Advantages of Supplier Self Service Portal
Portals were one of the innovative new technologies introduced
during the dot com era. But unlike marketplaces, exchanges and other failed
concepts, portals successfully gained widespread adoption. In fact, portals
have been both a disruptive and transformative force in the supply chain. As we
look back on the past ten years of evolution it is interesting to discuss both
the positive impacts portals have had on the supply chain.
Below are some of the benefits of supplier portals. A few of the
benefits enabled by the introduction of supplier portals include:
·
Broader Supplier Enablement –
Portals enabled a new tier of suppliers to automate routine supply chain
execution transactions such as purchase orders, ship notices and commercial
invoices. However, smaller businesses often struggled to find the resources,
budget and in-house expertise to implement Electronic Data Interchange. Portals
filled the white space in the market quickly. Anyone with a PC and an Internet
connection could connect to a portal with minimal training and investment. As a
result, the barrier to entry for e-commerce was lowered enabling tens of
thousands of small suppliers to interact with customers electronically.
·
New Business Process Automation –
Portals enabled a new group of business processes such as strategic sourcing,
collaborative design and demand planning to be automated. Historically, these
processes occurred over the phone, via e-mail correspondence or in face-to-face
meetings. Due to their complex nature these supply chain practices were too
sophisticated to automate through machine-to-machine transactions. By moving
these processes on-line, portals reduced not only the cost of these
transactions, but the latency of information sharing and the barriers to
adoption.
·
Supplier Self-Service –
Portals offer a lens into the buyer’s ERP system. Inquiries that would need to
have been conducted via a time-consuming game of phone tag could instead be
performed with just a few mouse clicks. For example, a high percentage of the
call volume to accounts payable organizations is from collections personnel in
the supplier organization attempting to determine when an invoice will be paid.
Portals offer the ability for suppliers to perform self-service inquiries
online whenever they need to know the status of an expected payment.
·
Collaborative Processes –
Portals provide both supplier and buyer a single, shared view of data.
Historically, personnel from buyer and the supplier each viewed data in their
own business applications which were hopelessly out of sync. With portals both
supplier and buyer share a common view of data such as performance scorecards.
The newfound visibility enables the two parties to collaborate on corrective
actions to improve overall supply chain performance. Dispute resolution is
another process which benefited from the shared view on a portal.
·
Change Management –
Supply chains are constantly changing. Buyers open up new distribution centers,
manufacturing plants and retail stores, which changes routing guides. As
business process re-engineering occurs, new and improved forecasting,
purchasing, labeling, shipping and invoicing procedures are introduced. Portals
provide an online resource for buyers to communicate changes to contact
details, routing guides and business processes to the supplier community.
Historically, these changes had to be communicated to each supplier through
direct mail, phone conversations or vendor conferences.
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