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Are your enterprise systems not
delivering on their promise? Is your Supply Chain Management
system failing to return your investment? Too many orders
with errors? Returns surpassing the industry average? Whatever
the reason, you owe it to yourself to take a fresh look at
your Product Information Management strategy. A PIM system
is built with a single focus of structuring and delivering
accurate product information for use across business systems.
Here are some synergies where your
business systems can benefit:
Enterprise
Resource Planning (ERP)
Most organizations implement expensive enterprise resource
planning (ERP) systems going through the rigors of long implementation
cycles without having control over their product information.
However, if product information was accurate and descriptive,
an ERP system can deliver more. ERP systems manage product
data and this data is often referred to as Item Master, Material
Master or Product Master. Here are some synergies across business
processes that occur in an ERP system:
Order Processing: On several
occasions new customers and existing customers alike do not
have the complete product information to place an order. In
such a situation, the responsibility of searching and adding
the right items to the order lies with the sales or the customer
service representative. ERP systems are bad at helping sales
and customer service personnel in finding the right products
to create the order. Sometimes potential sales and up-sell/cross-sell
opportunities are lost due to inadequate search mechanisms.
Hence, having a searchable catalog with multi-dimensional
search capabilities with rich and actionable product information
is paramount.
Order Errors: Studies have
shown that as many as 1 out of every 3 orders have an error.
This is usually caused due to lack of accurate and descriptive
product content in the ERP system where the order is placed.
An ERP system, places sever restrictions on the size of a
product description, which makes it hard to capture the details
of a product vis-à-vis a similar product with slightly
different characteristics. This leaves important information
out of the description and opens the product for multiple
interpretations, which in turn leads to incorrect orders.
Incorrect orders result in expensive returns and a compromise
in customer service.
Parked Invoices: Reconciliation
is another area where an ERP system with better product information
can make a difference. When invoices are sent to customers,
they are often keyed in to their system, and matched with
a purchase order. Invoices that match the purchase order are
cleared, and when they don't match, the invoice gets parked
for manual verification. This match often fails due to inaccurate
product information at the line item level. Hence better product
information can help in reducing the processing time of invoices.
Content Limitations: ERP
systems have limitations on the number of fields a product
can have. Even the most advanced ERP systems used by the fortune
500 companies can only handle a maximum of 250 odd attributes
at the product, item or material level. In many cases this
is not adequate since organizations need twice as many fields
to operate efficiently. A PIM system gives organizations the
ability to manage unlimited number of product attributes by
providing a secondary extended product information management
capabilities. This ensures that data that is secondary to
the operational aspect can be delegated to the PIM system.
Structured Content: There
are significant differences between an item, a product, a
product line, and a classification (also referred to as a
category). And there is text and information that needs to
be managed at various levels for customer service, sales,
and marketing purposes. ERP systems are not built to offer
that kind of structure to product data. ERP systems are built
for handling transactions between suppliers and customers.
Hence, they often limit the structure to an Item. However,
there are other parts of the organization like the web site,
buying guides, and customer service that needs content. A
PIM system can handle significantly complex structures for
product information and deliver it to other business systems.
Unstructured Content: ERP systems aren't exactly built for
handling product images, product related artwork, or marketing
copy. However, having this non-transactional content (content
that is not necessary to process an order, but is desirable
for other processes such as sales, marketing, print catalogs,
and customer service) in a system that integrates with ERP
as and when necessary can make the system even more capable.
How? A customer service rep can look up the order, and pull
up the related image, product benefits or an installation
guide. PIM systems are adept at handling unstructured data
such as images, art work, marketing copy, bullets, product
documentation, repair manuals and other associated literature.
With a PIM system in place, you can link an Item from your
Item Master in ERP to point directly to this content. This
offers a two-fold benefit. You can manage content that cannot
be managed in ERP. And, you can manage this content centrally,
while making it available not only from ERP but from other
business systems as well.
Supply
Chain Management (SCM)
Supply chain management systems mostly rely on improving efficiencies
on the supply side using sophisticated algorithms to make
a variety of predictions. Organizations that invest in these
systems have realized that the effectiveness of such a system
directly correlates to the correctness of the data that is
fed. If the input data is inaccurate, the outcome can be very
different.
SCM systems rely on vendor and
item related information to run these algorithms. Information
such as sales data, vendor data, product dimensions, product
weights, quantities, packaging data, product packaging options,
product handling information, regulatory information and warehousing
information to effectively run the algorithms to optimize
the supply chain. In many cases, the shipment dimensions described
by the vendor needs to be matched up with the shelf spacing.
Hence, having the right actionable product information is
paramount for an effective Supply Chain strategy. All product
information that is necessary for an SCM system can be captured,
validated and managed in the PIM system. One key feature of
a PIM system is its robustness to validate content at the
field level and ensure that all data complies to a set of
standards. Or, the a maintained product value has consistency
of interpretation. This capability of validating content is
unique to a PIM system. Hence, valid, accurate and actionable
product information that is necessary for an SCM system can
be better provided by a PIM system.
Customer
Relationship Management (CRM)
CRM systems employ catalogs to give sales associates the necessary
insight into product data to persuade and convince customers.
Having the right product options, product specifications,
and having the products correctly categorized is necessary
to find the right products. This is also necessary for the
CRM system to suggest the right up-sell and cross-sell product
choices. Though product data is necessary for CRM systems
to function effectively, these systems seldom have the depth
in functionality to manage product information in sufficient
amount of detail.
In most organizations product information
is authored without the involvement of sales. It is authored
by product managers, business analysts and product specialists.
Once authored this information is used by several other business
systems, departments and business processes. A CRM system
is more of an output channel for content rather than an authoring
platform. Hence CRM vendors built little capability to manage
this content. A CRM system is not suited to act as a product
content management platform for the entire organization. It
is built to better leverage content that is in a good state
to better serve customers.
Businesses that have invested in
a PIM system have empowered their product managers to manage
product information once and used it across the entire organization
including the CRM system. With better-managed content, a CRM
system can be much more effective.
Procurement
Systems / Buying Guides
To ensure consistent supply of products, and to better manage
price fluctuations, some organizations procure similar products
and parts from multiple vendors. Some other industries go
a step further and create a workflow process to buy products
and parts from vendors. In many cases a product or a part
can be bought from many vendors. In such a scenario, a procurement
system relies on finding all the possible vendors that can
supply a part. This can be accomplished if all product information
is accurately structured and the relationships that exist
at the vendor-part level are maintained. So not is the accuracy
of product data is important, but the also the relationships
that exist between products.
A business using a PIM system has
improved efficiencies with their buying guide to procure products
more effectively. The buying guide, was built using product
information that was managed and powered by a PIM system.
The buying guide had all products and parts structured by
categories, by vendor, and products cross-referenced across
vendors. This gave the buyers multi-dimensional searching
abilities, so they could go across vendors to procure a part.
This opened up many options for the branches this business
operated, so they could procure the parts from a geographically
closer vendor and had better pricing flexibility. This also
greatly streamlined the procurement process, resulting in
reduction of cycle times.
Many businesses have invested in
business systems that rely on product information. These systems
have a lot of inaccurate, incomplete and cryptic product data.
This data has to be fixed for the business systems to deliver
better ROI and to live up to their promise. A PIM systems
acts like a filter and keeps all content accurate, timely,
and rich and acts like a buffer and an extension. Here lies
the key synergy between a PIM system and other business systems.
Your true asset is not the system, it's the data. Data is
your strategic asset. And its power can be leveraged only
if the proper steps are taken to keep it fresh and accurate.
And it takes time to improve its quality.
Progressive organizations have
realized this and many have taken steps to invest in a PIM
system. And so should you. After all, in this day and age,
content is king!
Contact Us today to learn more
about ONEsource.
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