SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : CheckFree Holdings Corp. (CKFR), the next Dell, Intel?

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Robert Sloan who wrote (19848)10/21/2002 3:17:15 PM
From: peat   of 20297
 
this is from E-WEEK

October 21, 2002
SAP Closes Billing Cycle
By Renee Boucher Ferguson




October 21, 2002 SAP Closes Billing CycleBy Renee Boucher Ferguson SAP AG is developing software that integrates the myriad pieces of bill presentment, payment and settlement—processes that to date have been addressed only in parts by banks and pure-play software makers.ADVERTISEMENT

The Walldorf, Germany, software developer is readying new and upgraded components for its Financial Supply Chain Management software, which will provide a three-part hub-and-spoke billing system that officials said will be a cheaper, Web-based alternative to products based on EDI (electronic data interchange).Although the bill-paying software can be integrated with SAP's R/3 ERP (enterprise resource planning) software suite, officials at the company said Financial Supply Chain Management will be able to deliver invoices from an Oracle Corp. or a PeopleSoft Inc. financials application. SAP will provide a tool for small companies that don't have an ERP system to trade information with bill consolidators.The software, components of which are available now and next quarter in Germany and due in English versions for North America next year, consists of three components that communicate via XML over the Internet. The Bill of Service Provider component maintains the basic information of the bill issuer and transforms invoices to the SAP IDoc format.The second component, the Consolidator, maintains the relationship between the biller and its customers, as well as maintains an interface with banks to facilitate settlement. Third, the Customer Service Provider component provides a Web front end for customers to view and pay invoices.Along the way the system can verify the parties and the invoices, post open items in the financials systems of the biller and the company receiving the bill, and create a payment file to send to the bank. Authorized banks that also install a component of the SAP software can debit and credit accounts.SAP will market Financial Supply Chain Management first to banks that could offer it as a service and to its large corporate customers that could use it to create a private payment exchange for suppliers. Officials envision generic bill consolidators operating through consumer Web portals ultimately implementing the software.Trelleborg YSH Inc. is in a multiyear, multimillion-dollar R/3 implementation. "This is the backbone of our supply chain management system," said Kishore Nayak, worldwide vice president of IT at Trelleborg, of South Haven, Mich. "From here we are planning to deploy SAP Supplier Portal—a portal for all supplier activities."

While Nayak is planning to install a Web-based EDI system, he said he is interested in SAP's financial supply chain software because it could give suppliers more timely information on payments.ADVERTISEMENT

"EDI is so expensive that in Germany we have only two suppliers that participate in EDI. So we want to eliminate it," said Nayak. "It's a good time to [investigate financial supply chain software] because I believe it's going to save some money."Many would-be customers of the SAP software simply are not ready to take on the arduous and expensive task of deploying Financial Supply Chain Management, however, because it would require money and a fundamental change in how companies do business with one another."I don't look at SAP as having a significant presence on the supply chain side of things," said R/3 customer Paul Hoogenboom, CIO at RPM International Inc., in Medina, Ohio."We have automated cash management with our banks in each country. What's SAP got to do with all of that?" asked Hoogenboom. "I don't deny that there are things I can do more efficiently with financial settlement issues, but that's not an overriding issue with us."
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext