Electronic communication has changed the way companies conduct business with each other . Business-to-business (B2B) electronic commerce (e-commerce), which includes EDI, XML (Extensible Markup Language), and online catalogues, has enabled the integration of companies throughout the world into communities of business partners (often called trading partners) with benefits for all.
Step 1: Prepare the documents to be sent
The
first step is to collect and organize the data. For example, instead of printing
a purchase order, your system creates an electronic file with the necessary
information to build an EDI document. The sources of data and the methods
available to generate the electronic documents can include:
- Human data entry via
screens
- Exporting PC-based data
from spreadsheets or databases
- Reformatted electronic
reports into data files
- Enhancing existing
applications to automatically create output files that are ready for
translation into an EDI standard
- Purchasing application software that has built-in interfaces for EDI files
The
next step is to feed your electronic data through translator software to
convert your internal data format into the EDI standard format using the
appropriate segments and data elements. You can purchase EDI translation
software that you manage and maintain on your premises. This requires
specialized mapping expertise in order to define how your internal data is to
be mapped (i.e. correlated) to the EDI data. Translation software is available
to suit just about any computing environment and budget, from large systems
that handle thousands of transactions daily to PC-based software that need only
process a few hundred transactions per week.
Alternatively,
you can use the translation services of an EDI service provider. In that case,
you send your data to the provider, who handles translation to and from the EDI
format on your behalf.
Step 3: Connect and Transmit your EDI documents to your business
partner
Once
your business documents are translated to the appropriate EDI format they are
ready to be transmitted to your business partner. You must decide how you will
connect to each of your partners to perform that transmission. There are
several ways, the most common of which include 1) to connect directly using AS2
or another secure internet protocol, 2) connect to an EDI Network provider
(also referred to as a VAN provider) using your preferred communications
protocol and rely on the network provider to connect to your business partners
using whatever communications protocol your partners prefer, or 3) a
combination of both, depending on the particular partner and the volume of
transactions you expect to exchange.
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