Stuff
OS/400 Edition
Volume 3, Number 8 -- February 25, 2003

ABAS Ports ERP to iSeries Linux, Opens East Coast Office


by Alex Woodie

ABAS Software, a 23-year-old German software developer, was one of the first ERP vendors to embrace the fledgling Linux operating system back in 1995. Today, approximately 1,100 of its base of 1,600 customers, which are predominantly midmarket companies in central and eastern Europe, run their ABAS Business Software package on the Linux operating system, and soon manufacturers and distributors in the United States will be able to run the ABAS ERP suite on Linux partitions running on iSeries servers.

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The Linux story has gradually evolved from being competition to Microsoft's monopoly on the desktop to running basic server applications, such as Web, e-mail, and print servers. Only recently, as the Linux kernel has stabilized and grown to support larger multiprocessor machines, has Linux been considered as a viable platform for critical business applications like ERP and MRP. While many people in the industry say the maturity and security of OS/400 make it an ideal platform for ERP, those supporting Linux point to benefits such as hardware platform freedom and the cost savings that the open source Unix variant brings as strong reasons to consider this option.

"What's happened is, over the years, CFOs have begun to question what the value is in buying an operating system or a database license," says Alan Salton, president of ABAS USA, the new U.S. subsidiary that ABAS founded in Herndon, Virginia, late last year. "It just adds to the cost. Why pay for it, if it's pretty much free with Linux?"

Today, few enterprises in the United States run their core ERP or MRP applications on Linux, but that number is expected to grow in the coming years as support for Linux continues to build. In the last year, several ERP vendors committed support for their software on iSeries Linux, including MAPICS, Sage Group, and OpenMFG.

While enterprise Linux is in its fledgling stage in the United States, ABAS has had real success with Linux in its traditional midmarket stomping grounds in Europe. Almost 70 percent of its ERP customers are running Linux, with the rest running on Windows 2000 and Unix platforms. The company cites European analysts' studies that show ABAS Business Software implementations cost "well under" the average ERP implementation rate, and take one-third less time.

ABAS ported the software to iSeries Linux as a special bid when one of its German customers, a manufacturer of pumps, wanted to keep its ABAS ERP system on its AS/400 and requested that ABAS make the necessary changes, Salton says. After a little more than six months, ABAS had rewritten portions of the application's core C-based transaction engine and had a functioning version of its software for iSeries Linux environment. The company recommends running Linux distributions from Red Hat, the largest U.S. Linux distributor, or from SuSE, the largest European Linux distributor.

Business Software is a modular suite of applications designed for midmarket manufacturers and distributors. Owing to its European roots, Business Software has above-average support for different languages and currencies. In addition to running on an open-source operating system, Business Software itself is mostly open-source. Besides the proprietary workings of the core transactional engine, customers have open access to the source code, which constitutes 80 percent of the application, giving customers the ability to change an application's screens, fields, and processes as they see fit.

ABAS will begin supporting iSeries Linux when the next release of its ERP system, ABAS Business Software 2003, starts shipping on March 1. ABAS will be officially announcing iSeries Linux support two weeks later at the CeBIT computer show in Hanover, Germany, March 12 through 19. The company will publish iSeries Linux performance specifications in March, as well.

ABAS is tackling the giant U.S. market at the same time it is launching its iSeries Linux offering. Salton and his partner, Marko Becker, are overseeing a small direct sales force from their office in Herndon, a suburb of Washington, D.C., an area with a sizeable high-tech industry. ABAS reports it has "seven or eight live implementations" in the United States, at businesses in the semiconductor, automotive, and aerospace industries. ABAS is also building a reseller channel and speaking with consultants who are interested in implementing the software at customer sites. For more information, go to www.abas-usa.com.


Sponsored By
EXTOL

Wise takes a bite out of EDI costs with EXTOL Integrator

Strategic Migration from Legacy Environment Leads to E-Commerce Breakthrough

For many companies, the challenge of implementing and managing business-to-business e-commerce relationships is not new at all. But executives in these organizations often face subtle and complicated challenges as they take technologies like EDI to the next level. The reason: entrenched and established technologies, business procedures and relationships must be scrutinized and changed, creating discomfort and even resistance if the process is not properly managed.

But change is inevitable in the world of electronic commerce because:

  • Business strategies often evolve to respond to new marketplace realities; and
  • New technological developments create opportunities to introduce operational efficiencies that have strategic implications

That was the situation facing Neil Bixler, Director of MIS at Wise Foods Inc., as he evaluated his e-business infrastructure options in the wake of a comprehensive Y2K makeover in 1999.

Legacy Systems a Byproduct of M&A Activity
Founded in 1921, Wise Foods is now the largest regional snack food company in the United States, manufacturing and distributing its products - like Wise Potato Chips, Cheez Doodles, Cottage Fries, New York Deli, Waffies and Krunchers - primarily on the east coast. (The company continues to expand West beyond Ohio, and has a growing presence in Alabama, Texas, and other westward states.)

Since its inception, the company has been through a number of mergers and acquisition (Borden in 1964, KKR in 1995 and Palladium Equity Partners in 2000). While the Wise brand and culture has remained largely intact throughout this period, each change of ownership brought with it operational and management implications, as different parts of the company were kept or released based on the specific interests of the parent corporation.

Wise, itself, got into the e-commerce business in the 1970s when it established peer-to-peer data exchanges with major customers using magnetic tapes. In the early 1980s, Borden implemented standards-based EDI technology with large retailers, which created the opportunity for Wise to gain economies of scale benefits by consolidating its billing processes with sister Borden companies.

As a result of this initiative, Borden created an in-house service organization called Resource Partners to support the EDI needs of all Borden companies including Wise.

But during the KKR divestiture of the Borden companies (which eventually saw Wise land with Palladium Equity Partners in 2000) Resource Partner was sold to another company to become an entity separate and distinct from Wise. With its former "in-house" resource now an outside vendor, Wise found itself forced to pay what it saw as exorbitant costs for EDI services. Service levels were also not where they needed to be.

"Whenever we wanted to add a new partner it was a painful thing. If we wanted to create a new transaction or add a new transaction it was very painful and costly. Moreover, it was clear that we now had an added point of failure because they had systems issues, communications issues."
-- Neil Bixler, Director of MIS, Wise Foods, Inc.

This was especially true since Wise had replaced its legacy systems with new AS/400 platforms running JD Edwards Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) applications to address Y2K issues. A business case to bring EDI capabilities into the Wise MIS operation was thus formed.

However, convincing key internal audiences - including the interim management team and some members of the board of directors - that the business case was strong enough to justify making significant changes on how Wise processed tens of millions of dollars worth of electronic transactions with its trading partners proved challenging.

Eventually, however, Bixler and his team put together an analysis of the issues associated with moving EDI capabilities in house, and came to the conclusion that the company would save a minimum of $100,000 per year by implementing an appropriate solution.

Characteristics of the Solution
The first point of consideration for Wise was to find solutions that operated in the AS/400 environment. While there were many PC EDI applications on the market that claimed to support the mid-range platform, Bixler wanted a native AS/400 solution.

"I've always felt that the closer you are to the source of the data, the less points of failure you're going to have. As I looked at the market for EDI translators and mappers, I felt that the PC-based products were not secure or stable enough to handle the type of volume we were doing. I mean, we were billing between $50 and $60 million via EDI at that time. I had already made a commitment to the AS/400 platform during the Y2K exercise because I concluded it is one of the most stable boxes out there."  -- Wise Foods' Bixler

The company was closely courted by two companies who at that time offered EDI mapping and translation products for the AS/400 platform. After a vigorous proposal process, EXTOL International, Inc., emerged as the provider of choice for Wise Foods.

The implementation proved successful EXTOL implemented the mapping and translation applications, and assisted Wise Foods in establishing the internal infrastructure that managed the transition from Resource Partner to internal processes in seamless manner that was transparent to trading partners.

"As a result, today we have four times the trading partners and have expanded EDI transaction for orders and invoices to inventory movement, vendor managed inventory, remittances and price confirmation. As an added plus, Extol assisted us in transitioning from our previous proprietary value-added network (VAN) to AT&T Worldwide using TCP/IP technology. Furthermore, Extol helped us link up with Cyclone to begin EDI over the Internet."   -- Wise Foods' Bixler

The Bottom Line
As a result of this strategic migration, Wise Foods has expanded its trading partner base, improved the efficiency of the entire supply chain, accelerated cash flow and decreased the costs of EDI services by nearly $100K per year.

Moreover, the EXTOL-based EDI implementation has allowed Wise Foods to engage in price synchronization initiatives (using a service called viaLink).

"We now synchronize pricing with two major retailers (Nice N Easy and Winn-Dixie) and are currently in negotiation with Kmart. And, our Extol mapper allowed us to become the first of 50 companies to register our items through UCCnet to Wal-Mart...this too we will expand to Food Lion, Ahold, Shaw's and many more as they subscribe to UCCnet."   -- Wise Foods' Bixler

www.extol.com


THIS ISSUE
SPONSORED BY:

BOSaNOVA
EXTOL
Quadrant Software
Computer Keyes
ASNA
INPRO International


BACK ISSUES

TABLE OF
CONTENTS
iTera Goes 'High Availability Lite' With GuardianSave

ABAS Ports ERP to iSeries Linux, Opens East Coast Office

Pat Townsend Launches Two-Way XML-DB2/400 Translation Tool

Cross-Platform Management Tool Vendor Seeks Partners

inFORM Adds Self-Service Options to Online Archival System

News Briefs and Product Shorts


Editor
Alex Woodie

Managing Editor
Shannon Pastore

Contributing Editors:
Dan Burger
Joe Hertvik
Shannon O'Donnell
Timothy Prickett Morgan

Publisher and
Advertising Director:

Jenny Thomas

Advertising Sales Representative
Kim Reed

Contact the Editors
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