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Advanced How To Guide

Choosing eBusiness vendors and software

Single or Multiple Vendors?

It is at this stage that you have to determine whether your project is best performed by a single vendor (a turnkey solution) or a number of specialist vendors working in collaboration (a best-of-breed solution). A number of factors need to be considered. If the project is small and non-strategic (it may allow you perform a new function but it does not fundamentally change the way you do business) it usually makes sense to go for a single established vendor whose generic offering is likely meet your needs. This approach should be faster and cheaper than trying to manage multiple vendors. And since the project is not mission-critical you and your staff need not be overly distracted during implementation. An example of this kind of project would be providing an email system for your organisation.

If however you are undertaking a major strategic change through technology, it may be worthwhile considering the possible benefits of employing specialist vendors for each piece of the project. A generic solution may not be flexible or innovative enough to bet-your-business on. In this case you are committing to significantly greater expense (price and use of internal resources) and implementation time. It is important to have on staff someone who is sophisticated in IT to help select the vendors who can, in combination, deliver the best result. Having this IT person is also vital for resolving the inter-vendors disputes that frequently arise in collaborative projects. If your organisation does not have such an IT expert it may signal that the best-of-breed approach may not be the correct approach for you, or alternatively that you need to bring in outside expertise for the duration of the project in the form of a project manager.

Risk of Dependency

It is also important to appreciate what level of dependency your organisation will come to have on the software and resulting solution provided by the eBusiness vendor. If the solution is based on software that is readily available from other sources and the solution is reasonably straightforward you are unlikely to develop a serious dependency. It is still important that someone in your organisation is familiar with the software and is able to update information and perform routine maintenance. In the above example, if your solution provider goes bust you should be able to find a suitable replacement reasonably easily. If however your solution is highly customised and/or based on proprietary software (software invented by the provider and known only to them) you need to take greater care. Firstly, before entering into an agreement you should try to determine the likelihood of the vendor going bust or changing its business materially (see following section on due diligence). You need to be confident that the vendor is committed to the software your solution is based on and that the company is financially secure. You may be betting your business on this vendor's success/survival. As such you might be best served avoiding smaller start-up type organisations in favour of larger, well established ones. Even after selecting a stable vendor you should insist that the workings of your solution are well documented so that some other organisation can take over if the need arises. In this second scenario it is important that people in your organisation are familiar with the application and can perform minor trouble shooting in addition to regular updates and routine maintenance.

Shortlisting


On deciding upon your desired vendors, you should rank and advise the top several (maybe 3-4) that they have been shortlisted. As a courtesy rejected vendors should be contacted immediately. It is important to keep multiple vendors under consideration at this stage; both for the negotiating leverage this affords, and to protect from the possibility that one or more may remove themselves from consideration.

It may be worthwhile employing an independent consultant to help identify which vendor(s) are best suited to your project, and to assist in setting up the arrangement. Qualified individuals may be found within successful related technology or management consulting companies that are not connected to the vendors. A once-off arrangement or retainer payment may be appropriate depending on the scale of your project and your likely ongoing appetite for advancement through technology.

At this stage it is important to perform rigorous due diligence. Due diligence is the process investors use to check out the business and financial prospects of a potential investment. You should employ the same process to identifying the best eBusiness vendor for your company.


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