ABF Freight System wins Network World's 2001 E-comm Innovator of the Year
Award with an elegant network design, truckloads of creative features and
an open business philosophy.
By Julie Bort
Network World, 02/26/01
Innovation
is easy when you start from scratch. If someone hands you a few
million dollars in seed money to build an e-commerce infrastructure,
you'd naturally use the latest and greatest technologies.
But what if you work for a 65-year-old trucking company that relies
on a mainframe? Could you best upstart dot-coms and traditional
competitors in e-commerce features and functionality for years
on end, without ditching those reliable, mission-critical mainframe
applications?
E-comm Innovator of the Year Award Network World's annual E-comm Innovator of the Year Award honors companies with extraordinary business-to-business e-commerce initiatives. These innovators have advanced the use of e-commerce technology while supporting business objectives. They have carefully considered business plans, intimate knowledge of their customers and, of course, strong technology underpinnings.
This year, we honor trucking firm ABF Freight System for building a mainframe-based e-commerce infrastructure that enhances customer service and opens new markets. Click here for more awards information...
ABF
Freight System, a less-than-load (LTL) transportation company
in Fort Smith, Ark., has wrapped an e-business infrastructure
around its IBM 9672 R46 S/390 mainframe, saving more than $1 million
per year in the process while providing a level of self-service
never before available in its market. At the same time, e-commerce
created a new business line and revamped virtually everyone's
job, from how a regional vice president builds customer loyalty
to how a customer service representative spends the day.
The
same CICS and COBOL mainframe applications that ABF has long used
to calculate pricing, trace shipments, schedule routes and review
freight bills are now accessible via the e-commerce site, the
intranet, Wireless Application Protocol-enabled (WAP) devices,
imaging software, and even an old interactive voice response (IVR)
system. ABF secures the transactions through what it calls the
CICS Pipe, a custom-built protocol translation tool that wraps
CICS around whatever front-end protocols an application uses.
Such
integration contrasts sharply with the e-business norm: e-commerce
technology silos built to jump-start Web efforts, but which now
must be painfully integrated with existing back-end systems. Elegance
in ABF's case stems from its e-commerce champions: IT folks.
Honorable mentions
This past year was rich in innovation. Here's a roundup of
other worthy projects culled from entries for Network
World's 2001 E-comm Innovator of the Year Award. Click
here for more...
With
more than 14,000 employees, ABF earned $1.38 billion last year
in operating revenue. As a wholly owned subsidiary, it represents
the bulk of the income and profits of its publicly traded holding
company, Arkansas Best, No. 772 on last year's Fortune 1000
list. ABF's e-commerce infrastructure, dubbed eCenter, boasts
more than 23,000 registered users from more than 17,000 ABF customers.
These customers generate more than 70% of ABF's annual revenue
and shipment volume.
ABF
has earned Network World's 2001 E-comm Innovator of the Year
Award for serving as an example of old-to-new economy transformation.
Trucks
and technology
LTL
carriers such as ABF and competitor Roadway Express fill the niche
between parcel carriers like Federal Express and full-truckload
carriers like JB Hunt that specialize in huge shipments. With
the dot-com boom of 1999, competition also sprung forth from virtual
companies, such as freightquote.com and Transportation.com.
LTL
carriers ship general commodities in loads that would not fill
a truck; their core customers are businesses, not consumers -
although e-commerce has allowed ABF to move into at least one
consumer market.
Consumers are only a click away
By creating a highway to consumers, e-commerce gave ABF Freight System a chance to develop a new line of business:
U-Pack Moving. Click
here for more...
Prices are calculated for each shipment using variables such as
weight, volume, distance and the number of boxes. To complicate
matters, carriers unilaterally offer discounts on most shipments,
making custom quotes the order of the day. That is the prime reason
ABF e-commerce champion Bob Davidson, vice president of pricing
and marketing, lobbied to integrate an e-business infrastructure
when ABF began experimenting with the Web in 1995. ABF wouldn't
have even been able to offer an accurate price to e-commerce customers
without tapping into or reinventing back-end mainframe applications,
says Davidson, who, like nearly everyone running ABF's e-commerce
site, has an IT background. He began his career as a programmer.
"This
is a surprisingly technical company," Davidson asserts, noting
that many vice presidents and business managers have college degrees
in mathematics, engineering or the information sciences. For example,
Michael Newcity, prior to becoming ABF's e-commerce manager,
wrote much of the code for the e-commerce site, including a patent-pending
application that illustrates shipments via a calendar.
Leaning
on his IT know-how, Davidson based the company's e-business
strategy on two concepts: One, the Internet would be the ultimate
tool for customer self-service and, two, by separating business
and presentation logic, core applications could remain on the
steadfast mainframe while the front ends vary.
Davidson
has experimented with self-service systems - via PC, IVR, fax-back
and direct-dial modem applications - since 1983. "We had
applications, but they were clunky. It didn't take a genius
to see that the Internet gives you the standardized [graphical
user interface]," he says.
Maybe
not. But in 1996, this realization was so far ahead of the game,
a day was looming when he would have to convince top management
of his vision.
Many
returns
In
January 1996, before Fort Smith even had a single Internet point
of presence, ABF launched its first site. Customers could now download
updated versions of a Windows-based rate application that ABF otherwise
would mail to them on disk.
This
FTP site cost next to nothing to deploy, but it didn't go far
enough, Davidson says. By the summer, ABF was operating a self-service
Web site that let customers map routes and trace shipments.
By
the end of the next year, a customer could schedule a pickup and
create a bill of lading - the formal document required for shipments.
By early 1998, ABF customers could generate price quotes that
included discounts, view images of shipment documents and review
damage claim status, among other functions.
Photo caption: (from left to right) Bob Davidson, vice president of pricing and marketing for ABF; David Cogswell, director of technical services for Data-Tronics; and Michael Newcity, manager of e-commerce for ABF.
Then,
in a move that would define the company's open attitude toward
e-commerce, ABF added predictive e-mail alerts. Through these notices,
ABF offers progress reports of a shipment in transit and alerts
the customer to the probability that the shipment will be late.
The data comes from a tool ABF uses internally for the same purpose.
This service, Newcity notes, only became available on competitive
sites late last year.
ABF
executives, who in 1998 were so planted in the old economy mindset
that they hadn't even adopted client/server technology, worried
that customers would be angered if told a shipment might be late.
But Davidson contended that ABF customers would actually benefit
from and appreciate being apprised of shipment status. "You
have to reconcile yourself to the fact that you are going to tell
the customer everything, good or bad," he says.
Click for larger image ( 48kGIF)
Davidson
would be proved right. In October 1998, predictive e-mail notification
went live. At the same time, ABF formally announced the e-commerce
site as eCenter, after nearly three years of continuous development.
"At that time, the site had already paid for itself four
times over in cost savings," Newcity says.
For
instance, prior to the e-commerce site, a customer would telephone
customer service to trace a shipment, verify delivery or check on
damage claims. The representative, in turn, would locate the necessary
paper documents and fax them to the customer. As ABF added the tools,
customers took on these tasks themselves, in real time and at much
lower cost. ECenter cost $985,000 from 1996 through 2000 to build
and maintain. Costs for 2000 alone were $425,000, while savings
tallied $1.1 million - or $4,140 per workday, Newcity says. This
adds up to a sweet return on investment of 139% for last year alone,
he says.
As
for losing customers over predictive e-mail alerts and other tell-all
planning tools, the converse proved true, Newcity says. In a survey
Newcity conducted in the third quarter of 2000, 93% of 54 eCenter
user respondents said they benefited positively from using online
applications. "Shipment visibility" was named by 68% as
one of those benefits.
Last
year, the eCenter user base nearly tripled, from 8,400 to 23,800
users. Newcity attributes the jump to a concerted effort to get
the word out about eCenter. The company's 600 salespeople now
train their customers to use eCenter, and the 25 regional vice presidents
must visit with a customer every quarter and discuss how eCenter
can be improved, says David Stubblefied, ABF CEO.
Better
still, rather than tracing shipments all day, call center personnel
can engage in pro-active, even income-producing, activities, Newcity
says. "They can spend time helping customers through complicated
logistics issues, like planning the distribution of a multistaged
delivery," he says.
Data
in the pipe
ABF grew the innovative features of eCenter throughout 2000 by
introducing a variety of new functions, including Shipment Planner,
Transparent Links, ABF Anywhere and Dynamic Rerouting.
The
patent-pending Shipment Planner displays pending shipments in
a calendar format. Transparent Links lets ABF customers incorporate
shipping data from ABF's back end into their own systems
via XML (see graphic at left). ABF customers typically use this
feature to submit pickup requests, via XML parsing and style sheets,
when they receive e-commerce orders from their Web sites. ABF
Anywhere lets users manage shipment information and communicate
with ABF with a Palm VII, Windows CE device or mobile phone equipped
with Internet access and a microbrowser. Users can trace shipments
and look up contact information for ABF service centers.
Dynamic
Rerouting lets customers change the destination of an in-transit
shipment or recall a shipment to the place of origin. Via the
Web site, customers tap into a mainframe application that sends
the new destination instructions to the proper ABF service center.
ABF then e-mails a confirmation of the new destination and revised
charges.
Click for larger image ( 44kGIF)
Such
applications rely on imaging software accessed via Tivoli Storage
Manager, the custom CICS Pipe Web-to-mainframe conversion tool,
and a simple but effective frame relay WAN.
Drivers
en route check in at ABF service stations in 311 locations until
they arrive at the destination terminal, where the shipment is
scheduled for delivery to the consignee's address. At each
checkpoint, drivers submit documents, such as the bill of lading,
for scanning. The images are uploaded via FTP over the WAN to
a DB2 database, running on Windows NT, located in Fort Smith.
This creates a visual record; data records are created by scanning
a bar code on each document.
ABF
manages retrieval requests via Tivoli Storage Manager. Users can
view bills of lading, proofs of delivery, packing slips and customs
documents, then confirm delivery to their customers.
ABF's
internal IT group, which is structured as a sister company named
Data-Tronics Corp. (DTC), handles all hosting, application development
and maintenance for eCenter. DTC, the centralized IT department
for all four Arkansas Best subsidiaries, is also in Fort Smith.
The
routed network
Currently,
the ABF network is "one big 10/100," says Dave Cogswell,
director of technical services for DTC.
A
Cisco 7500 router sits in front of the mainframe, sorting traffic
from a series of application servers, today mostly running on
NT (see graphic, page XX). These run the IVR system, FTP, custom
bar code applications, the NT DB2 application (DB2 also runs on
the mainframe), the Wireless Markup Language (WML) server, Tivoli
Storage Manager, and a handful of other custom software objects
mostly running on Microsoft DCOM. Various NT intranet application
servers running Microsoft's Internet Information Server (IIS)
4.0 sit on the same network, Cogswell says.
A
Nokia IP 440 service-provider-class firewall, which features Check
Point Software's Firewall-1, routing and frame relay functions,
links to the NT IIS public e-commerce host.
Award Presentation Network World will honor ABF Freight System at a ceremony Aug. 1, 2001, at IDG Expo's ICe conference in Las Vegas. Click
here for more...
The
CICS Pipe protocol-conversion gateway gets these IP-based front-end
applications talking to the applications written in CICS or even
COBOL and running on IBM Systems Network Architecture. Using IBM's
Advanced Program-to-Program Communications and Common Programming
Interface for Communications protocols, the CICS Pipe passes data
from an NT application to a CICS transaction, waits for the transaction
to process the request, and returns the results, allowing IIS
to maintain a session.
With
the CICS Pipe, programmers need not deal with the network protocols
or even COBOL, says Craig Wahlmeier, senior technical consultant
for DTC.
Alternatively,
ABF could have used Microsoft's Open Database Connectivity
(ODBC), which lets SQL queries pass through to a back-end database.
However, ABF found ODBC to be less efficient and secure than the
CICS Pipe, which encapsulates queries, Newcity says. "We
have experimented with ODBC and have found that it works relatively
well for small applications, but the performance degrades significantly
when it is used for substantial applications like Shipment Planner."
One
downfall of ABF's streamlined infrastructure is the training
requirement. DTC aggressively hires graduates and trains them
for six months on the mainframe.
"New
people want to do all Microsoft ODBC and do everything on the
front end. We have to fight that and tell them to use the Pipe.
It's got better security, diagnostic tools, control - if
someone's running up the workload, we can stop them,"
Wahlmeier says.
One
strategy for calming hot shots is keeping the carrots of hot technology
projects in front of them.
Farming the future
The
next step for ABF is extending its network infrastructure without
destroying the simplicity that works so well. The company plans
to launch a three-city WAP pilot for drivers handling local deliveries.
The WAP applications will let drivers input pickup information
immediately, rather than waiting until they reach a service center
at day's end, says Richard Bogner, DTC senior technical consultant.
DTC
owns a WML server and will rely on the cellular carrier's
WAP gateway, says Kevin Taylor, senior technical administrator
for DTC.
Building
a server farm and implementing load balancing are on tap for early
this year, Cogswell adds. These would let ABF distribute Web content
among multiple servers, combining failover redundancy with efficiency.
ECenter operates on more than 65 servers; at least eight more
are expected for the project. ABF also may turn to Web caching,
particularly for graphics, if it makes economic sense, he says.
Likewise,
Cogswell is considering replacing the expensive and relatively
slow-speed frame relay WAN with VPNs and DSL service. The company
is also considering building a second data center or perhaps hosting
with a collocation provider.
While
ABF watches its dot-com competitors swinging in the wind over
the Internet stock correction, it knows that with its trucks,
infrastructure and e-commerce innovation, it's traveling
a profitable route.
Check out the winners for 2000 and 1999.
Contact Signature Series Senior Editor Julie Bort at jbort@nww.com.