Floor
Covering Industry to Save Money With the Internet
Contact: CRI Communications Department, 706.428.2103
JANUARY 31, 2002 The Internet continues to hold strong promise for businesses
to lower cost and improve service to customers. To insure the floor covering
industry is not left behind on capitalizing on this opportunity, a bold new
business-to-business (B2B) initiative has been launched that is sponsored and
endorsed by nearly every major player in the floor covering industry.
Over the last year, a committee representing almost every major manufacturer,
distributor and software systems supplier in the floor covering industry, has
successfully negotiated a standard language for the electronic exchange of product
and order information between any two buyers and sellers across the Internet.
Using computer systems that comply with this B2B Standard, dealers and distributors
will be able to simplify the way they conduct business with their vendors in
many ways:
- Today, dealers wait days to get bulky product and price reports from their
vendors, only to spend valuable time re-keying this information into their
own systems. Using the B2B standard, vendors can automatically send all product
and price changes to dealers across the Internet, flowing this up-to-date
information straight into the dealers own pricing file. This will save dealer
personnel work and reduce the likelihood of mistakes.
- Dealers will now have a better alternative to phone, fax or web sites for
placing orders for carpet, rug, laminate, wood, ceramic, resilient or other
flooring products. By pushing just a few buttons on their own system, a dealer
can send purchase orders to their vendors electronically, and get back a full
response within seconds that completes the transaction. Automating the procurement
process will also save time and further reduce the chance for costly mistakes.
- There are even features in the standard that provide advance notification
of vendor shipments (simplifying the work of receiving vendor shipments) and
enable electronic billing, which will make it easier to reconcile accounts
payable records.
This new B2B standard will enable forward-thinking companies in the floor covering
industry to leap ahead in their use of computer technology. Although manufacturers
and distributors have used computers for decades to help lower costs and improve
customer service, many specialty retailers have not yet taken the plunge to
fully automate their business operations. As a result, many retailers spend
too much time having to manage a blizzard of paper forms and notes, which eats
into sales and margins.
The promise of this new standard is the way it will help retailers further
automate their time-consuming and error-prone back office functions, allowing
them to focus more time on activities that generate sales and improve customer
satisfaction. Companies that choose to streamline their processes and use the
Internet to conduct business with their vendors will enjoy a significant competitive
advantage over their competitors who do not.
Are these promised benefits too good to be true? Right now, no company has
fully implemented the full promise of the B2B Standard. However, a large number
of vendors and the flooring software companies are already at work to make it
a reality in the very near future.
Many manufacturers and distributors expect their systems to fully support the
standard within the next few months. The software vendors who sell their systems
to dealers are equally committed to completely supporting the standard as quickly
as possible. Several companies already offer Internet-based solutions that deliver
on some of this capability.
As companies complete their full implementations of the standard, dealers can
expect to receive letters from each supplier announcing their readiness to send
and receive electronic transactions. Once a dealer has also implemented a B2B
Standard compliant system, they can begin doing business electronically with
their vendors across the Internet.
Then the benefits begin to flow.
How can any floor covering company not be better off participating in a open
standard that is fully backed by the industry heavyweights, speeds the accurate
exchange of transactions between buyers and sellers, and helps everyone lower
costs?
With the help of the Carpet and Rug Institute, the creators of the Floor Covering
Industry B2B Standard have published a web site at www.flooringb2bstandard.com,
providing additional information about this exciting initiative. On this site
can be found names and contacts of all participating companies, answers to common
questions, and even (for the technically curious) a copy of the most recent
version of the detailed standard specification.
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