¶ … Information Systems over the Last Century:
Synchronizing and Streamlining Transportation and Logistics Systems
The pace of change and its complexity continues to drastically redefine entire industries, with those reliant on supply chains, logistics and transportation services seeing the greatest benefits and risks. Globalization is also re-shaping industries the fastest who rely on transportation as a key part of their value chains. United Parcel Service is a company that is representative of the pace and complexity of change that has occurred in business processes, strategies, and information systems over the last one hundred years. UPS was founded in 1907 in Seattle, Washington by Jim Casey, and today is one of the leading transportations services companies globally. The intent of this analysis is to explain the differences between business information systems and methods widely used in 1910 and how they compare to the common enterprise-wide systems and methods of today. The telephone, telegraph, paper record keeping, and many face-to-face meetings pervaded the approach to doing business in 1910. In 2011 the use of enterprise-wide systems that support Enterprise Resourcing Planning (ERP), Customer Relationship Management (CRM), Supply Chain Management (SCM) and 3rd party logistics (3PL) logistics processes and strategies globally have become commonplace (Das, 2011)
. The pace and complexity of change has been accelerated by these systems and the valuable information and insight they can provide executives for managing global product and services models. This paper concludes with a series of predictions as to where business information systems will be in 2020 and how the unmet needs of corporations globally are quickly riving these developments. The pervasive use of the Internet will also accelerate entirely new platforms for creating, delivering, maintaining and customizing Web-based applications by 2020 and tablet-based PCs running the Google Android, Apple iOS and other competing operating systems will dominate nearly every industry with transportation being an early adopter due to the highly mobile nature of the businesses in this industry. A full analysis of predictions for 2020 is provided as the last section of this paper.
A Century of Progress in Business Information Systems
At the most fundamental level, the differences in business systems from 1910 to 2011 center on the aspects of accuracy, speed, scalability and reliability. These four attributes quickly define each set of business information systems compared to their 2011 counterparts. Taken together, these four attributes serve as the foundation for creating a platform for global growth as well. Globalization would not have been possible without business tools progressing rapidly to encompass the four attributes of accuracy, speed, scalability and reliability. For businesses in the transportation industry, these four attributes taken together were the catalysts that led to entirely new global markets opening up. For UPS specifically, the telephone and telegraph were indispensible as tools for their rapid expansion from 1907 to 1913 along the coastal regions and state of the Western U.S. In many respects the advances in telephone performance during those years along the dimensions of accuracy, speed, scalability and reliability served as the "market development" platform for UPS as they moved into larger, southern markets including San Francisco, California and Los Angeles, California. Telephone and telegraph together also revolutionized the concept of a distribution supply chain and made it possible for UPS to expand out of the western U.S. And eventually become national in scope (Perna, 2001). The same holds true of how the company relied on railroads and other forms of transportation to create a broader value chain that would eventually go global. Communications technologies of 1910, rudimentary by today's standards, were considered revolutionary for the time as they multiplied the productivity of the businesses across distance and saved time at a pace no one thought possible before. Technology was beginning to change people's expectations of what time was and how it could be invested. Time as a resource took on added significance, and in the value chain of transportation businesses, it was more readily turned into profitable, billable activity. Communications technologies that could deliver higher levels of accuracy and speed were in constant demand in 1910, which eventually led to more pervasive adoption of the telephone first across the U.S. And then globally.
While communication technologies continued to focus on accuracy and speed, the manually-based approaches to record keeping were not keeping up with the pace of change necessary for growing business. No doubt, UPS was frustrated at the lack of flexibility these manually-based approaches provided for measuring the profitability of each route, package service...
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