XML Plays Big Integration Role

Drawing from its experience with a customer, Software AG delivers a unique offering for integrating legacy-system data

Charles Babcock, Editor at Large, Cloud

May 21, 2004

4 Min Read
InformationWeek logo in a gray background | InformationWeek

Until earlier this year, CompuCredit Corp. faced a big challenge managing the information it held on 3.5 million customers, which was scattered across more than 100 systems and databases. When holders of the company's Aspire Visa and other credit cards called customer service, the calls were too lengthy and sometimes unproductive. The system required customer-service representatives to toggle back and forth between applications, which hindered key goals such as convincing a customer to commit to a new payment while on the phone.

It was a problem CompuCredit could no longer ignore. "There were many underlying inefficiencies in our old architecture [and] a serious risk of impairing our business growth," says CompuCredit CIO Guido Sacchi.

CompuCredit implemented a solution to the problem in January, co-developed with Software AG Inc. The credit-card issuer now boasts the ability to treat its legacy systems as Web services, so that data pulled from them can be combined into a single view for customer-service reps.

CompuCredit is using an XML standards-based approach to integration that retrieves data from mainframe applications, databases, and other systems through Software AG's software connectors and adapters. The information is converted from its native format into XML data and then moved over an XML-based messaging system (sometimes called an enterprise service bus, as it can connect many parts of the software infrastructure).

Now a customer-service rep can see a cardholder's payment history, the status of the most recent payment, and credit score, all in one view. Because of the improved system, customer-service reps collecting payments can more quickly conduct a transfer of funds from a customer's bank account to CompuCredit. The average length of customer calls has dropped by 30 seconds, to four minutes, and more calls are resulting in payments, which has improved the company's revenue flow, Sacchi says.

The partnership also proved to be a success for Software AG. Drawing from its experience with CompuCredit, the vendor last week introduced a set of products called XML Business Integration Portfolio. The product set is expected to compete with integration and enterprise-service-bus products offered by middleware vendors such as IBM, Sonic Software, and Tibco Software, with offerings that were developed with proprietary technologies, not XML-based standards. Vendors such as Ipedo Inc. and Xiasoft Inc. offer XML database systems but not enterprise-service buses.

Software AG's approach of combining integration and enterprise-service bus technologies with its Tamino XML database could give it a competitive advantage. "Other vendors have part of this portfolio; it's the combined aspect that's new," says Ron Schmelzer, an analyst at ZapThink, an XML-oriented research firm.

The standards-based approach of basing an enterprise-service bus on an XML messaging service is likely to wear well in the future, says Anne Manes, Web-services analyst at the Burton Group.

"Many other enterprise-service buses are based on proprietary protocols," Manes says, so only systems where the proprietary software is installed can be integrated. The proprietary approach also makes it difficult to allow integration with systems outside a company, such as with a business partner, she says.

CompuCredit, meanwhile, has more plans for how it will use Software AG's XML-based technologies. By the end of the summer, Sacchi hopes to have a fraud-detection system in place that can cross-check more than 50 CompuCredit data sources.

About the Author

Charles Babcock

Editor at Large, Cloud

Charles Babcock is an editor-at-large for InformationWeek and author of Management Strategies for the Cloud Revolution, a McGraw-Hill book. He is the former editor-in-chief of Digital News, former software editor of Computerworld and former technology editor of Interactive Week. He is a graduate of Syracuse University where he obtained a bachelor's degree in journalism. He joined the publication in 2003.

Never Miss a Beat: Get a snapshot of the issues affecting the IT industry straight to your inbox.

You May Also Like


More Insights