EDI
Solutions
EDI
EDI is short for Electronic Data Interchange.
It is a trade exchange system that replaces
common business forms and documents such as
purchase orders, invoices, shipping documents,
etc., with a computer-based communications
and records keeping system.
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Reasons For Emanio's EDI Software |
- Easy to use
- easy to deploy
- add trading partners in minutes
- Automate all your EDI
- integrate seamlessly with your
back-end system
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Another definition of EDI: “Electronic
Data Interchange is the inter-organizational,
computer-to-computer exchange of business documentation
in a standard machine-processable format.”
There are a number of key points in this definition
that makes EDI very different from
other forms of paper or electronic communications.
Firstly, EDI happens between companies, it
is cross enterprise. While the growth in the
use of computers and other advanced technologies
has been tremendous during the past decades,
the same trend is beginning to happen between
companies. While the technology of EDI can
be used internally within an organization,
by definition EDI is organization to organization.
EDI happens between computers. The purpose
of EDI is not to eliminate paper, but rather
to eliminate the time and the data entry associated
with paper. It is generally accepted that 70
percent of one computer’s business data
output becomes a second computer’s data
input. In a paper environment without EDI this
means that the same information is being entered,
in different processes, into both computers.
With EDI, the computers are linked such that
duplicate data entry does not take place.
The purpose of EDI is to
improve the flow and management of business
information. Any information that, today, is
on a business form of any kind, is appropriate
for EDI. EDI is currently being used for all
of the most common business transactions such
as purchase orders, invoices, quotes, bills
of lading, status reports, receiving advices;
and also for some very specific transactions
such as residential mortgage insurance applications,
healthcare claim payments, and material safety
data sheets.
Because EDI is computer-to-computer communication,
rather than person–to-person communication,
the data being exchanged in EDI must be understandable
to a computer. This means the data must be
in some pre-established, structured format,
thus allowing the data to be “read and
understood” by the computer without human
interpretation.
As stated earlier, the purpose of EDI is to
improve information management. EDI accomplishes
this by reducing non-value added time and eliminating
redundant data entry. The basic functioning
of EDI, as compared to a paper-based system
is illustrated in the paragraph below.
In the basic EDI transaction that would be
shown in a figure, the buyer’s computerized
purchasing system creates an order on a paper
form. The paper purchase order is delivered
through some manual system to the supplier.
When the order is received by the supplier,
an order entry clerk abstracts information
from the purchase order and enters it into
an order entry system. With EDI, on the other
hand, the data moves directly from the buyer’s
computer to the seller’s computer, without
any delivery or processing delays. In EDI,
the transformation to a paper format, the interpretation
of that paper format by an order entry clerk,
and the re-entering of the data are functions
that are no longer necessary. |
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