Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Dealing With GTM Complexity

The moves of JP Morgan Chase and TradeBeam, and their respective acquisitions, as discussed in Market Leaders of Global Trade Management of this note, indicate that the global trade management (GTM) space is consolidating and that point solution providers are disappearing. Leaders like JP Morgan Chase and TradeBeam understand that to truly improve global trade, one must be able to manage both the physical and the financial supply chain across the entire trade transaction. The physical supply chain consists of export/import compliance, document management, shipment tracking, supply chain electronic management (SCEM), inventory management, global parts management, security management, and contract management. The financial supply chain refers to tasks such as purchase order processing, letter of credit (LC) management, open account management, pre- and post-shipment financing, reconciliation, invoice presentment, dispute management, foreign exchange, and insurance management (See figure 1).

As for the acquisition of Open Harbor by TradeBeam, product integration should be complete by the second half of 2005, and TradeBeam pledges to maintain uninterrupted service and support for a key group of Open Harbor clients during the immediate transition phase and post contract execution. TradeBeam has also been engaged in discussions with Open Harbor's customers to understand their specific circumstances, the scope of their projects, and to jointly agree on terms to work together to ensure alignment of business goals. GTM is a new and potentially very large enterprise applications space that has been compared by some to be the next corporate paradigm after enterprise resource planning (ERP). TradeBeam is considered a thought-leader because of its significant "first mover" advantage. It has had a few years head start compared to most competitors, and began with an "end-to-end" GTM portfolio, and did not retrofit its solution onto other "cousin" enterprise applications. So far, TradeBeam has an impressive functional scope, and it promises much more in the future.

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