Article ID: | iaor20052573 |
Country: | Netherlands |
Volume: | 159 |
Issue: | 2 |
Start Page Number: | 393 |
End Page Number: | 405 |
Publication Date: | Dec 2004 |
Journal: | European Journal of Operational Research |
Authors: | Irani Zahir, Love Peter E.D., Themistocleous Marinos |
Keywords: | supply chain |
Supply chain management (SCM) is the integrated management of business links, information flows and people. It is with this frame of reference that information systems integration from both intra- and inter-organisational levels becomes significant. Enterprise application integration (EAI) has emerged as software technologies to address the issue of integrating the portfolio of SCM components both within organisations and through cross-enterprises. EAI is based on a diversity of integration technologies (e.g. message brokers, ebXML) that differ in the type and level of integration they offer. However, none of these technologies claim to be a panacea to overcoming all integration problems but rather, need to be pieced together to support the linking of diverse applications that often exist within supply chains. In exploring the evaluation of supply chain integration, the authors propose a framework for evaluating the portfolio of integration technologies that are used to unify inter-organisational and intra-organisational information systems. The authors define and classify the permutations of information systems available according to their characteristics and integration requirements. These classifications of system types are then adopted as part of the evaluation framework and empirically tested within a case study.