| Decoding
B2B
By Kenneth Cline
Mellon's Janey Place sees opportunities
for banks in B2B e-commerce, but only if they first agree
on technical standards.
Was business-to-business e-commerce
a flash in the pan or a true revolution in the way companies
do business with each other? The jury is still out on
that question, leaving bankers confused about the role
their institutions should play in a technology that allows
companies to buy and sell among themselves over the Internet.
In the late '90s, many bankers eagerly
seized on B2B as a way to offset their disappointing online
business-to-consumer projects. B2B technology vendors
are struggling in the wake of the dot-com crash, however,
and many of the once-ballyhooed e-marketplaces have shut
down. FXA11, a foreign exchange service owned by some
of the world's largest banks, is even being investigated
by the Justice Department for possible antitrust violations.
The grim landscape doesn't deter Janey
A. Place. Executive vice president of e-commerce at Mellon
Financial Corp. and president of its Mellon Lab technology
unit, Place still believes banks can harness B2B to extend
their services deep into the "commerce chain"
that links companies with their customers and suppliers.
"We're well into the process of creating the technological
capabilities, but surely not close to the end in terms
of the benefits that are going to be realized," she
says in a recent interview.
The key to greater payoffs will be getting
the industry to agree on technical standards that will
allow banks and everyone else involved in this commerce
chain to exchange data files without having to laboriously
translate the information from one format to another.
Place is emphatic that a "winner-take-all" approach
by technology vendors will hinder the development of B2B,
just as it has electronic bill presentment and payment.
Generally considered one of the banking
industry's leading technology and e-commerce theorists,
Place worked with Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo
& Co. before joining Mellon in 1999. We spoke with
her during BAI's B2B e-commerce and payments conference,
which was held this past February in New Orleans.
Banking Strategies:
B2B means different things to different people. What's
your definition?
Place:
There was a time when it seemed to be something very new
and different. Many people had faith that if you put your
traditional processes online, you somehow changed them
in a fundamental way. As we certainly learned in B2C,
that's not true. Simply moving procurement activity online
is not transformational.
I frequently get calls from vendors
who claim to possess a "global B2B e-commerce solution"
that is seamless, integrated and secure. That sounds wonderful,
but I don't have a clue as to what it means. I got so
irritated with all these pitches that I told them, "If
you can't e-mail me with an explanation of exactly what
you do, without all that marketing jargon in it, then
I don't even want to talk to you."
What B2B does give you is another channel
for reaching your customers. And it provides great efficiency
advantages over some of those other channels. It also
can extend your reach to potential new customers.
Within a company, B2B e-commerce technologies
can span the operating and processing silos between purchasing,
raw materials management, manufacturing, invoicing, payments,
accounts receivable, etc. I like to refer to this as "the
commerce chain." What B2B can do is take much of
the noise and cost out of the commerce chain.
Now that's easy to say. There are enormous
challenges in trying to do anything there in a practical
sense.
Banking Strategies:
The lack of technical standards is a big obstacle, right?
Place:
Yes. That's the messiest problem we have. System-wide
standards would allow everybody to move much more quickly
in terms of building applications. Instead of collaborating,
however, every technology vendor wants its own proprietary
technology to become the standard, which is probably not
the most efficient way to go about it.
The situation is similar to electronic
bill payment, where everybody wants to own the transaction
hub. But B2B, like electronic billing, can't be a winner-take-all
situation.
Some years ago, I worked with a financial
services group that was considering using Microsoft Corp.'s
TransPoint venture for electronic billing and I had my
only face-to-face meeting with Bill Gates. It was just
him, myself, and a couple of other people. I remember
arguing with him over whether bill payment was a winner-take-all
kind of game. I said it wasn't, but Gates doesn't want
to be in any game where he can't take everything. And
of course, he later sold TransPoint to CheckFree Corp.
B2B likewise needs open standards and
open architecture to reach its fullest potential. Mellon
is a member of the Banking Industry Technology Secretariat,
an industry consortium that's trying to promote the development
of appropriate standards for online financial services,
including B2B. A useful analogy, I think, is the development
of the magnetic ink character recognition, or MICR, line
for checks. People collaborated on defining that standard
and more than one technology company was able to build
hardware and software for it.
The opportunity in B2B may involve Extensible
Markup Language, a programming language that allows companies
to share data over the Internet. Although XML is often
referenced as the be-all and end-all in interoperability,
an XML implementation may be more specific than an implementation
of UNIX, an older programming language. Just as we now
have many different flavors of UNIX, we're going to wind
up with many different flavors of XML if we're not careful.
BITS is now working on a project to
facilitate the development of appropriate XML standards
for the financial services industry. But I wouldn't give
it more than a 50% chance of success. It's very hard to
create a standard unless you've got the kind of money
Bill Gates has, or can identify standards elements that
all stakeholders agree on.
Banking Strategies:
Even if the standards issue is solved, there's still the
question of customer demand. Many banks have said it's
just not there
yet for B2B services. What's Mellon's experience?
Place:
You have to understand what people need, as opposed to
what they specifically ask for.
For example, we developed a product
at Mellon that extends the life and value of investments
customers made in Electronic Data Interchange, a technology
that links one computer to another but can't be used on
the Web. EDI is very rigid and fairly expensive to implement,
which limits its use to a General Motors-size company
and its major trading partners. Some of our customers
wanted to trade with smaller companies that weren't EDI-enabled.
But they couldn't ask their partners to make the required
investment in EDI.
So we provided a product that connects
XML and EDI. This allows a customer to expand its trading
network while simultaneously preserving and extending
its investment in EDI. Is that B2B? We think it is, but
the customer might not think of B2B in those terms. If
customers even have a clue as to what B2B means, they
probably don't have a vision of what they want out of
it. But they do know, for example, that they'd like to
interface between their accounts payable system and lockbox
vendor.
So it's partly a matter of listening
to your customers and partly understanding what's currently
available and what future capabilities in e-commerce can
do for those customers.
Banking Strategies:
Banks have traditionally focused on their core competencies
of payments and credit extension. How deeply should they
become involved in the business processes of their customers,
or what you describe as the "commerce chain?"
Place:
I think you can go very deep. Corporations are increasingly
outsourcing non-core activities. It's not unusual, for
example, to find companies outsourcing their entire human
resources function.
If you look at the structural components
of the commerce chain, many functional components are
the same across different industries. The central problem
is that most business processes, both internal and external
to a company, function separately and pass information
to one another sequentially. For example, sales data goes
first through a salesperson's sales tracking system to
an accounting system, then to a compensation system, and
eventually to the manufacturing, profitability and risk
management systems.
A financial institution that currently
handles cash management for a company could extend into
that customer's enterprise resource planning system, or
into functions handled by an ERP system. As chief financial
officers continue to grapple with the need to do more
with less, they will look to outsource non-core processes.
It would be natural for a company to tap its payments
and cash management service provider to handle other components
of the commerce chain.
Banking Strategies:
What's your opinion of the online marketplaces, which
early on became one of the rallying points for B2B activity?
Banks such as KeyCorp and FleetBoston Financial Corp.
have become active in this area, as well as eScout.com
LLC, which is run by a former banker, Alexander "Sandy"
Kemper.
Place:
As I understand eScout, it's a marketplace for small businesses
an attempt to create a kind of self-interested
community on the Web. While I think the Web certainly
has the ability to create or nurture cultural communities,
like self-help groups, I've become pretty disillusioned
with the notion of creating economic communities on the
Web.
Take small business, for example. A
small business might use a Web marketplace that provides
travel services. But at some point, it's going to look
at Travelocity or some other specialized Web site and
probably find cheaper fares. Why would small businesses
limit themselves to a range of partners for office supplies
when they can probably get a better deal from Staples
or Office Depot?
I don't see any fundamental advantage
for the economics of a Web within a Web. The Web itself
is fundamentally very efficient, and unlike physical space,
everything is next door to everything else. The convenience
of space offered by a shopping mall simply has no analog
on the Web, where everything is just a click away.
Vendors used to ask us to sign up for
their e-marketplace, where our customers could buy and
sell everything from insurance products to refrigerators
and we'd get a 5% cut in perpetuity. I had two basic problems
with this idea. One, our customers and their trust in
us is probably the number one asset we've got. Why would
we want to sell them, say, car insurance? Have you ever
liked anybody who sold you car insurance?
The other issue is, who's going to pay
5% in perpetuity? Those marketplace margins are going
to come under the same sort of pressure that you see with
every other Internet-based product or service. This strikes
me as an irrationally exuberant business model.
Banks face a real challenge deciding
what to do in this area. Mellon has a lot of cash management
services, for example, so we're increasingly expanding
that suite of services based on what our customers tell
us they want. We do participate in a couple of the foreign
exchange marketplaces.
But we really haven't put too many eggs
into any of those baskets because e-marketplaces give
all the advantage to the buyer rather than the seller.
Buyers enjoy price transparency, for example, and the
ability to search out quickly, within the privacy of their
own offices, any number of options.
So when one company approached us about
their foreign exchange marketplace, we analyzed the value
proposition. It went like this: we could pay them a fee,
interface our technology to their exchange and then post
all our prices besides those of our competitors. And should
we then be so lucky as to sell anything, we'd have to
give the marketplace a piece of it. What's wrong with
that picture?
To be sure, there are marketplaces that
provide benefit for all the players. Some trucking companies,
for example, sell excess capacity to each other so they
don't have to travel with half a truckload. I think that's
great. With that kind of arrangement, you use up capacity
and drive more liquidity to that particular activity.
Everybody wins.
Banking Strategies:
How important is B2B to Mellon, strategically? Is it a
separate investment category for your company, or just
part of the whole e-commerce picture?
Place:
It's really the latter. Although Mellon still has some
retail presence with affluent investors, our primary focus
is institutional and commercial. We only have about 6,000
customers, primarily institutional or commercial. Our
whole world is very B2B focused and we look at e-commerce
as just a way to serve that marketplace.
Banking Strategies:
How important is B2B to the rest of the banking industry?
You often hear dire warnings that if bankers don't move
quickly into this space, they'll forfeit the territory.
Place:
I get a little nervous when bankers say we have to retain
control of something or it will go to the technology people.
The way to retain control is to develop the technologies
that allow you to offer a service more efficiently. Whoever
does that the best is going to get the business.
When I first came into financial services
about 10 years ago, people worried about losing the value-added
services around the payment system. But we forget the
advantages banks possess around their core competencies.
For example, when I was talking to TransPoint, it became
obvious to me that those people didn't understand the
risks involved with moving money around. It would have
been very dangerous to have that company as a hub through
which large amounts of money flowed. Banks understand
those risks.
At Mellon, we do a lot securities servicing,
which is a very technology-oriented, scale-driven business.
We invested heavily in that business because we know how
it works and understand all the fiduciary obligations.
Banking Strategies:
Putting it all together, how should bankers think about
investing in B2B technology to the benefit of their institutions
and customers?
Place:
It is never useful to think of B2B in a vacuum, but rather
in terms of how it fits with your overall corporate strategy.
Mellon has a lot of processing businesses.
So we invest in capabilities that promise to drive more
business to our established platforms. Does the investment
help us build scale? Does it make the platform more efficient?
These are the questions we ask.
The investments tend to be huge, so
it's a challenge. But it's important to be proactive.
If you wait for a customer to come to you with a request,
like facilitating automated clearinghouse transactions
from the retail point-of-sale back to the bank, you would
have to procure that service from a third-party and then
worry about integrating it into your receivables processing
operation. It's better to make some of those investments
ahead of time based on your knowledge of customer needs
and industry developments.
A final point I'd make is that the need
for open standards can't be over-emphasized. You need
to continually ask the partners and service providers
you're dealing with: how much of your architecture is
open? And I don't just mean open in terms of technology,
although that's certainly important. I mean open in terms
of business process. For example, does the technology
simultaneously expose data to other businesses' processes?
My grand vision would be to bring more
transparency to international trade finance, which is
one of the most opaque areas in financial services. A
big problem there is lack of liquidity: there's currently
no consistent way to securitize or to create a secondary
market in those deals. You could really do an enormous
amount of good by bringing standardization, simplification,
automation, real-time information and standard products
and technologies to those transactions. An ability to
securitize trade finance would drive a lot more liquidity
to that business.
When people talk about the B2B "gold
rush" being over, I just shake my head. I think we're
well into creating the technology capabilities, but surely
not close to the end in terms of the benefits that are
going to be realized. As with other technology revolutions,
the "golden age" of value creation in e-commerce
will come after the investment boom-and-bust cycle runs
its course.
Mr.
Cline is senior editor with Banking
Strategies.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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