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Unit 4: Electronic Data Interchange to E-Commerce



               EDI is a  subset of electronic  commerce that encompasses  the exchange of business information in a
               standardized electronic form like layout of information for an invoice or purchase order.

               EDI can reduce costs, workforce requirements, and documentation errors related to retyping orders,
               invoices, and other documents. Using EDI, the computer data already entered by an  organization is
               made available to a business partner.

               EDI is typically handled by using store-and-forward technologies which is similar to an e-mail. A third
               party like General Electric Information  Service (GEIS) often serves as a middleman to help
               organizations establish business relationships and handle business transactions.



                           There is an  interpretation that EDI constitutes the entire electronic  data interchange
                           paradigm, including the transmission, message flow, document format, and software
                           used to interpret the documents.

               4.2   EDI
               EDI is an inter-organizational transmission of business documents in a structured format. Many
               companies use EDI facility to trade with each other. Important messages related to the trade such as
               purchase orders, delivery instructions, and remittance advice are the typical messages sent between the
               trading partners. These messages can be effectively communicated between the user companies because
               they are structured according to various standards.
               Earlier, a particular format  of agreement  between two trading partners was used for electronic
               interchange of data. But, the differing document formats made it difficult for companies to exchange
               data electronically with many trading partners. Therefore, a standard format was necessary to exchange
               data.
               The first attempt to produce a common data format was done in the 1960s by the cooperative effort
               between industry groups. The format, however, was only for purchasing, finance, and transportation
               data and it was used only for intra industry transactions. The actual work for national Electronic Data
               Interchange (EDI) standards began in the late 1970s. The set of standard data format was created by
               considering both users’ and vendors’ requirements. The features of the standard data formats are:
               1.   It is hardware independent.
               2.   It is unambiguous such that, they can be used by all trading partners.
               3.   It reduces the labor-intensive tasks of exchanging data.
               4.   It allows the sender of the data to control the exchange, including acknowledging if and when the
                    receiver received the transaction.
               Today, a number of formats are available for EDI. The two most widely recognized and used formats
               are X12 and EDIFACT.
               Some of the essential elements of EDI are the use of an electronic transmission medium rather than
               using physical storage system such as magnetic tapes and disks. The EDI message is well structured
               and formatted. EDI enables  direct communication  between applications and increases the speed of
               document transfer from the sender to the receiver. It depends on a sophisticated information technology
               infrastructure  that includes  data processing, data management, networking capabilities that provide
               efficient and reliable data transmission between remote sets.
               An EDI message can be  easily translated into various  formats which are suitable for application
               software right from controlling the production in a factory to giving future orders to the retailers. The
               structure permits the trade related operations to be automated with data, from serving customer to the
               relevant department for automatic action.
               The EDI process is initiated either by downloading a file, or by an operator entering data into a
               computer with necessary instructions on the screen. The EDI system can send one or more orders at a
               time and different companies can receive the order at the same time. Once a company sends a message,
               it is transferred through a telephone line either to a Value-Added Network (VAN) or directly to the



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