New commerce servers

Published: 10 October 1999 y., Sunday
Commerce server vendors continue to entice users with more complete packaged e-commerce applications as an alternative to users building their sites from scratch. New commerce servers this month from Art Technology Group, BroadVision, Intershop, and InterWorld offer users more choice than ever in jump-starting their e-storefronts. Users such as OkiData Americas, a fax and printer manufacturer that launched its direct-to-consumer commerce site last March with the help of InterWorld, prefer the increasing enterprise-readiness of such platforms. "We looked at and easily ruled out a lot of solutions that weren_t much more than catalogs. We needed something capable of handling our full business processes," said Craig Broadbent, manager of electronic marketing at OkiData. Also a requirement: tight integration with an SAP back end, and the ability to move forward in the future with personalization and other advanced site features, said Broadbent.OkiData_s decision mirrors that of many high-end sites that are increasingly opting to choose and ride a commerce server vendor rather than be stuck with the cost and complexity of building a commerce infrastructure in-house.At Internet World this week, InterWorld launched Commerce Exchange 3.0. The release features an expanded repository of "best practice" templates for online merchandising, order processing and customer service. New merchandise techniques supported in Commerce Exchange 3.0 include personalized promotions, product alternatives, cross-sells, up-sells, and points programs. The 3.0 release also introduces a new family of role-based tools that pushes commerce site responsibility down to business line managers, systems managers, Web designers, and application developers. InterWorld Commerce Exchange 3.0 is available now and averages $400,000 for a typical installation. Intershop, perhaps best known for its software for commerce service providers (CSP), last week unveiled a new high-end commerce server, dubbed enfinity, directly targeting the enterprise. The vendor believes its experience in dealing with massive CSP implementations, along with a strong focus on back-end integration, will serve enterprise users well, said Sam Boonen, Intershop_s product marketing director. When Intershop questioned enterprise users, it found "that integration and extensibility are the primary needs, even on top of marketing and merchandising applications," Boonen said.Enfinity includes 75 preconfigured "pipelines" that let an enterprise integrate e-commerce transactions with external and internal business systems, including ERP, CRM, and custom mainframe applications, Boonen said.
Šaltinis: TechWeb
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

DEA awards e-commerce contract

The Drug Enforcement Administration announced Nov. 26 that it has awarded a $6 million, two-year contract to PEC Solutions Inc. more »

Small victory

Via takes early round in graphics dispute with Intel more »

A trial date

Russian programmer gets April court date more »

Hardcore About Blocking Porn

The most people agree that work is the worst place for it to arrive. more »

Hardware vendors seek Web services opportunities

A host of IT vendors are jumping on the Web-based services bandwagon as hardware vendors realize the additional margins available from helping companies manage hardware from PCs to printers. more »

FBI software cracks encryption wall

‘Magic Lantern’ part of new ‘Enhanced Carnivore Project’ more »

E-Commerce Getting Ready for a Lean, Mean 2002

E-businesses are putting tech spending and other elements of their organizations on a much shorter leash in an effort to get ready for 2002, analysts say. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

The report

Internet An Ideal Tool For Extremists - FBI more »

IT spend up 1% in 2001 - IDC

The "perfect storm" of the 11 September terrorist attacks, slowing global economy, and the telecommunications supply-demand mismatch, means that worldwide IT spending will only increase one per cent in 2001. more »