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E-Commerce Integration: What You Don't See Can Hurt You

Links from e-commerce site to business systems is cobbled together by hand & works only with e-commerce system.EAI requires custom code, proprietary third-party tools,interfaces or middleware. SOA's rational approach makes entire IT system agile.

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PRLog (Press Release) - Mar 18, 2010 -
The year is 2025. You are at the Detroit Auto Show. The internal combustion engine is on the decline, and alternative energy vehicles are no longer alternatives. Walking the show floor, two apparently identical vehicles, parked side by side, captivate you. Both are ruby red. Both have classic lines that scream performance.
However, it's the engineering and extreme performance under the hood that real car aficionados desire -- and when you pop open both hoods, the differences are startling. The first vehicle's engine compartment is a mess of exposed machinery. Traditional in its design, every component is clearly custom fitted. Pipes, wires, belts and rods are visible everywhere. To replace a component requires a mechanic certified for the vehicle make and model.
The second car could not be more different. Opening the hood reveals what appears to be a sealed black box. On closer inspection, you see each engine component is itself a sealed black box, but smaller. Each has a handle, a latch, and is labeled with a function: CPU, fuse block, motor controller, DC fan, tach and more. A turn of the latch frees a component, which slides out easily for replacement or upgrade. Each component has a standardized connector that allows any compatible device to be used. Any mechanic, even trainees, can swap components in minutes.
EAI: The Legacy Approach to Integration
Fantasy? Perhaps when it comes to automobiles -- but not when it comes to e-commerce. The first vehicle -- the one with the patchwork quilt of customized parts -- represents how most e-commerce sites are built today, using a process known as "enterprise application integration" (EAI).
Every connection from the e-commerce site to existing business systems (such as inventory, order entry, ticketing, payables, receivables, and marketing content) is cobbled together by hand. Every connection works only with the e-commerce system, and nowhere else in the organization. Connections often have to be "mended" when there is a technical change in the back office.
EAI requires custom code, proprietary third-party tools, interfaces, or middleware in order to work -- sometimes all of the above. Only the handful of programmers who built the system actually understands how it works, or how to fix it when it breaks. Data moves through an EAI system slowly, typically not in real-time. Worse, the EAI learning curve for developers is steep, costly, and time intensive.
SOA: A Better Business Model
The second vehicle -- the one with the modular black box for an engine -- represents a new way of thinking. Its called a "SOA," for "service-oriented architecture." It's a seismic departure from decades of EAI, and its transforming information technology. Instead of focusing on point-to-point technology patchworks, a SOA treats integration requirements as a documented set of open, plug-and-play business services.
Penciled onto a white board, these business services look like a model of your business. Each box represents business services, connection points and real-time data flows. For example, a box labeled "inventory" might offer clearly labeled services such as lookup, get price, add item, remove item, show photo, and get cost and so on.
Industry-standard open technologies, such XML, XSD, WSDL, JAX-WS, and BPEL, are used to connect services. Data flows in real-time, giving customers’ up-to-the-second insight into inventory, accounting and so on -- giving management unprecedented visibility into business metrics.
For IT teams, all of the SOA interfaces are governed, stored, and documented in a common corporate repository. This makes it easy for developers to find, understand, and reuse services when they need to integrate or adapt business applications and features.
Better still, major business systems from Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL), SAP (NYSE: SAP), Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) and other leading vendors are now built with SOA in mind. Its internal workings are offered as services using the same open technologies, interfaces, and documentation, making it easy for e-commerce teams to use them seamlessly.
Assembling Solutions
Indeed, from a developer's standpoint, integrating an e-commerce application in a SOA is like connecting pieces of a puzzle. Modules come together with great speed and minimal coding. Applications are designed top down, as a business model, instead of bottom-up, as a point-to-point technology model.
In fact, some of the more advanced tools, such as Oracle's BPM Suite, allow development teams to work in tandem with business leaders to physically model business processes, and then generate workflows and interfaces. It seems like science fiction, but it is as real as the screen on your PC.
The efficient development cycles delivered by a SOA speed time to market and lower costs. More important, a SOA's standardized, rational approach also makes the entire IT system more agile -- that is, more reliable, resilient, and adaptable to change. Moreover, nothing could be more important than agility to an electronic marketer today.

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ABOUT INFOGAIN

Established in 1990 in Silicon Valley, California, Infogain delivers end-to-end solutions through valuable strategy development, consulting services and highly skilled engineering execution. With worldwide delivery capabilities in ERP, SOA and enterprise integration, SaaS and cloud computing, Business Intelligence, Portals and CRM, we have developed deep industry expertise through our engagements in Retail, High Tech and Insurance among others.

An ISO certified and an SEI-CMM level 5 compliant organization with global delivery centers in New Delhi and Pune in India, Infogain specializes in JAVA, integration and the full Oracle stack, including database, middleware and applications such as Oracle E-Business Suite, Siebel, Oracle Fusion and Oracle Retail.

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Source:Cathy Chandhok
Industry:Business services
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Last Updated:Mar 18, 2010
Shortcut:http://prlog.org/10581676
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