Beyond enterprise information integration and enterprise content integration is semantic integration, an emerging category that deciphers the contextual meaning of the seemingly disparate information all around us.

Doug Henschen, Executive Editor, Enterprise Apps

August 29, 2005

4 Min Read

Integration keeps moving to a higher level of abstraction to get to better understanding. It's not about just data or just content; we need both to truly understand a customer complaint, an exception transaction, a business opportunity or a competitive threat. We also have to look beyond the metadata--the information behind the information that we map--so we know that one data point is a customer number, another a purchase-order number and a chunk of text an item description tied to a product catalog.

Beyond enterprise information integration and enterprise content integration is semantic integration, an emerging category that deciphers the contextual meaning of the seemingly disparate information all around us.

Sound like highfalutin theory? Well, by making sense of high volumes of cryptic requests for bids, semantic integration is adding millions of dollars to the bottom line at electronics giant Avnet. The $10 billion distributor has some 2.5 million parts in its master catalog, selling parts and components from more than 280 suppliers to thousands of electronic goods manufacturers. The challenge? Customers submit two million line-item requests for quotes per month, and they do so in a jumble of formats, including XML files, spreadsheets, delimited lists and even Word files. Given the volume, Avnet has to rely on computer interpretation.

"I've been involved in the quote process for eight years, and when we started out, we had a match rate of only six percent," says Beth Scheer, a vice president of development at Avnet. "Over the years, we've built a rules-based approach to automate the matching, but we've been stuck at a 50- to 55-percent match rate and exhausted our ability to build more rules."

If Avnet had an army of clerks, it could probably match every incoming request for a bid because the electronics business, like most industries, has a language all its own. Manufacturers use consistent part-numbering schemes that the trained eye can break down into manufacturer names, voltage, wattage, case sizes, capacities and so on. A full-time business analyst and a full-time IT developer spent seven-and-a-half years methodically developing rules to interpret bids automatically. But with so many suppliers and bids, Avenet was hitting a wall it couldn't scale with more rules.

When Scheer saw a demonstration of semantic integration technology from Silver Creek Systems, she realized it could solve the matching problem by literally "understanding" incoming bids. "You can train this system on the semantics of the elements within part numbers, and it can figure out the right part number based on a natural language description," she says.

Silver Creek's Data Refraction platform is "intelligent" technology that can be trained to understand at a semantic level. The system is used primarily on large volumes of structured and semi-structured information, and it can interpret long, textual descriptions, abbreviations and a mix of descriptive attributes.

Avnet implemented Silver Creek's software last February, and within 90 days, four full-time pricing and parts analysts and six others working part time had trained the system on the distributor's highest volume product lines. "Our match rate is now at about 62 percent, but as we do more training and it learns from exceptions, we're going to get incremental increases," Scheer says. "The initial goal was a 75-percent match rate, but we now think we can get to 85 percent."

Avnet spent about $500,000 on the software and $200,000 on development and implementation, according to Scheer, but the investment has been well worth it. "If we can't match the request, we won't quote, and that means we don't get the business," she explains. "My quote to win ratio is at 22 percent, so if we can quote that many more lines, I can win that much more business."

Silver Creek's software has not only increased Avnet's match rate by seven to 12 percent thus far (which translates to 140,000 to 240,000 more line-item quotes and 30,000 to 50,000 more orders per month), it was also used to support the acquisition of a rival distributor. "We took [the acquired company's] master part catalog and ran it through Silver Creek's software to support the system integration," Scheer says. "We came up with a 75-percent hit rate in what otherwise would have been a manual process of mapping part numbers."

Semantic integration is a compliment, rather than a replacement for conventional methods such as extract, transform and load (ETL) and enterprise information integration (EII), according to Barbara Mowry, CEO of Silver Creek Systems. But it fills a crucial gap in "making information usable the way people need to understand it," she says. "You'll still need to map, share and move data between systems, but all those activities work better if you can put the information in context."

About the Author(s)

Doug Henschen

Executive Editor, Enterprise Apps

Doug Henschen is Executive Editor of InformationWeek, where he covers the intersection of enterprise applications with information management, business intelligence, big data and analytics. He previously served as editor in chief of Intelligent Enterprise, editor in chief of Transform Magazine, and Executive Editor at DM News. He has covered IT and data-driven marketing for more than 15 years.

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