intricate demands, like complex piece picking; advanced kitting and postponement; serial number capture and tracking; material handling integration (e.g., sortation systems, AS/RS, carousels); and highly configurable task segregation by work area and operator, and companies with over 200,000 line items, and over 150 users per site should place Provia on a shortlist of SCE vendors. Prospective clients should keep in mind the packaged and highly configurable nature of ViaWare and understand that customizations, if needed will cost more. A center that picks 200,000 orders over 50,000 SKUs with a great deal of value-added services is an example of complexity that Provia can address well. Existing Provia customers should evaluate the remaining portions of the product suite in search for additional value (e.g., OMS customers migrating into full-fledged WMS). Users that need automation and visibility across multiple transportation modes, including sea and air, might want to consider marrying ViaWare with third-party software for managing international transport lanes.
There are indeed some indications that the main burden for RFID compliance will fall on suppliers, and not on retailers. Thus, such companies should start evaluating RFID technology soon to avoid paying exorbitant compliance costs, in the nick of time or ensuing penalties due to their noncompliance after the deadline. CPG manufacturers and other Wal-Mart suppliers, and companies that are not yet "Top 100 listed", but are eager to grow their relationship with Wal-Mart, that are looking for a reasonably low cost path to RFID-compliance that does not include implementing an entire WMS solution, a costly customization to an existing system, or an upgrade, should look at RFIDware. It easily coexists with the existing WMS, ERP or host system and is among the easiest of ways to achieve compliance in the required time frames.
However,
RFID compliance will mainly mean additional costs unless the holistic supply
chain business processes are also modified in the process. Many enterprises
can learn much from the Gillette's ViaWare WMS RFID deployment experience—like
in the case of some other success stories (see ROI
for RFID: A Case Study), the benefits are achievable, but one has to
beware of still unproven technology, which seems to be heading for the mainstream
and boardroom priorities, almost directly from scientific labs, of course with
a number of caveats due to the technology's current imperfection level (see
Leveraging
Technology to Maintain a Competitive Edge During Tough Economic Times—A Panel
Discussion Analyzed; Part Four: RFID Software Issues). The giant retailers'
compliance mandate has unfortunately preceded the achievements of applied physics
and computer science. Thus, as noted earlier on, the trickiest part of using
RFID at the case and pallet level is to position the readers and accompanying
RFID gear correctly for accurate reads, which means lots of testing, manual
intervention and tweaking on the floor before reliable automation is reached.
Another related big issue that has been encountered so far by most early adopters would be getting an accurate scan on a mixed pallet. Although RFID tags can, in theory, streamline complex stock-handling processes, enterprises should not assume that this will reduce the need for staff and processes in exception handling. On the contrary, in many cases, the resource overhead requirements for RFID implementations can often be even greater than traditional methods. Namely, there are no built-in default reconciliation mechanisms to validate whether the data was read or not, which imposes visual checking of goods as a means of reconciliation. This, in turn, might remove much of the touted value proposition of RFID. Thus, enterprises should conduct a number of tests on the plant, since laboratory-environment testing is often insufficient to determine RFID tag performance in the real life warehouse environmental and system conditions.
Users should also look warily at many vendors' claims of RFID readiness and that cite their applications are designed for automated data collection since they have been doing it for years with RF technology, and that RFID is yet another format. Namely, the process to gather bar code data follows a very structured and straightforward practice, requiring a SKU, case, or pallet to be scanned individually, whereas in an RFID environment, data collection is not such a discrete process. Namely, a bundle of data is collected in one scan, regardless of the variety or quantity of product, while in its raw form, the data shows no relationship between pallet, case, and SKU, necessary for inventory integrity. Therefore, a middleware, similar but more complex than those developed for RF and automated material handling equipment, is required by the vendors to transform an unstructured mass of data into an input the system can understand and process.
In any case, software vendors will thus have to create new data fields to cope with the inevitable data deluge by ensuring that data tables, transaction systems, and data warehouses can handle all of it, and, in general, vendors have been by and large responding to the RFID challenge. The likes of Provia, which have significant installed bases in retail and CPG sectors, have been leading the pack by developing the RFID interface to their applications, and by adding software modules or upgrading their products to cope with the serial numbers in RFID tags.
But
these effective albeit not necessarily neat solutions will still require suppliers
and retailers to deploy specialized middleware and hardware that manages the
huge amount of data coming from the readers. More proactive companies are thinking
about putting the right business intelligence (BI) and analytic architecture
in place to make the most out of RFID data and drive better supply-chain decisions.
Users should also check out these vendors' services at their labs that include
consulting and integration, as well as painstaking testing multiple vendors'
RFID equipment and hardware to simulate real world supply chain business processes.
Full and careful consideration should be given to vendors that have experience
laboring in trenches and that have done it many times before.
One
of the main obstacles is the lack of integration, since there is a dearth of
software tools from enterprise application integration vendors to get data from
RFID tags and readers into existing business systems, meaning that companies
are often forced to do expensive custom integration work. Together, with the
vendors, they will have to devise ways to filter out false or redundant reads
and pass on only useful information to enterprise applications. Managers will
have to devise policies on how much data to collect from RFID systems, which
signals to record, which to ignore and which to forward to a transactional system
or a person for an action. Such policies could eventually be coded into business
logic of SCE applications or some type of a business-rules engine, and then
enforced by middleware.
This
concludes Part Eight of an eight-part note.
Parts
One through Five detail recent announcements.
Parts
Six and Seven discuss the market impact.
Parts
One through Four were published between August 11 and 14.
Part
Five to Eight were published August 18 to 21.
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Reflections on Lean Philosophy and the Theory of Constraints | The Theory of Constraints Enters the Lean Manufacturing Arena | The TEC Quick Case for Made2Manage | Enterprise Resource Planning Vendors Address Lean Manufacturing | So What: The Big Test of Your Positioning Strategy | Manual versus Information Technology Enabled Lean Manufacturing | How to Achieve Lean Manufacturing | Lean Tools and Practices that Eliminate Manufacturing Waste | Microsoft's Dynamic New Approach to Professional Services Automation | Globalization Has a Profound Impact on the Supply Chain and Supporting Information Technology | IDeWeb Provides Best-of-breed Product Portfolio Management Functionality for the Manufacturing Sector | Enterprise Resource Planning Vendor Gains Connectivity through Acquisition of Plant Intelligence Provider | Has SAP Nailed Plant Level Leadership with Lighthammer? | Where is Oracle in the Product Lifecycle Management Software Market? | SAP NetWeaver Background, Direction, and User Recommendations | Multipurpose SAP NetWeaver | Pelion Systems Champions Manufacturing Process Optimization | Enterprise Resource Planning Giants Eye the Shop Floor | As Hype Becomes Reality, a Radio Frequency Identification Ecosystem Emerges Part Three: Radio Frequency Identification Opportunities Abound and Summary | As Hype Becomes Reality, a Radio Frequency Identification Ecosystem Emerges Part Two: The Middleware Dilemma, Partnerships, and What Next? | As Hype Becomes Reality, a Radio Frequency Identification Ecosystem Emerges | Extending Quality's Reach to Manage Quality in the Supply Chain | SSA Global finds Little Known SCM Gems in Filling Out its Solution Portfolio | Exact Faces Challenges | Exact Acquires Vanguard Solutions Group | A Single Software Solution That Enables Business Process Management | Global Software Aspirations | Exact Software Continues with Its Share of Judicious Acquisitions | Project Portfolio Management for New Product Development: Tracking the Project Cycle from Idea to Launch | What Are Your Competitors Telling You? 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Part Six: Weaknesses and User Recommendations | RFID ... For Customers? | Oracle Further Orchestrates Its SOA Forays
Part Five: Collaxa Acquisition | Oracle Further Orchestrates Its SOA Forays
Part Four: SOA and Web Services | Oracle Further Orchestrates Its SOA Forays
Part Three: Strategy Shifts | Oracle Further Orchestrates Its SOA Forays
Part Two: Strategy | Oracle Further Orchestrates Its SOA Forays
Part One: Event Summary and Market Impact | Jack Link's Beef Jerky Case Study: "Wal-Mart Didn't Make Me Do It"
Part Three: Expected Benefits and Lessons Learned | Jack Link's Beef Jerky Case Study: "Wal-Mart Didn't Make Me Do It"
Part Two: An Approach to RFID Implementation | Jack Link's Beef Jerky Case Study: "Wal-Mart Didn't Make Me Do It"
Part One: RFID Philosophy for SMEs and Company Background | The Three Rs of RFID: Rewards, Risk, and ROI | A Spoonful of SugarCRMCase Study and Review of an Open Source CRM Solution | Atrion User Conference Highlights Need for Regulatory Compliance in PLM | RFID in Healthcare--A Whole Industry of Value | RFID Case Study: HP and Wal-Mart | The Data Explosion | The Name and Ownership Change Roulette Wheel for Marcam Stops at SSA Global
Part Four: What SSA Global Gets | SSA Global Forms a Strategic Unit with an Extended-ERP Savvy
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | TEC Talks to OpenMFGFree and Open Source Software Business ModelsPart Two: OpenMFG | Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
Part Seven: WMS Market Impact | Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
Part Six: Market Impact | Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
Part Five: 3PL Support and SCE Optimization | Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
Part Four: Global Availability | Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
Part Three: Provia and Viastore Systems Alignment | Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
Part Two: RFID Compliance | Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
Part One: Recent Annoucements | RFID Case Study: Gillette and Provia
Part Two: Challenges and Lessons Learned | RFID Case Study: Gillette and Provia
Part One: Background | Electronic Product Code (EPC): A Key to RFID | PeopleSoft Revamps World for Its Mid-Market "Express" Conquest
Part One: Recent Annoucements | ROI for RFID: A Case Study
Part Two: Implementation and Results | ROI for RFID: A Case Study
Part One: Company Background | Service Chain Information will Transform the Total Chain | Encompix--Thriving on Encompassing Complexity
Part Two: Challenges and User Recommendations | Leveraging Technology to Maintain a Competitive Edge During Tough Economic Times--A Panel Discussion Analyzed
Part Four: RFID Software Issues | RFID--A New Technology Set to Explode?
Part Two: Early Adopters, Challenges, and User Recommendations | RFID--A New Technology Set to Explode?
Part One: RFID Technology | SmallSmartFast Organizations | Exact Software--Working Diligently Towards the "One Exact" Synergy
Part One: Event Summary | 3M Wraps Up HighJump, While Retalix Shops OMI International
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | Onyx/Pivotal Rivalry Through Thin Rather Than Thick | I-Impact Predicts Your Customer Retention! | Microsoft Keeps on Rounding up Its Business Solutions
Part Two: Challenges and User Recommendations | Microsoft Keeps on Rounding up Its Business Solutions
Part One: Event Summary | Autodesk to Bring Microsoft Business Solutions Closer to PLM | Lawson Software-IPO and Several Acquisitions After
Part Five: Challenges and User Recommendations | Lawson Software-IPO and Several Acquisitions After
Part Four: Strengths Continued | Lawson Software-IPO and Several Acquisitions After
Part Three: Market Impact | Lawson Software-IPO and Several Acquisitions After
Part Two: Retail and Professional Service Initiatives | Lawson Software-IPO and Several Acquisitions After | Ramco to Its Customers-Let's Get Personal!
Part Two: Commitment and Recommendations | Ramco to Its Customers - Let's Get Personal! | Surado! A Rising Mid-market CRM Provider | Analyzing MAPICS' Further Steps After Frontstep
Part Five: Challenges and User Recommendations | Analyzing MAPICS' Further Steps After Frontstep
Part Four: Market Impact Continued | Analyzing MAPICS' Further Steps After Frontstep
Part Three: Market Impact | Analyzing MAPICS' Further Steps After Frontstep
Part Two: More Recent Events | Analyzing MAPICS’ Further Steps After Frontstep | chinadotcom in the "Process" of Acquiring Ross Systems
Part Two: Challenges and User Recommendations | chinadotcom In The "Process" of Acquiring Ross Systems | SSA GT to EXE-cute (Yet) Another Acquisition
Part Four: Challenges, and User Recommendations | SSA GT to EXE-cute (Yet) Another Acquisition
Part Three: Impact on SSA GT | SSA GT to EXE-cute (Yet) Another Acquisition
Part Two: EXE | SSA GT To EXE-cute (Yet) Another Acquisition | QAD Pulling through, Patiently but Passionately
Part Six: User Recommendations | QAD Pulling Through, Patiently But Passionately
Part Five: Challenges | QAD Pulling Through, Patiently But Passionately
Part Four: Market Impact Continued | QAD Pulling through, Patiently but Passionately
Part Three: Market Impact | QAD Pulling Through, Patiently But Passionately
Part Two: Company Background | QAD Pulling Through, Patiently But Passionately | PeopleSoft Strategy a Good Deal for JD Edwards Customers | Battery Power Shakes Up Made2Manage
Part Two: Challenges and User Recommendations | Battery Power Shakes Up Made2Manage | IBM is Serious About SMB | Solomon Stands the Test of Time Despite Changing Masters
Part Four: Challenges and User Recommendations | Solomon Stands the Test of Time Despite Changing Masters
Part Three: Product Differentiators | Solomon Stands the Test of Time Despite Changing Masters
Part Two: Market Impact | Solomon Stands the Test of Time Despite Changing Masters | Scala and Microsoft Become (Not So) Strange CRM Bedfellows
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | Scala and Microsoft Become (Not So) Strange CRM Bedfellows
Part Two: Market Impact Continued | Scala and Microsoft Become (Not So) Strange CRM Bedfellows | Epicor Conducts Its Own ROI Acquisition Rationale
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | Epicor Conducts Its Own ROI Acquisition Rationale
Part Two: Market Impact | Epicor Conducts Its Own ROI Acquisition Rationale | Lose the Starry Eyes, Analyze: Reviewing the Ideal Candidate for EMR Innovations ProcessPro | RTI's CRM Applications Rivals The Major League Providers | IBM Express-es Its Candid Desire For SMEs
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | IBM Express-es Its Candid Desire For SMEs
Part Two: Market Impact | IBM Express-es Its Candid Desire For SMEs | Best Software Delivers More Insights To Its Partners
(As Well As To The Market)
Part Five: Challenges and User Recommendations | Best Software Delivers More Insights To Its Partners
(As Well As To The Market)
Part Four: Market Impact Continued | Best Software Delivers More Insights To Its Partners (As Well As To The Market)
Part Three: Market Impact | Best Software Delivers More Insights To Its Partners (As Well As To The Market)
Part Two: Event Summary Continued | Best Software Delivers More Insights To Its Partners
(As Well As To The Market) | Baan And SSA GT Merge To Form A Mid-Market Empire With An ''Iron Side''
Part Four: Market Impact Summary and User Recommendations | Baan And SSA GT Merge To Form A Mid-Market Empire With An ''Iron Side''
Part Three: Market Impact On SSA GT | Baan And SSA GT Merge To Form A Mid-Market Empire With An ''Iron Side''
Part Two: Market Impact On Baan | Baan And SSA GT Merge To Form A Mid-Market Empire With An ''Iron Side'' | To Gain Market Share in the Mid-Market, SAP Leaves No Stone Unturned | Welcome to the CRM Mid-Market Abyss-PeopleSoft | Frantic Merger-Mania Spiced Up With Vendettas Leaves Customers Anxious | Lose the Starry Eyes, Analyze: Reviewing the Ideal Candidate for Metasystems ICIM | Epicor Reaches Better Vista From This Vantage Point
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | Epicor Reaches Better Vista From This Vantage Point
Part Two: Market Impact | Epicor Reaches Better Vista From This Vantage Point | A User Centric WorkWise Customer Conference | ROI Systems Defies The Odds Through Delighted Customers
Part Three: Strengths, Challenges and User Recommendations | ROI Systems Defies The Odds Through Delighted Customers
Part Two: Market Impact | ROI Systems Defies The Odds Through Delighted Customers | Adonix + CIMPRO = A Feature-Rich Process ERP Product, But With Challenges | SCE Leaders Partner To See Beyond Their Portfolio
Part Two: Market Impact | Baan Seeking A New Foster Home -- A Déjà vu Or Not Quite?
Part Three: Market Impact and User Recommendations | Baan Seeking A New Foster Home -- A Déjà vu Or Not Quite?
Part Two: Baan Under Invensys | Baan Seeking A New Foster Home -- A Déjà vu Or Not Quite? | Microsoft Convergence 2003 portrayed an Enterprise Solutions crossroad! | Commerce One Conducts Its Soul-Searching Metamorphosis
Part Two: Challenges and User Recommendations | Commerce One Conducts Its Soul-Searching Metamorphosis | Cincom Acknowledges There Is A Composite Applications Environ-ment Out There
Part Two: Challenges and User Recommendations | Cincom Acknowledges There Is A Composite Applications Environ-ment Out There | Lose the Starry Eyes, Analyze: Reviewing the Ideal Candidate for a Pronto Solution | Is J.D. Edwards's CRM 2.0 (With more than 200 Enhancements) Good News? | Ramco Ships Technology And Products.
Part Two: User and Vendor Recommendations | Ramco Ships Technology And Products.
Is This The Future Of Enterprise Applications? | SYSPRO - Awaiting Positive IMPACT From Its Brand Unification
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | SYSPRO - Awaiting Positive IMPACT From Its Brand Unification
Part Two: Market Impact | SYSPRO - Awaiting Positive IMPACT From Its Brand Unification | SAP Weaves Microsoft .NET And IBM WebSphere Into Its ESA Tapestry
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | SAP Weaves Microsoft .NET And IBM WebSphere Into Its ESA Tapestry
Part Two: Market Impact | SAP Weaves Microsoft .NET And IBM WebSphere Into Its ESA Tapestry | Top 10 Reasons For Having A Project Kickoff - Part II | Top 10 Reasons For Having A Project Kickoff - Part I | Lilly Software - Product Enhancements Remain Its Order 'Du Jour'
Part Four: Challenges and User Recommendations | Lilly Software - Product Enhancements Remain Its Order 'Du Jour'
Part Three: Competitive Analysis | Lilly Software - Product Enhancements Remain Its Order 'Du Jour'
Part Two: Market Impact | Lilly Software - Product Enhancements Remain Its Order 'Du Jour' | Will Adonix Provide A Warmer Home To CIMPRO?
Part Three: Challenges and User Recommendations | Will Adonix Provide A Warmer Home To CIMPRO?
Part Two: Market Impact | Will Adonix Provide A Warmer Home To CIMPRO? | ACCPAC -- Being Much More Than Meets The Eye
Part Four: Challenges and User Recommendations | ACCPAC -- Being Much More Than Meets The Eye
Part Three: Market Impact | ACCPAC -- Being Much More Than Meets The Eye
Part Two: Announcements Continued | ACCPAC -- Being Much More Than Meets The Eye | Ramco Systems' Users - Winning Big And Speaking Out In Las Vegas | Made2Manage Affirms Its Technological Astuteness
Part 3: Challenges and User Recommendations | Made2Manage Affirms Its Technological Astuteness
Part 2: Strategy | Made2Manage Affirms Its Technological Astuteness | MAPICS To Leap Forward In A Frontstep Way
Part 3: Challenges and User Recommendations | MAPICS To Leap Forward In A Frontstep Way
Part 2: Market Impact | MAPICS To Leap Forward In A Frontstep Way | Best Software To Hold Competition At Bay
Part Four: Challenges & User Recommendations | Best Software To Hold Competition At Bay
Part Three: Market Impact | Best Software To Hold Competition At Bay
Part Two: Strategy | Best Software To Hold Competition At Bay | Ross Systems Shows Poise in 'Big Easy' | Is SSA GT Betting Infini(um)tely On Acquisitions?
Part Four: Challenges and User Recommendations. | Is SSA GT Betting Infini(um)tely On Acquisitions?
Part Three: Complementary Products | Is SSA GT Betting Infini(um)tely On Acquisitions?
Part Two: Market Impact | Is SSA GT Betting Infini(um)tely On Acquisitions? | Epicor Picks Clarus' Bargain At The Software Flea Market
Part 2: Challenges and User Recommendations | Epicor Picks Clarus' Bargain At The Software Flea Market | Cincom Asserts Expertise In CRM For Complex Manufacturers
Part 2: Challenges and User Recommendations | Cincom Asserts Expertise In CRM For Complex Manufacturers | MAPICS Moving On Pragmatically
Part 4: Competition and User Recommendations | MAPICS Moving On Pragmatically
Part 3: Challenges | MAPICS Moving On Pragmatically
Part 2: Market Impact | MAPICS Moving On Pragmatically | Microsoft Lays Enforced-Concrete Foundation For Its Business Solutions
Part 4: User Recommendations | Microsoft Lays Enforced-Concrete Foundation For Its Business Solutions
Part 3: Challenges | Microsoft Lays Enforced-Concrete Foundation For Its Business Solutions
Part 2: Market Impact | Microsoft Lays Enforced-Concrete Foundation For Its Business Solutions | J.D. Edwards Finds Its Inner-Self Within Its 5th Incarnation
Part 4: Challenges and User Recommendations | J.D. Edwards Finds Its Inner-Self Within Its 5th Incarnation
Part 3: Market Impact | J.D. Edwards Finds Its Inner-Self Within Its 5th Incarnation
Part 2: FOCUS Announcements Continued | J.D. Edwards Finds Its Inner-Self Within Its 5th Incarnation | PeopleSoft Internationalizes Its Mid-Market Forays
Part 2: Challenges & User Recommendations | PeopleSoft Internationalizes Its Mid-Market Forays | Frontstep Ups The .NET Ante
Part 2: Challenges and User Recommendations | Frontstep Ups The .NET Ante | Will Glovia Glow Again Through Its Hub And VARs?
Part 2: Challenges and User Recommendations | Will Glovia Glow Again Through Its Hub And VARs? | Lose the Starry-Eyes, Analyze:An Ideal Customer for Relevant INFIMACS | Ramco Systems - Diversity Marshaled Through Flexibility
Part 3: Challenges and User Recommendations | SAP Farms More Business Out Amid Its Staff Reductions | Ramco Systems - Diversity Marshaled Through Flexibility
Part 2: Market Impact | Ramco Systems - Diversity Marshaled Through Flexibility | SAP Opens The ‘Miss Congeniality’ Contest | Lilly Software Visualizes Its eBusiness Offering, NOW. Part 2: Market Impact | PeopleSoft Remains Rock-Hard And Economy Proof | Lilly Software Visualizes Its eBusiness Offering, NOW | Glovia On B2B Reinventing Trail | Kewill And Microsoft Great Plains To Further Mutually Complement | Syspro Hatches 'Encore' IMPACT On SME Manufacturers. Part 2: Market Impact | INFIMACS Becoming Ever More RELEVANT For Project-Based Industries. Part 2: Market Impact and User Recommendations | INFIMACS Becoming Ever More RELEVANT For Project-Based Industries. Part 1: Recent Developments | Clarity of Vision: Clarify Sold to Amdocs by Nortel | Collaborative Commerce: ERP, CRM, e-Proc, and SCM Unite! A Series Study: IFS - Part 2 of 2 | Way To Go, Ross Systems! | Collaborative Commerce: ERP, CRM, e-Proc, and SCM Unite! A Series Study: IFS - Part 1 of 2 | MAPICS Unifies The Brand And Interacts For CRM Solutions | IFS Glows Amidst The Mid-Market Gloom | Oracle Makes A U-Turn At The 'All Things To All People' Exit | 'Collaborative Commerce': ERP, CRM, e-Proc, and SCM Unite! A Series Study: SAP AG | 'Collaborative Commerce': ERP, CRM, e-Proc, and SCM Unite! A Series Study: Baan and Parent Company, Invensys | Frontstep Still Awaiting Better Times | Will V8 Help SSA GT Regain Lost Ground? | PeopleSoft Keeps Truckin’ On A Potholed Road Ahead | Epicor Shows Resilience When It Needs It The Most | J.D. Edwards Fires Siebel, Hires YOU | SAP Thrives On Competitors' Plight, In Part | Made2Manage Manages Throughout Soft Market | Microsoft Great Plains Procures eProcure At Last | SAP - A Humble Giant From The Reality Land?
Part 5: Challenges and User Recommendations | SAP - A Humble Giant From The Reality Land?
Part 4: SAP's Strategy | i2, SAP, Oracle Poised For Showdown in Q4 | SAP – A Humble Giant From The Reality Land?
Part 3: Market Impact | SAP - A Humble Giant From The Reality Land?
Part 2: Expanding Functionality | SAP - A Humble Giant From The Reality Land?
Part 1: Alliances | PeopleSoft Supply Chain Is Music To Mid Market Ears | It Is Possible - SAP And Baan Strange Bedfellows | Oracle Claims The Worst Is Over And Turns To KISS For A Boost
Part 3: The Challenge of Gaining Competitive Advantage | Oracle Claims The Worst Is Over And Turns To KISS For A Boost
Part 2: The Implications | Oracle Claims The Worst Is Over And Turns To KISS For A Boost
Part 1: The News | Baan Achieves A Speedy Recovery Despite The Tough Times | Will QAD Finally Get The Break (-Even)? | ROI Systems - A Little ERP Fellow That Gets By | PeopleSoft - Catching Its Second Wind From The Internet
Part 3: Predictions and Recommendations | PeopleSoft - Catching Its Second Wind From The Internet
Part 2: Strengths and Challenges | PeopleSoft - Catching Its Second Wind From The Internet
Part 1: About PeopleSoft | Epicor To Try The Divestiture Tack, Too | MAPICS Clings To Its Customers' Loyalty | SAP Remains One Of The Market’s Beacons Of Hope | SSA Acquires MAX Hoping To Leap From Its MIN | IBM Buys What’s Left of Informix | Invensys Announces New Division - Baan Process | SAP Acquires TopTier To Further Broaden Its Horizons | Oracle Sails Slower In The Low Tide, But Mayday Signal Is Quite Far-Fetched | IFS Aspires To Capture North American Market Against The Low Tide | Is Intentia Truly Industry’s First In Food Traceability? | QAD Finally Breaks The Red Ink Streak, But… | Epicor Software Corp.: Completing Painstaking "e"Volution Part 2: Evaluating Epicor | J.D. Edwards Saved By SCM, Narrowly, And Only For Now | Epicor Software Corp.: Completing Painstaking "e"Volution Part 1: About Epicor | Infinium Attempts To Better Gain Some Markets' Ear | MAPICS XA Expands BI Offering Through Partnership With Vanguard | Has Intentia Turned The Corner? Almost. | Ross Systems Closes Ranks For A (Possible) Turnaround | PeopleSoft Plays Hardball | Is Made2Manage Made2Survive? Seems So. | Frontstep (Nee Symix Systems) A Step Closer To A Turnaround | SAP Defies Economic Slowdown, For Now | Can Lilly Software Get More VISUAL? | Fourth Shift Hopes To Thrive On China’s Greener Pastures | PeopleSoft Joins The Hunt For SMEs | Extricity Makes a Move into IBM’s Sphere of B2B Influence | Microsoft And Great Plains – A Friendship That Turned Into A Marriage | Oracle Sails Despite Market’s Low Tide; How Far Will It Go? | J.D. Edwards Reaches $1B Milestone In Another Losing Year | e-Catalysts Delivers Digital Marketplace | Made2Manage Systems, Inc.: M2M From A2Z For SMEs? | Ross Systems Continues To Slip, But Pledges to Fight Tooth And Claw | IFS Has A Magic Growth Formula; But What About Profitability? | SAP Claims Big Gains In The Low-End Battleground | IBI + IBM = EAI | Baan – What Will The Future In Invensys’ Stable Bring? Part 2: Evaluating Baan | Infinium Ends Its Most Challenging Year | JuxtaComm And IBM Integrate Their Integration Products | Great Plains Unveils New E-Commerce Solution | Great Plains Taps The Web To Deliver Product Support | Epicor Delivers On Milestones, But Its Situation Remains Bleak | Onyx Software: CRM Vendor Battling For Viability | Baan – What Will The Future In Invensys’ Stable Bring? Part 1: About Baan | Intentia Possibly Seeing Daylight | SAP Q3 Results Cause Mixed Reactions | Fourth Shift Tightens Belt To Weather The Drought | PeopleSoft Delivers Oxymoron In 'Supply Chain in a Box' | PeopleSoft – Again A Force To Be Reckoned With? | Another Type Of Virus Hits The World (And Gets Microsoft No Less) | J.D. Edwards – A Collaboration Thought Leader Or A Disguised ERP Follower? Part 2: Evaluating J.D. Edwards | J.D. Edwards – A Collaboration Thought Leader Or A Disguised ERP Follower? Part 1: About J.D. Edwards | ROI Systems Catching Up With e-Commerce | IBM Aims Renamed UNIX Server at Sun | Catalyst International to Tread Water With SAP Through 2000 | More Vendors Bail on Oracle in Favor of IBM | Great Plains Supply Chain Series To Be Powered By Logility | Infinium and Elcom Walk Down ASP Aisle | SAP Details CRM Plans | J.D. Edwards Closes Out Millennium on an Up Note | Oracle is Word One at Ford | Intentia Floats Vaporware Agent to Replace Business Planning | IBM Announces Netfinity 4000R Super-Thin Server | SAP AG - ERP Leader with a "New Dimension" | Baan Company N.V. - Is the Worst Over? | PeopleSoft on Client/Server and Database Issues | PeopleSoft - Are Business Intelligence and e-Commerce Enough? |