The Gerber story started in the kitchen
of Daniel Gerber in the summer of 1927. Following the advice of a
pediatrician, his wife had been hand-straining solid food for their
seven-month-old daughter. After many evenings of repeating this chore, Dorothy
Gerber suggested that her husband try it. After watching him make several
attempts, she pointed out that the work could be easily done at the Fremont
Canning Company, where the Gerber family produced a line of canned fruits and
vegetables. Experiments with strained baby foods
began shortly. Soon workers in the plant requested samples for their babies. By
late 1928, strained peas, prunes, carrots and spinach, not to mention beef
vegetable soup, were ready for the national market. Gerber has continued
to grow throughout the years. Today nearly 190 food products are labeled in 16
languages and distributed to 80 countries.
Tightening
inventory management is a top priority for cost-conscious retailers and their
suppliers. Retailers want their products
to be available for customers to buy, but they don’t want too much. Gerber has convinced 40 major grocery chains
to allow the company to manage their inventory of Gerber products. During
systems analysis, project participants defined the system objectives — reduce
both Gerber’s and the customers’ inventory costs and provides a strong
incentive for store managers to buy from Gerber. The company also decided not
to charge for the inventory management service, treating it instead as a way to
build customer loyalty and get sales data that can be used to fine-tune baby
food production plans. Gerber believes
it can gain a competitive advantage with superior forecasting and planning.
An electronic
data interchange (EDI) setup was designed and implemented to feed information
on sales of Gerber products from the grocery stores to the Freemont, Michigan,
company. The data is input to Manugistics software to schedule new deliveries.
Manugistics, Inc. is a manufacturer of software for supply chain management.
The company's solutions improve the flow of product within and among companies
from raw materials or parts through manufacturing to delivery of product to the
end customer. With Manugistics software, Gerber makes informed operational
decisions, resulting in increased revenues, reduced inventories, improved
customer service, better relationships among trading partners, greater speed to
market and lower overall costs throughout the supply chain.
While the
Gerber-Manugistics system worked fairly well, the need to translate all of the
EDI messages from various grocery chains into a common format slowed down
Gerber’s ability to add grocers. And custom-built software for sending alerts
and other messages to Gerber’s inventory planners gave them only the minimum
data they need. Planners often had to
resort to searching through raw EDI transmissions to find important data. Thus,
Gerber requested Manugistics to perform a systems analysis and design a simpler
and improved EDI process.
Manugistics’
formed a partnership with Frontec AMT, a company that specializes in
integrating applications. The alliance created the Intelligent Messenger for
Vendor Managed Inventory, a software product to format and prepare customer
product activity data for input into Manugistics. The software was designed to
present data to Manugistics that is consistent and complete in terms of product
identification, unit of measure conversion, data validation and sequence
checking. Additional features were
identified based on user requirements — intelligent routing of messages,
event-driven notifications, and predefined trading partner business processes.
Gerber plans to be the first company to implement the new data
transformation and messaging software.
It has established objectives for this system to dramatically increase
the amount of inventory it manages for grocery stores. Gerber sells around $700 million worth of
baby food in the U.S. each year; however, it only manages about 27% of base
sales. Its goal is to manage inventory
for 80% of sales within two years.
Discussion questions:
1. What are the stages of an
information systems project and what are the objectives of each stage?
2. Who are the various players that need to be
involved in an information system development project and what are their roles?
It was a great post. Thanks for it.
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