AMR research report... Some comments from AMR research that may be of interest to you on IMI.
>New Release Readies IMI for Strategic Relaunch > >Hard on the heels of the news two weeks ago of a strategic >initiative with i2 Technologies, IMI is back in the Alert >this week with news of a new version of its product, System >ESS 5.2. We met with IMI's chief product strategists and >marketing team for a quick look under the hood of the new >release. It's clear that IMI has substantially broadened >and deepened the footprint of its one and only product. >Impressed as we were by the extensions and enhancements in >the product, we were stunned to learn that IMI has earmarked >this as a point release, especially since it's been eighteen >months since the last release, 5.1. We know of many other >vendors who would have taken much less and launched it as a >major release or even a new suite of products! > >System ESS 5.2 expands the application footprint beyond >order management functionality. This release integrates >Open Warehouse, a warehouse management application IMI >acquired from Ceratina, a Swedish WMS vendor, in early 1997. >Service Manager adds integrated after-sales service >management functionality, while Demand Chain Planner >provides tactical inventory management functionality in >forecasting, planning, and sourcing. Finally, Customer and >Economic Value provides capabilities for economic value >analysis of the business by customer, order, product, or any >aggregation. These capabilities invoke the robust DuPont >EVA Model, a technique commonly taught in business schools >but rarely applied in business for lack of data. >Recognizing the need for such data, the original designers >of System ESS architected the product around the granular >data elements needed for DuPont analysis. The Customer and >Economic Value component also provides datamart-like >capabilities in a set of statistical objects for performance >analysis. > >The release also includes more than twenty enhancements in >the order management functionality, the core of System ESS. >These include flexible invoice triggering, improved customer >profiling, improved price management, integrated logical and >physical warehouse concepts, line-item independence in >purchase order management, enhancements in globalization and >localization functions (streamlined euro-handling and >embedded world tax compliance engine via Taxware), and >improved printing via Jetforms. > >Perhaps the biggest news involves expanded electronic >commerce capabilities. System ESS 5.2 rolls out more Web- >enabled core functionality, including Java-based order entry >capabilities, on an Internet Commerce Workbench. That >functionality is supporting the Web commerce activities of >Forlagsentralen, the largest Swedish book retailer. With >its scalability and process logic to handle complex >logistics and data granularity, it makes a compelling case >for putting System ESS at the core of any enterprise-class >electronic commerce business. We expect core System ESS >capability should drive significant e-business opportunities >through IMI's relationship with IBM to integrate System ESS >with Net.Commerce, its merchant server software. When used >together, the systems will deliver an e-business solution >with complete order management capabilities, including >advanced order entry and tracking, customer profiles, price >and promotion management, and distribution management, to >tailor fulfillment processes to the needs of individual >customers. > >What's the bottom line? Plenty of potential. In addition >to the new product, IMI has reinvigorated its sales and >marketing organizations in North America and Europe. By the >numbers, the organization looks as strong now as ever. In >North America (which lost a number of key employees within >the past year) the sales organization includes 12 account >managers, versus 8 last year; 8 presales, versus 4 last >year; and 3 regional managers, against none a year ago. An >under-performing sales and alliance organization in Europe >has been reorganized and restaffed. While IMI cannot yet >point to new revenue from its relationship with Oracle in >CPG, the two companies have taken several steps to eliminate >channel conflicts, have improved their implementation >capabilities, and are undertaking joint development to >improve integration. > >All things considered, with a new product and other >improvements in hand, now seems like a great time to re- >launch the company, rename the product, bring complex >logistics solutions to e-commerce and do it all with a lot >of fanfare. To be sure, even with significant complementary >functionality, System ESS remains an order management >application, spanning order capture and validation, >sourcing, delivery, and after-sales support. That's the >vital core of its two toughest competitors, SAP's R/3 and >legacy custom order management applications. IMI's success, >as a single point solution provider, swings on taking its >complex logistics-handling message straight at e-commerce >supply chain management. > |