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Promoting a
standard
PTDA/BSA electronic
price update format gaining momentum.
by Rich Vurva
When Bearing Belt
Chain Company of Las Vegas started using a single, uniform electronic
pricing format with suppliers, it saved more than $60,000 in data
entry costs. Instead of manually entering prices from hundreds of
vendors or writing computer programs to accommodate multiple formats,
the company uses the PTDA/BSA Product and Price Information Format (PPIF)
developed by the Power Transmission Distributors Association and the
Bearing Specialists Association. Company president Steve Philpott is
so convinced that PPIF lowers his cost of doing business that he
insists manufacturers utilize the format if they want him to carry
their line.
“I have potential
vendors in all the time, and one of the first questions I ask is if
they use the PPIF format. If they don’t, that’s a deal killer for
me,” he says.
Since adopting the
PPIF, Philpott eliminated a full-time staff position, no longer
searches for price books and catalogs, and spends considerably less
time writing credit memos and correcting purchase orders for
incorrectly priced items.
Philpott previously
maintained pricing on about 13,000 stock items, but wanted to add
non-stock items from key vendors into his database. Manually keying in
parts numbers and prices for the company’s full vendor line would
have required hundreds of hours in overtime.
“I sure didn’t
want to maintain a half-million part numbers. By adopting this format,
what would have taken weeks to do, we can now do in minutes,” he
says.
The PPIF is a
single-format, single program designed to allow suppliers to provide
complete, accurate and up-to-date pricing and product information to
distributors. Endorsed by other trade associations including the
Association for High Technology Distribution and the American Bearings
Manufacturers Association, use of the format has caught on fastest
among PTDA members.
“Most major players
in the industry have endorsed it and use it. In terms of volume
through the channel, we’ve made great inroads at getting the
standard utilized,” says Mary Sue Lyon, PTDA executive vice
president.
Fifty-seven
manufacturer and 54 distributor members of PTDA have endorsed the
standard, including the three largest power transmission/motion
control distributors, Motion Industries, Applied Industrial
Technologies and Kaman Industrial Technologies. Lyon anticipates
adoption will increase because the association plans to intensify its
efforts to communicate how it can help distributors and manufacturers
lower their costs.
One manufacturer
saved more than $100,000 in the first year because the company no
longer had to send updates in multiple formats using different media.
Lyon says the need for a standard is even greater now than when it was
first introduced in 1999.
“In the last couple
of years, there haven’t been many price increases because customers
wouldn’t accept it. Because of rising steel costs, price increases
are coming through more often. The consequences of not having a
standard format are even more significant,” she says.
Rockwell
Automation’s Craig Deitchley says the rising cost of steel forced
the company to pass along an unscheduled price adjustment in June.
“Historically,
after reviewing costs, we schedule one price adjustment per year,
which we communicate in advance to our distributors. The PPIF provides
a quick way of communicating price adjustments to our customers,” he
says.
The format is also a
valuable tool for communicating product changes and introducing new
products, Deitchley says.
He estimates that
about 70 percent of his distributors request electronic pricing.
Deitchley e-mails price updates to them using the PPIF. He previously
used a proprietary Rockwell Automation format. He says distributors and
manufacturers both benefit.
“The benefit for
the distributor is using just one format of pricing communication for
all vendors. The benefit for the manufacturer is the need for only one
program for industry-wide distribution, instead of having to use a
variety of programs,” Deitchley says.
He acknowledges that
some manufacturers still offer custom electronic pricing formats, but
doing so requires distributors to plug into dozens of different
programs or key in information manually.
PTDA hopes
distribution software vendors will incorporate the standard into their
technology to spur even greater acceptance. So far, Prelude and
Computer Insights are the only software companies to endorse the
format.
Steve Epner, a
technology consultant with Brown, Smith Wallace in St. Louis,
anticipates that other software vendors will incorporate the format
into their programs if customers request it.
“As soon as
somebody says I will buy your package if you have this, everybody else
will jump on the band wagon,” he says. “It is a very simple to
use, simple to transmit file, but very complete.”
The format allows
channel partners to transfer data in a tab-delimited ASCII file format
via disk, e-mail or the Internet. It is easier to use and less
complicated than the previous ANSI X.12 832 standard.
Carlos Ingram of
Kaman Industrial Technologies estimates that his company saves up to
three hours per vendor using the PPIF.
“This year, we’re
working on our third round of price increases from manufacturers. I
would estimate we’ve saved about 600 hours of labor by updating
prices in our system from those vendors who have adopted that
format,” Ingram says.
He says about half of
Kaman’s vendors that belong to PTDA have already adopted the format.
He’s hopeful it will become more widely used by fluid power vendors
also.
“I think the way to
get it more widely accepted is to work with other trade associations
to try to get them to adopt it within their channel so it becomes more
universal,” Ingram says.
The format was last
revised in October 2001, prompting some channel members to suggest
it’s time for an update.
Philpott wants to
incorporate links to product images. Salespeople who want to see a
photo could simply click on a link that would direct them to the image
stored on the manufacturer’s computer server. Before any changes
occur, a PTDA/BSA joint revision task force must approve them.
“We don’t want
companies to alter the format on their own. When that happens, it
erodes the integrity of the program and defeats the benefits that
having an industry-wide standard provides,” says Lyon.
For
information on how to obtain a free copy of the PTDA/BSA Product and
Price Information Format, contact PTDA at (312) 876-9461 or online at www.ptda.org.
This article originally appeared in the
September/October 2004 issue of Progressive Distributor. Copyright
2004.
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