Inter-Firm Information Sharing in Enterprise Resource Planning Systems: a call for timely but limited access to customer information

Current trends in Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) suggest that supply chain management and tight control over scheduling jobs within the supply chain are key tactical planning issues. Modern ERP software packages, in conjunction with the World Wide Web, allow for automated exchange of information...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Michael Busing
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Australasian Association for Information Systems 2001-11-01
Series:Australasian Journal of Information Systems
Subjects:
ERP
Online Access:http://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/223
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spelling doaj-0a6dce78ecdf491f87945e878743441f2021-08-02T03:26:48ZengAustralasian Association for Information SystemsAustralasian Journal of Information Systems1449-86181449-86182001-11-019110.3127/ajis.v9i1.223187Inter-Firm Information Sharing in Enterprise Resource Planning Systems: a call for timely but limited access to customer informationMichael BusingCurrent trends in Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) suggest that supply chain management and tight control over scheduling jobs within the supply chain are key tactical planning issues. Modern ERP software packages, in conjunction with the World Wide Web, allow for automated exchange of information within a company and also between two or more companies (i.e., conveyance of customer information to suppliers) of parts and components) for the purposes of effective planning and control. While ease of information exchange between a customer and supplier is increasingly critical to the success of modern-day planning and control efforts, the issue of information security is also a very real concern. Suppliers can benefit from gaining access to a customer's dispatch list and material requirements plan (MRP) in order to determine real-time priority of jobs in queue at various work centers within their own organization. Other customer information, however, should remain secure and unavailable to supplier firms for competitive reasons such as threat of forward integration. This paper presents a previously tested priority-sequencing rule that explicitly considers downstream shop conditions in determining which job to run next The rule proves to perform well on mean flow time and lateness as well as on variability of these measures. The rule is extended here to incorporate the case where a downstream work center is outside official corporate boundaries. With the call for free exchange of information comes the threat of other, perhaps proprietary, information being accessed by vendors or others outside the official corporate boundaries. The paper will propose information that should be freely exchanged between customers and suppliers and information that should remain secure. Finally, practical measures to manage access to web-enabled ERP information will be proposed.http://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/223inter-organisationalinformation sharingEnterprise Resource PlanningERP
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Busing
spellingShingle Michael Busing
Inter-Firm Information Sharing in Enterprise Resource Planning Systems: a call for timely but limited access to customer information
Australasian Journal of Information Systems
inter-organisational
information sharing
Enterprise Resource Planning
ERP
author_facet Michael Busing
author_sort Michael Busing
title Inter-Firm Information Sharing in Enterprise Resource Planning Systems: a call for timely but limited access to customer information
title_short Inter-Firm Information Sharing in Enterprise Resource Planning Systems: a call for timely but limited access to customer information
title_full Inter-Firm Information Sharing in Enterprise Resource Planning Systems: a call for timely but limited access to customer information
title_fullStr Inter-Firm Information Sharing in Enterprise Resource Planning Systems: a call for timely but limited access to customer information
title_full_unstemmed Inter-Firm Information Sharing in Enterprise Resource Planning Systems: a call for timely but limited access to customer information
title_sort inter-firm information sharing in enterprise resource planning systems: a call for timely but limited access to customer information
publisher Australasian Association for Information Systems
series Australasian Journal of Information Systems
issn 1449-8618
1449-8618
publishDate 2001-11-01
description Current trends in Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) suggest that supply chain management and tight control over scheduling jobs within the supply chain are key tactical planning issues. Modern ERP software packages, in conjunction with the World Wide Web, allow for automated exchange of information within a company and also between two or more companies (i.e., conveyance of customer information to suppliers) of parts and components) for the purposes of effective planning and control. While ease of information exchange between a customer and supplier is increasingly critical to the success of modern-day planning and control efforts, the issue of information security is also a very real concern. Suppliers can benefit from gaining access to a customer's dispatch list and material requirements plan (MRP) in order to determine real-time priority of jobs in queue at various work centers within their own organization. Other customer information, however, should remain secure and unavailable to supplier firms for competitive reasons such as threat of forward integration. This paper presents a previously tested priority-sequencing rule that explicitly considers downstream shop conditions in determining which job to run next The rule proves to perform well on mean flow time and lateness as well as on variability of these measures. The rule is extended here to incorporate the case where a downstream work center is outside official corporate boundaries. With the call for free exchange of information comes the threat of other, perhaps proprietary, information being accessed by vendors or others outside the official corporate boundaries. The paper will propose information that should be freely exchanged between customers and suppliers and information that should remain secure. Finally, practical measures to manage access to web-enabled ERP information will be proposed.
topic inter-organisational
information sharing
Enterprise Resource Planning
ERP
url http://journal.acs.org.au/index.php/ajis/article/view/223
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