A METHODOLOGICAL APPROACH FOR MEASURING B2B
INTEGRATION READINESS OF SMES
Spiros Mouzakitis, Aikaterini-Maria Sourouni, Fenareti Lampathaki and John Psarras
National Technical University of Athens, Iroon Polytechniou st, Zografou-Athens, 157 73, Greece
Keywords: B2B integration, readiness evaluation, interoperability, business indicators.
Abstract: In the dawn of 21st century, companies are seeking ways to perform transactions efficiently and effectively.
Enterprises must tackle B2B integration and adoption challenges in the short term in order to survive in such
a competitive business environment of nowadays. However, most enterprises, and especially SMEs, lack the
necessary technical and non-technical infrastructure as well the economic potential in order to efficiently
adopt a B2B integration framework. This paper presents a methodological approach towards measuring the
B2B integration readiness of Enterprises and the development of the software system to support it.
1 INTRODUCTION
In today’s competitive business environment,
companies are seeking ways to perform transactions
efficiently and effectively. The Internet has created a
flexible platform for the buying and selling of
products and services. As businesses recognize the
need for employing efficient methods for the vertical
exchange of goods and services, they are
considering the adoption of functional business-to-
business (B2B) applications and technologies that
allow transactions in "real time.” (Amoroso, 2006)
Modern B2B technologies, such as XML-based
protocols have solved major technical issues of
traditional EDI but due to a vast number of non-
technical adoption barriers, the efforts for business-
to-business integration are still enormous (Gionis,
2007). Although there are some approaches and
guidelines available that address the adoption phase,
most Enterprises, especially the SMEs, lack the
necessary business culture, technical and non-
technical infrastructure and economic flexibility in
order to efficiently adjust to the environment of a
B2B integration framework.
To solve the current issues, we present a
comprehensive framework that measures the
readiness of an enterprise to adopt a multi-enterprise
(B2B) integration approach and, based on the
findings, provides thereafter guided support to the
SMEs with a view to overcoming the related
barriers.
2 METHODOLOGY
2.1 Approach Overview
The proposed methodological approach for
measuring B2B Integration Readiness presents a
research framework and a web-based platform with
an aim to aid the Enterprises, and especially the
SMEs transition to a B2B integration environment.
This approach will provide insight for the B2B
integration adoption phase by:
Recognizing and classifying common integration
patterns and styles
Identifying key technical and non-technical
factors that affect the transition
Presenting a comprehensive methodology for the
assessment of an Enterprise’s readiness to
integrate with other Enterprises
Identifying aspects that affect the integration
impact
Developing a “knowledge framework” which
can support the enterprises in their brainstorming
for B2B integration.
The implementation of the proposed framework
involves the following tasks:
a) Modelling an abstract B2B integration
framework
b) Specification of the assessment indicators
c) Design and development of the evaluation
methodology
d) Performance Impact estimation design
298
Mouzakitis S., Sourouni A., Lampathaki F. and Psarras J. (2008).
A METHODOLOGICAL APPROACH FOR MEASURING B2B INTEGRATION READINESS OF SMES.
In Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems - DISI, pages 298-303
DOI: 10.5220/0001708002980303
Copyright
c
SciTePress
e) Design and development of the support software
system.
These tasks are described in the following sections.
2.2 Framework’s Methodologies and
Design Scheme
2.2.1 Modelling an Abstract B2B
Integration Framework
Τhe first step in the conception of the proposed
framework is the abstraction of existing and
upcoming B2B integration architectures and
solutions. The abstraction process involves the study
and analysis of the most important both dominant
and promising integration technologies, solutions
and standards. This analysis will lead to a
categorization and classification of the involved
patterns based on both technical and non-technical
aspects of a B2B integration solution. Then, a
generic model will be produced for each possible
abstraction of two or more categories.
The output of this procedure will be a set of
generic enterprise application integration models
covering a broad range of integration styles and
technologies. The value of this process is of high
importance since, on the one hand, it will provide a
generic yet concrete and realistic prototype model
based on which the assessment indicators as well as
other crucial evaluation elements will be created and
maintained, and on the other hand, it will contribute
to the sustainable value of the methodology. For the
purposes of this analysis we consider five integration
levels each with its own specific issue to be
addressed (Giachetti, 2004-2005). The enterprise
integration types are shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1: Levels of Enterprise Integration.
Connectivity. At the network level, the integration
issue is the physical heterogeneity of the hardware,
machines, devices, and their operating systems
found in a physical network. The integration goal at
the network level is connectivity defined as the
linkages between systems, applications, and
modules.
Data Sharing. Data sharing is the ability to
exchange data between two enterprises. There are
two components of this definition. First, the
enterprises must be enabled to exchange data
(technical interoperability). Second, the data
exchanged must be understood by the receiver
(semantic interoperability). This second requirement
is harder to satisfy then the first, because semantic
differences among enterprises are still prevalent.
(Mouzakitis, 2007), (Janner, 2006)
Enterprise Application Interoperability. The
application level, describes the systems used by the
enterprises. The integration goal is interoperability,
which is the ability of one software application to
access/use data generated by another software
system of another enterprise. Interoperability of
software applications is usually achieved by
exposing interfaces of a system to the network
usually with a service-oriented approach and web
services or through application adapters and remote
protocol interfaces, with middleware, with
Enterprise Service Buses, or with other enterprise
application integration (EAI) technologies (Ruh,
2000).
Business Process Orchestration. The business
process level describes the tasks, the manner and
order in which the business processes are conducted.
The problem at this level is that every enterprise has
different approaches for conducting their internal or
external processes, and even worse in some cases,
especially in SMEs there is no formal approach in
managing or conducting business processes.
Integration in this level is usually achieved with
appropriate orchestration and coordination of the
business processes between the enterprises that
agree on mutual adjustments.
Goal Alignment. The organizational level addresses
the way that the three key elements of business
strategy, organizational strategy, design strategy and
information systems strategy must all be aligned
with their B2B integration partners (Venkatraman,
1993).
Since most integration products and standards do not
provide end-to-end interoperable solutions, but
instead they serve only one integration level, as for
example middleware or message broker software,
the abstraction task of the methodology will form
the abstract B2B integration models, by considering
both the individual technologies and their current
application in enterprises nowadays in the context of
a complete integration framework, taking into
consideration all integration levels.
The formulation of the prototype business
integration framework will contribute greatly to
clarifying the purpose, the merits and the goals of
A METHODOLOGICAL APPROACH FOR MEASURING B2B INTEGRATION READINESS OF SMES
299
such a solution, a necessity for the creation of
assessment indicators of high quality.
2.2.2 Specification of the Αssessment
Ιndicators
In order to specify practical and appropriate
evaluation indicators, measurable objectives must be
first identified clearly.
Based on the prototype B2B integration
framework model, a number of goals can be realized
through discourse and negotiation with
representative enterprises, such as seamless data
exchange in automated transactions between
suppliers and partners that is characterized by:
Maintainability
Trust and Confidentiality
Strong Security
Low Implementation/Integration Cost/Effort
Low Operational Cost/Effort
Value-added functionality
High quality of service aspects, such as speed
and availability.
Regardless of the specific B2B integration to be
used, the current situational status of an enterprise
directly affects one of above mentioned factors
(Ranganathan, 2001), (Mouzakitis, 2007). While full
integration is not always needed to use some of the
exchange's functionality the full value of conducting
business on the Internet and sharing information
with business partners cannot be realized without
integration of exchange technology with production
systems. This is not just a technology issue. The cost
of integration also includes the redefinition of
processes and relationships within the enterprise,
and implementation of these new processes,
including training in and management of them.
Based on the defined measurable objectives the
assessment indicators of the proposed
methodological approach can be created in a
straightforward way. Still though, the indicators
must also be homogeneous and complete. With a
view to ensuring these principles the generic
enterprise model breaks down to the following two
domains:
a) Enterprise Structure
Leadership and Strategy: This section
includes business plans, strategies, policies,
agreements, ISOs compliance, and Legal
compliance.
Financial: Including General Ledger, Cash
Management, Accounts Payable, Accounts
Receivable, Fixed Assets Projects
Internal Management and Support: This
section includes Production Management,
Project Management, Human Resources
Management and Document Management
Supply Chain and Warehouse
Management: Including Inventory, Order
Entry, Purchasing, Product Configurator,
Supply Chain Planning, Supplier Scheduling,
Inspection of goods,
Customer Relationship Management: This
section includes Sales and Marketing,
Commissions, Service, Customer Contact
and Call Center support
b) Resources
Basic Infrastructure: This section includes
building infrastructure, network
infrastructure (LAN, wireless, VPN) and
physical and hardware security.
Human Resources.
Documents and Data
Information Technology Systems:
Including operating system, available
software (databases, CRM, ERP , CMS, E-
procurement, e-business, legacy systems)
and hardware (servers, desktops, routers,
firewall, etc)
By defining these sections the methodology for the
creation of the assessment indicators is depicted
bellow:
Enterprise Structure
Domain
Resources
Domain
Negotiation with Enterprises
and stakeholders
Assessment Indicators
Objectives/Goals
(per Integration Level )
Figure 2: Process for the creation of the assessment
indicators.
Many indicators will be created or removed based
similar research, standards or implementations, such
as e-Business Scorecard applications, the Capability
Maturity Model Integration (CMMI) approach for
the business process section or the COBIT and the
ITIL framework for the indicators of the Information
Technology systems section. After producing the
basic set of the assessment indicators that apply to a
generic model or an enterprise, an extra set of
assessment indicators will be created in the same
way for each business sector with special
requirements.
ICEIS 2008 - International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
300
2.2.3 Design and Development of The
Evaluation Methodology
The evaluation methodology will contain questions
depending on the business sector of the enterprise. In
both cases, questions represent one or more
assessment indicators. Since most questions refer to
intangible assets, a normalized performance scale
must be defined, and all answers (belonging to
different measures - percentage, numeric, pre-
defined choices) must be transformed to values in
the common normalized scale. In order to achieve
this, for each question different quality points Li are
defined that have corresponding points to the
normalized performance scale. The performance
indicators FID are conflated with given weights wi
in a similar way in order to produce a performance
value for each Indicator Category.
2.2.4 Performance Impact Estimation
Design
Enterprise integration has been found to lead to
improved enterprise performance (Armistead,1993),
(Frohlich,2001),(Brunnermeier,2003). In the context
of the evaluation framework performance impact
means that a B2B integration solution when used in
the enterprise and interdependencies environment
will improve some unit level performance measure.
For example, improved efficiency, improved
effectiveness, improved quality, or other
performance measures are possible. The framework
will provide a rough impact estimation that depends
closely to a vast number of input parameters
provided by the stakeholders in combination with
the B2B integration readiness results. These
parameters are organized as follows:
Macroeconomics: These parameters deal with
the performance, structure, and behavior of
national and international economy. B2B
integration impact is implicitly affected by the
determinants of aggregate trends in an economy,
such as national income, unemployment,
inflation, investment, international trade and
international finance.
Legal and Statutory framework: Current
legislation directly affects the performance
impact both in time (audit controls, legally
required fields, messages, documents or even
processes in transactions) and cost (value-added
tax, special taxes, regulation compliance cost,
etc)
Pricing: Pricing models are not expected to be
solidified because many solution providers are
struggling to understand the value of the
products they offer. However, in general, pricing
structures can include: subscription fees (regular
monthly fees); membership dues (typically large,
one-time investments intended to help the
exchange fund itself); and transaction fees (fees
based on a percentage of the business that is
transacted on the exchange).
Integration Effort: Integration effort is the
difficulty level of achieving integration and is
measured in terms of cost, time, and amount of
resources that must be used in order to achieve
the desired integration. Integration effort
includes implementation and operational effort
as well as maintenance and support effort. Other
integration issues can include: defining
integration standards, linking data from the
enterprise into the exchange's systems, deciding
the data owner, defining the timing of updates
and levels of secure access to information,
agreeing on decisions that will be made based on
the data and by which partner.
The Exchange’s Technology Vendor
Relationships: The exchange's technology
vendor relationships provide insights into its
technology strategy, for example, is it using one
technology provider or trying to integrate
solutions across several providers? (Morrison,
2001) If the B2B integration framework is using
one vendor's technology, it may require less
effort to integrate, but the enterprise may not be
getting the best functionality for specific process
areas. Likewise, if the B2B integration
framework is working with multiple vendors and
taking a best-of-breed approach, integration may
be challenging, but functionality is likely to be
better.
The Exchange's Partnerships and Members:
Many B2B integration solution providers are
building partnerships within different functional
areas and across process areas in an effort to
create a networked end-to-end solution. The
number and the quality of potential partners and
customers that are members of the provided
network can have a significant impact on the
enterprise (Ulfelder, 2004).
The performance impact estimation
methodology is depicted in figure 3.
Provided that an enterprise has completed the
readiness evaluation, the proposed framework can
approximately calculate the performance impact of
moving to a B2B environment by identifying the
new values of performance measures, such as
required time and cost per transaction, Business
Process Interoperability (BPI), quality of service
delivery, availability, etc. In order to achieve this, a
A METHODOLOGICAL APPROACH FOR MEASURING B2B INTEGRATION READINESS OF SMES
301
Figure 3: Performance impact estimation.
number of crucial parameters have to manually be
inputted by a stakeholder, such as the pricing cost of
the B2B integration solution, the number of columns
and length of documents. Thus, the limitation of this
methodology is that its effectiveness heavily
depends on the accuracy and quality of the user
input. Nevertheless, most of these parameters are
usually objective (e.g. price) so the input task is
usually straightforward. Moreover, applications of
the framework are possible where some of these
parameters can be provided by a neutral and trusted
authority.
2.2.5 Design and Development of the
Support Software System
In the context of the proposed approach, a modern
technological platform is developed to support the
application of the methodology in a cost-effective
and easy manner. This platform is an intelligent web
based system which will evaluate the situational
status of a member Enterprise. It will then provide:
The level of readiness to adopt a B2B integration
solution or to participate in a collaborative B2B
network
Detailed analysis of the evaluation results
In depth examination of the weak points that
diminish the worth of the B2B integration
A practical toolkit that measures the expected
impact based on user input and the evaluation
results.
The system’s evaluation engine is responsible for
calculating performance indicators by transforming
and combining the values of the answers of the
questionnaire as instructed by the evaluation
algorithm. Based on the administrators’ predefined
weights, the indicators FID are conflated to produce
a performance value for each indicator category. The
evaluation algorithms are expected to be different
for each indicator category. After the evaluation is
over, Entrepreneurs can review the associated
comprehensive evaluation reports and identify their
weaknesses. Moreover, Entrepreneurs can
investigate further the assessment results by
providing their own weights per indicator
(subjective evaluation). Furthermore, a practical
toolkit is available for making an estimation of the
integration impact.
3 CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE
WORK
The primary contribution of this paper was to
propose a research methodology that evaluates the
readiness of an enterprise to adopt a B2B integration
solution and identifies important technical and non-
technical factors that are expected to affect the
impact of the integration technology. The results of
the evaluation can be used in impact assessment of
the integration solution, based on additional user
input.
The methodology, presented in this paper, can
assist enterprises in identifying their weaknesses and
can serve as a guide for establishing an effective
integration strategy. In this way, this approach can
contribute to achieving the full potential of the
multi-enterprise integration. Furthermore, on the
other side, B2B technology vendors and
standardization bodies can benefit from the
knowledge base that is developed around such a
framework, by focusing more on the alignment to
the organizations’ business needs, than technological
excellence.
Future work includes collecting the complete set
of the assessment indicators, adjusting the evaluation
method and proving the framework’s merits by
collecting data and performing statistical analysis to
validate each of the proposed methodologies. Work
is going forward on using the research framework to
understand SMEs B2B integration in the Greece.
Additional findings and results are expected during
the support system’s pilot operation that will be
circulated through further dissemination activities.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors of this paper gratefully acknowledge the
financial support from Greece General Secretariat of
Research and Technology, Ministry of
Development, under the program “Business models
and technologies for automated business to business
transactions”.
ICEIS 2008 - International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
302
REFERENCES
Amoroso, D.,Vannoy, S., 2006. Translating the Adoption
of B2B e-Business into Measurable Value for
Organizations. Proceedings of the 39th Hawaii
International Conference on System Sciences.
Armistead, C. and Mapes, J., 1993. The impact of supply
chain integration on operating performance. Logistics
Information Management 6(4): 9-15.
Brunnermeier, S. B. and Martin, S. A., 2003.
Interoperability costs in the US automotive supply
chain. Supply Chain Management: An International
Journal 7(2): 71-82.
Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI) National
Center for Biotechnology Information,
http://www.sei.cmu.edu/cmmi/
Control Objectives for Information and related
Technology (COBIT), http://www.isaca.org/
Frohlich, M. T. and Westbrook,R., 2001. Arcs of
integration: an international study of supply chain
strategies. Journal of Operations Management 19:
185- 200.
Giachetti, R., 2004. Enterprise Integration: An information
integration perspective. International Journal of
Production Research 42(6): 1147-1166.
Giachetti, R., 2005. Research Framework for
Operationalizing Measures of Enterprise Integration.
IFIP International Federation for Information
Processing.
Gionis, G., Mouzakitis, S., Janner, T., Schroth, C.,
Koussouris, S. and Askounis, D., 2007. Implementing
Next Generation e-Business Platforms for Small and
Medium Enterprises, PCI2007 Conference, Patras,
Greece.
Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL),
http://www.itil-officialsite.com/
Janner, T., Lampathaki, F., Mouzakitis, S., Scheper, U.,
Schroth, C., 2006. Interoperability enhancement of
electronic Business-to- Government: Extending the
scope of UBL. Workshop on “Enterprise Software
Application Interoperability for Businesses and
Governments” , PAKM 2006, Vienna, Austria.
L’heureux, B., 2007. Hot Questions for Multienterprise
(B2B) Integration, Gartner Research.
Morrison, D., 2001. B2B branding: Avoiding the pitfalls.
Marketing Management, 30-34.
Mouzakitis, S., Lampathaki, F., Schroth, C., Scheper, U.,
Janner, T., 2007. Towards a common repository for
governmental data: A modeling framework and real
world application, in Enterprise Interoperability II:
New Challenges and Approaches (Springer),
Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference
Interoperability for Enterprise Software and
Applications I-ESA 2007, Funchal (Madeira Island)
Portugal.
Ranganathan, C., 2003. Evaluating the Options for
Business-To-Business Exchanges. Information
Systems Management, 20, 3, 22-29.
Ranganathan, C., Thompson, S.H. Teo, Dhaliwal, Jasbir
S., Ang, James S.K., and Hyde Micki., 2001.
Facilitators and Inhibitors for Deploying Business-To-
Business E-Commerce Applications: A Multi-Method
Cross-Cultural Study. Proceedings of the Twenty-
Second International Conference on Information
Systems, 593-600
Rossi, P., Lipsey, M., Freeman, H., 2003. Evaluation: A
Systematic Approach. Sage Publications, Inc; Seventh
Edition.
Ruh, W. A., Maginnis, F. X., 2000. Enterprise Application
Integration: A Wiley Tech Brief. New York, NY, John
Wiley & Sons Inc.
Ulfelder, S., 2004. B2B survivors: why did some online
exchanges survive while many others failed? It helped
to have members with deep pockets, Computerworld,
38, 5, 27-28.
Venkatraman, N. C. and J. C. Henderson, 1993.
Continuous strategic alignment: exploiting
information technology capabilities for competitive
success. European Management Journal 11(2): 139-
149.
A METHODOLOGICAL APPROACH FOR MEASURING B2B INTEGRATION READINESS OF SMES
303