The 24-hour advance manifest rule. C-TPAT. FAST. Those are
just three out of a slew of new government security initiatives
affecting U.S. importers and exporters. Though formulated with the
best of intentions, they present a mind-boggling array of new
responsibilities for shippers.
Under those programs, for example, shippers now file data for
U.S.-bound containerized cargo at least 24 hours before a vessel is
loaded (the 24-hour advance manifest rule); step up their own
security efforts (C-TPAT); and participate in a border-security
agreement between the U.S. and Canadian governments (the FAST
initiative).
These programs aren't yet set in stone, so it's a challenge for
importers and exporters to keep up with the fast-changing security
scene. Many have turned to consultants, customs brokers, and freight
forwarders for help. But there's another source of help available:
global trade management software.
Today, vendors of these packages, which manage import and export
transactions, are heavily promoting their security capabilities. Yet
it appears that only the largest shippers are taking advantage of
those capabilities, while smaller companies continue to manually
work through security requirements.
Vendors Answer the
Call
Global trade management software is a relatively young product
category that's dominated by a handful of vendors, including
Vastera, NextLinx, Precision Software, TradePoint, and Open Harbor.
Several other vendors have either abandoned that space or gone out
of business in the last two years.
Analysts disagree on the size of the global trade management
software market. Senior Analyst Jerry McNerney of Boston-based AMR
Research, for one, estimates annual sales at just over $51 million.
Adrian Gonzalez, director of logistics at ARC in Dedham, Mass., had
not finalized his numbers for 2002 as of this writing, but believes
sales were considerably higher. He says that although sales did not
grow as originally forecast, there still was positive growth in the
high single digits or low double digits in 2002.
Regardless of the actual size of the market, the recent spate of
security rules has been good for business. "Customs agencies around
the world are looking for more information sooner," says Ty Bordner,
vice president of product management for Vastera in Dulles, Va. Over
the last 18 months, he says, he's seen more shippers turn to his
company's software to help them provide information to customs
authorities more quickly and accurately.
Vendors like to point out that their products have always
included security and regulatory compliance capabilities. But most
of them have upgraded their products to help shippers comply with
quickly changing conditions. "A law can surface overnight, but the
implementation, procedures, and guidelines within an organization
don't happen overnight," says Greg Lloyd, CEO of Precision Software
Ltd. in Chicago. "To answer the call, software vendors like
ourselves are providing out-of-box solutions companies can use to
meet the new compliance and security demands."
For instance, Precision Software, like its competitors, allows
users to screen their customers against government lists of
"sanctioned individuals or organizations" (i.e., terrorist
organizations). Such checks also ensure that shippers don't violate
export restrictions or send shipments to embargoed countries.
At Open Harbor in San Carlos, Calif., CEO and President Chris
Erickson says he's seen shippers' interest in his company's products
grow over the last year or so. Because of security concerns, he
says, they are looking for software that includes product
verification, denied-party compliance, and establishment of business
rules and documentation in systems that can be verified and audited
by customs authorities.
To help ensure compliance with internal business rules and
procedures, Open Harbor's Trade Automation Suite lets shippers
"embed" rules that apply to specific shipments, destinations, and
other variables. "It's a self-adjusting system that doesn't let the
process continue unless the rules are followed," Erickson says.
Vastera's XML-based Internet solution, meanwhile, lets companies
share information with customs organizations as well as with
carriers, freight forwarders, and customs brokers, Bordner says. The
product makes it easier for shippers to comply with the 24-hour
advance manifest rule because the Harmonized Tariff System product
codes that Customs requires prior to shipment are built right into
the solution.
Another vendor that has upgraded its application to facilitate
security compliance is Rockville, Md.-based NextLinx. To add a new
trade document to its Trade Collaborator platform, NextLinx used to
code and then embed it in the software—a method that resulted in
frequent re-releases and upgrades. Changing trade and security
regulations would have exposed users to a steady stream of upgrades,
so NextLinx created an XML-based system that separates the document
technology from the rest of the application. Now, says Chief
Operating Officer Darren Maynard, his company can update document
templates as needed and generate the updated version on demand.
Like other vendors, Nashua, N.H.-based TradePoint Systems
includes an export compliance system in its products. Shippers can
use the application to check embargo, licensing, and other pertinent
information about the countries and business partners they're
dealing with. Joe Cowan, vice president of compliance systems, says
TradePoint is continuously adding new country information. "Our
system can check for the rules that are specific to the country of
origin, the country to which the goods are being exported, or to
other countries in general," he says.
Why Don't They Buy?
Shippers that use global trade management software say those
products have indeed helped them improve their compliance with
security rules. Yet many potential customers still haven't shown a
high degree of interest in the software.
For the most part, says AMR's McNerney, large multinational firms
that were already getting results from these solutions have also
embraced them for security purposes, but small to mid-sized firms
still prefer to put out the fires as they come along. "Users haven't
committed themselves as readily as one might think to actually take
advantage of the solutions on the market," he observes. "We're
seeing short-term approaches, like companies throwing people at the
issue to make sure it gets done effectively."
That's probably because few companies have allocated enough
resources to acquire the technology to do the job effectively,
McNerney continues. That reluctance may be fueled by companies'
inability to see regulatory compliance as producing a tangible
return on investment.
But when it comes to trade and security compliance, it's a
different world today than it was just a year or two ago. That's why
McNerney doesn't see the low-tech approach as a sustainable model
for the future. "I think we're going to reach a point where we'll
see a much more rapid period of adoption of these technologies," he
predicts. "But for companies to respond, it will probably take that
first, high-profile situation in which goods are held up because of
non-compliance."
What did you think of this story? Let us know at
http://www.lmsurveys.com/
.
| Author
Information |
| Bridget McCrae is a freelancer who writes
frequently on logistics
technology. |