• The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
Menu
  • The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Adapting to Omni-Channel with Conditional Printing a CYBRA Specialty

    September 2, 2015 Alex Woodie

    The humble shipping label sits at the intersection of our digital lives and the real world. You can order 15 items from Amazon without leaving your comfy chair, but warehouse workers still need to find the product and generate the right barcode label that tells UPS where to go. CYBRA has been playing this game for a while, but a new release of its MarkMagic forms generation software helps IBM i shops take omni-channel fulfillment to efficient new levels.

    The focus for MarkMagic these days is all about conditional printing in support of changing fulfillment trends. Not long ago, a manufacturer or distributor would package their products on a pallet and ship it to a retailer with a single label guiding that pallet’s voyage. Huge volumes of orders flowed through the distribution centers of Wal-Mart, Target, and other retail giants in this manner.

    While the consumer goods supply chain is still intact, the rise of online shopping and omni-channel fulfilment has added an interesting twist to shipping. Companies that still actually make and move physical things (as opposed to the digital middlemen that get investors’ hearts all a flutter) must adapt to these changing times or risk losing market share. A part of that business process adaptation is maintaining flexibility with the forms generated by business applications.

    Sheldon Reich, vice president of marketing for CYBRA, explains how changing commerce trends impacts his IBM i customers.

    “The traditional model is they’re shipping pallet loads of stuff to a retailer’s distribution center,” he says. “But now they have websites and they’re sending onesies and twosies through carriers like FedEx and UPS. So instead of sending 200 watches to Macy’s, they send one. That’s a whole different kind of picking and different things you’re printing out.”

    Complying with the labeling requirements of each retailer is not always a simple matter, and it could require a programmer and cost upward of $10,000 to get each batch of forms right if done manually, Reich says. With the diversification of channels that online shopping has brought to shipping–not to mention shipping individual items to specific stores, per the omni-channel revolution–those costs soon make manual manipulation of labels a big drain on profitability.

    “We have a customer tied into Walmart, JCPenney, and Amazon. The customer sends the same apparel to each of the retailers, but they all require different forms,” Reich says. “You, as a shopper, get something from Amazon, it needs to look like it comes from Amazon instead of Joe Schmoe’s Apparel.”

    MarkMagic 9 automates many aspects of forms generation, including eliminating the need to manually align fields.

    MarkMagic helps by enabling customers to modify the labels to support the different retailers’ requirements, without requiring the services of a programmer. “MarkMagic can automatically produce the correct documents without programing,” Reich says.

    CYBRA is taking condition printing to an even higher level with the recent launch of MarkMagic version 9. Among the new features in this release are new print transforms that tell the software to change how the form appears based on certain segments that appear in a field, as opposed to reading the whole field.

    “So you can start at position five for a length of three,” says CYBRA marketing manager Chuck Roscow, “and look for certain values, like SKU numbers or PO numbers that contain XYZ. Then based on that, have the format look or printed differently.” The lookup can even start with the last characters in a given field.

    This new feature, which would have required programming in earlier releases, will help customers support omni-channel goals. “It allows you to look at a certain part of that field, and if it contains ACME, for instance, you could strip that out and insert CYBRA, if you wanted to.”

    The new release also uses “trim and replace” data that retailers don’t want in the label, such as extra dashes or spaces. “Maybe you don’t want the dashes for your account number to be in the barcode,” Roscow says. “We can automatically take that out in V9.”

    New edit codes added in version 9 (“You can never have too many edit codes,” Reich jokes) give customers more power over forms. Specifically, the new version brings new “AND” rules that let users specify how the forms should be distributed. So if a certain spool file shows up on the queue, MarkMagic will ensure that the generated form is automatically routed to employee “A” as well as customer “B.”

    “This is the kind of stuff that we pride ourselves in MarkMagic–giving users the ability to create these sophisticated results without programming,” Reich says. “The holy grail in our business is conditional printing, and we’ve taken conditional printing to a very high level.”

    RELATED STORIES

    CYBRA Getting Creative With RFID Solutions

    CYBRA Completes Forms Journey with MarkMagic 8

    CYBRA’s MarkMagic: Not Just for Barcodes Anymore

    CYBRA Updates MarkMagic for i 6.1

    CYBRA Goes for i’s Funny Bone with 2K, the 2,000 Year Old Programmer

    i5/OS V6R1 Compatibility an Issue for Software Vendors

    CYBRA Gives Users More Control Over System i Printing with MarkMagic 6.1

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Tags:

    Sponsored by
    Maxava

    Disaster Recovery Strategy Guide for IBM i

    Practical tools to implement disaster recovery in your IBM i environment. Fully optimized to include cloud recovery, replication and monitoring options.

    Download NOW!

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Sponsored Links

    Profound Logic Software:  Free White Paper: Overcome Mobile Development Challenges
    NGS:  PAY NO LICENSE FEE for two concurrent users on Qport Office.
    System i Developer:  Session Grid Posted: RPG & DB2 Summit - Chicago, October 20-22

    RCAC in DB2 For i, Part 2: Column Masks Taking The Power Systems Pulse With GM Doug Balog

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Volume 25, Number 43 -- September 2, 2015
THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

SystemObjects
New Generation Software
Manta Technologies
Linoma Software
Fresche Legacy

Table of Contents

  • Did IBM i Just Get Hacked at DEF CON?
  • Agilysys’ Tardy BI Tool Added To Lodging Management System
  • Adapting to Omni-Channel with Conditional Printing a CYBRA Specialty
  • European Distributor Taps Maxava for Data Resiliency
  • Dynamic Solutions Launches New VTLs for IBM i

Content archive

  • The Four Hundred
  • Four Hundred Stuff
  • Four Hundred Guru

Recent Posts

  • IBM Unveils Manzan, A New Open Source Event Monitor For IBM i
  • Say Goodbye To Downtime: Update Your Database Without Taking Your Business Offline
  • i-Rays Brings Observability To IBM i Performance Problems
  • Another Non-TR “Technology Refresh” Happens With IBM i TR6
  • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 18
  • Will The Turbulent Economy Downdraft IBM Systems Or Lift It?
  • How IBM Improved The Database With IBM i 7.6
  • Rocket Celebrates 35th Anniversary As Private Equity Owner Ponders Sale
  • 50 Acres And A Humanoid Robot With An AI Avatar
  • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 17

Subscribe

To get news from IT Jungle sent to your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.

Pages

  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Contributors
  • Four Hundred Monitor
  • IBM i PTF Guide
  • Media Kit
  • Subscribe

Search

Copyright © 2025 IT Jungle