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Director, IT and Supply Chain Management, Longo's

Director, IT and Supply Chain Management, Longo's

By:  Joaquim P. Menezes  On: 14 Oct 2007 For: IT World Canada Creator

Longo's says Microsoft BizTalk is good for business.

Watch Video Feature of Longo's BizTalk Rollout

Length: 9 minutes; File type: Windows Media Video

Longo Brothers Fruit Markets Inc. has an ambitious vision statement:"offering the best food experience to every customer, every time."

Executives at the Mississauga, Ont.-based grocery retail chain say to live up to this mandate, all Longo’s 15 stores need to be stocked with fresh produce, in the right quantities, in response to constantly changing customer demands.

And this, in turn, requires effective and timely exchange of data between Longo’s various software applications.

Until very recently, such data interchange was virtually impossible owing to lack of integration between the disparate systems that comprised Longos IT infrastructure.

The problem only intensified with the phenomenal growth Longo’s experienced in its operations over the past few years.

For instance, in August 2004, the company acquired Grocery Gateway, an online grocery delivery service. With the acquisition came the need to re-evaluate Longo's existing IT systems and infrastructure. No system talks directly through itself anymore. All communication between apps goes through BizTalk.John Charleson>Text

John Charleson, director of IT and supply chain management at Longo’s recalls the huge technology challenges the grocery retail chain had to respond to.

“Longos in the past, bought best of breed,” he says. “So we had a number of different applications acquired from many different vendors over the years.”

As data could not be easily exchanged between these disparate, non-integrated applications, the result was inefficient, time-consuming business processes.

Charleson said Longo’s IT department expended around 40 per cent of its time supporting a motley of interfaces between discrete applications.

“We would get calls from users saying: 'get this info over to my system' - and we’d have to go back and see why that interface for that particular application failed on that given day. We spent a lot of time fixing those issues. Every application spoke to another directly and there was nothing in the middle.”

This lack of a central "integration hub" between applications also made the process of placing and receiving orders from vendors a laborious and time-consuming chore, as it required staff to manually input data in several different applications.

To resolve its integration woes, Longo's decided to move to a services-oriented architecture (SOA) based on loosely connected interfaces between systems, replacing cumbersome point-to-point vendor driven integration between applications.


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Joaquim P. Menezes Joaquim P. Menezes is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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