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Risk Analysis in B2B E-Business Relationships: A Model for Continuous Monitoring and Assurance in Partnering Relationships Vicky Arnold (UConn) Clark Hampton.

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Presentation on theme: "Risk Analysis in B2B E-Business Relationships: A Model for Continuous Monitoring and Assurance in Partnering Relationships Vicky Arnold (UConn) Clark Hampton."— Presentation transcript:

1 Risk Analysis in B2B E-Business Relationships: A Model for Continuous Monitoring and Assurance in Partnering Relationships Vicky Arnold (UConn) Clark Hampton (UConn) Deepak Khazanchi (Nebraska-Omaha) Steve G. Sutton (UConn)

2 B2B E-Commerce Market Projected between 4.3 to 7 Trillion by 2005 Dynamics Changing in Business Relationships –Business Partnering –Market Exchanges Private Public –Traditional EDI (Estimated $3.8 Billion)

3 E-Business Facilitated Change in Organizational Focus Emphasizing Core Competencies Advanced Production Planning and Scheduling Systems Co-Dependence on Upstream / Downstream Supply Chain Partners Just-in-Time Inventories with Minimal Safety Stocks Required Use of Electronic Linkages

4 Business Partner Relationships Cooperative and Extensive Electronic Linkages Forced Implementation of Electronic Linkages Influenced by Power Balance Varying Levels of Technology Integration into Internal Business Processes

5 Associated Business Risk Issues Process Alignment w/ Technology (IFAC) Poor Integration of B2B Capabilities With Internal Processes Limited Operations Efficiency Improvements (Khazanchi and Sutton 2001) Match Between IS Strategy and Business Strategy (Sabharawal & Chan 2001) Coercive Power Forcing B2B Integration Leads to Vulnerability and Becomes a Constraint on Relationship (Hart & Saunders 1997) Power Negatively Related to Quantity and Diversity of B2B Transaction Usage (Hart & Saunders 1998)

6 Assessing Business Risk in Advanced IT Environments D. Khazanchi & S.G. Sutton (2001): “Assurance Services for Business-to-Business Electronic Commerce: A Framework and Implications” Journal of the Association for Information Systems Application-User Level Business Level Technical Level B2B ASSURANCE SERVICES

7 Application-User Level Understanding potential benefits of E-business Current business environment and internal processes Organizational readiness for adoption End-users reliance on paper-based transactions Overcoming the impersonal nature of e-business Pilot tests of transactions for reliability Adequacy of educational and training programs in preparing organization’s staff to handle above

8 Business Level Appropriate changes made to traditional business processes and controls to incorporate new methods of conducting business Appropriateness of e-business for company Are direct/indirect e-business benefits being realized? Legal issues (electronic orders, signatures, legal trading partner agreements) Managing data and transmission security and auditability Reassessing workflow procedures for efficiency improvements Adjustments in Internal Control systems to assure privacy of data, reliability of systems and secure electronic transmission

9 Technical Level Assuring necessary technical elements are in place Integration of internal and external applications is feasible given financial and technological resources Implementation of multiple trading partners Mapping customer/supplier data for direct use in internal applications Business transaction processing works Appropriate means of communications and vendors for transaction integrity and completeness (includes ISP/ASP assessment) Data integrity and control Integration Issues

10 Assessing Business Risk in Advanced IT Environments (cont) EDI Adoption EDI Outcomes (Benefits) B2B ASSURANCE SERVICES Application-User Level Business Level Technical Level EDI Integration D. Khazanchi & S.G. Sutton (2001): “Assurance Services for Business-to-Business Electronic Commerce: A Framework and Implications” Journal of the Association for Information Systems

11 Research Method Structured Group Process for Identifying Key Business Risks in Each Level (Sutton 1991; Sutton & Lampe 1994; Havelka et al. 1998) –Discuss and Define B2B Organizational Context –Structured Brainstorming of Risks by Level –Round Robin Listing of Risk Factors –Reflection Upon and Addition of New Risk Factors –Consensus on Risk Definitions –Individual Identification of Key Risk Factors & Ranking

12 Study Participants IT Audit Specialists, Security Specialists and E- Commerce Development Leaders –ConAgra –Mutual of Omaha –Union Pacific External IT Audit (Partner/Mgr), CIO Staff –PricewaterhouseCoopers E-B Consultants (Team Leaders in Business Applications, Infrastructure, Strategy) –Rising Tide Consulting

13 Results KPIs for Technical Level Risks KPIs for Application/User Level Risks KPIs for Business Level Risks

14 Continuous Monitoring & Assurance of E-Business Relationships Business Level Applic/User Level Technical Level B2B ASSURANCE SERVICES PeriodicContinuous

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