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HCLT Whitepaper: Event Driven Supply Chain
Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009




                                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
                                               Abstract                                                                                                                     3

                                               Background                                                                                                                   4

                                               Business Need                                                                                                                4

                                               Complex Event Processing: The Concept                                                                                        5

                                               The Solution: Advanced Control Tower (ACT)                                                                                   7

                                               Components of ACT                                                                                                            8

                                               Benefits                                                                                                                      9

                                               About HCL                                                                                                                  11




 2                                             © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009




                                               ABSTRACT
                                               Until just a few years ago, decision–making relied on paper-based processes,
                                               the human mind and a basic medium of communication. Today the
                                               decisions we make are based on what our systems reveal to us and how
                                               best they provide us the data and information in the right views. But with
                                               greater information come greater responsibilities. The larger the volume of
                                               information captured, the longer the list of parameters for our managers to
                                               correlate and manage, resulting in a greater risk of making mistakes. Imagine
                                               we had a system that automatically correlated mind-boggling volumes of
                                               data and information, enabled managers to instantly understand underlying
                                               operational and business cause and effects, prompted timely responses from
                                               supply chain participants, triggered automated sequences of actions and was
                                               an intelligent system that learnt over time just like we did, and scaled up to
                                               the requirements of the supply chain operations and activities. Imagine the
                                               possibilities of the efficiencies in decision making that could be achieved
                                               using such an intelligent system. No, this is not science fiction but a peek
                                               into the possible transformations that technology is enabling for the next
                                               generation of supply chains.

                                               This paper seeks to explore applications of the Complex Event Processing
                                               technology in monitoring, managing and enhancing future Supply Chains,
                                               through real-time correlation of events, timely reaction and response to
                                               business scenarios, incidents and exceptions, and real-time routing of alerts
                                               and incidents to people within organizational hierarchies. The idea is to
                                               reduce latency in decision making through a proactive intelligent system
                                               that works like the human mind, captures the situational snapshot of the
                                               enterprise at any moment in time and maximizes business benefit through
                                               the ability to respond to a business situation in the shortest possible time.



 3                                             © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009




                                               BACKGROUND
                                               The supply chain domain has seen significant transformational change over
                                               the last few years. Starting from the way in which businesses are transacted
                                               and data and information are managed to the manner customers and partners
                                               collaborate, share and respond to supply chain situations. Technology
                                               has been the single strongest enabler with offerings such as enterprise
                                               applications, sensor edge technologies, middleware and integration adapters,
                                               visibility and tracking solutions, and now with concepts such as the web
                                               2.0, the IT enabled transformational direction is only becoming steeper
                                               and more advanced. Since supply chains require strong collaboration and
                                               pervasiveness of information among the various participants, systems have
                                               been on-boarded and integrated inconsistently and the supply chain IT
                                               landscape has become a hotchpotch of multiple vendor applications and
                                               legacy systems. As a result, visibility and the lack of a single source of
                                               truth continue to challenge the efficient operations of supply chains. The
                                               siloed nature of organizations and partner collaboration issues have also
                                               contributed to this problem and resulted in distributed control of the supply
                                               chain. If a supply chain is to behave as an individual unit, respond to market
                                               demand in the most agile manner, and keep efficiencies high and costs low,
                                               the one way to do it is to have a system enabling this centralized control. So,
                                               here we are talking about a mechanism, enabled by an IT tool, where the
                                               different members of the supply chain, act as different departments of ‘One’
                                               organization, and enhance the operations of the ‘One’ supply chain.


                                               BUSINESS NEED
                                               Players in supply chains operate on wafer-thin margins, and look to develop
                                               efficiencies through collaboration with other partners in the supply chain.
                                               A Supply Chain member’s performance is as much dependent on the other
                                               participants within the chain, as on the internal operations of the member.
                                               The supply chain system leans heavily on Visibility, Predictability and
                                               Optimization in order to stay viable and compete as a powerful force in
                                               the market place. Precision, accuracy of information, and a single source of
                                               truth is of utmost importance in making impactful decisions for all players
                                               of the chain. The efficiency of a supply chain is dependent upon how quickly
                                               each individual participant can respond to disparate events, and take timely
                                               action that is local to that individual’s enterprise.

                                               Some of the key drivers for an Event Driven Supply Chain include:

                                                   Situational Visibility across operational and transactional landscapes

                                                   There is a need for each member of the supply chain to obtain a real-time
                                                   snapshot of the high-level critical operations and transactions that occur
                                                   upstream and downstream. Often, metrics shared and made available
                                                   across the participants of the chain, provide a delayed snapshot of the
                                                   system. This retrospect nature of the picture diminishes the value that


 4                                             © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009




                                                   can correspondingly be derived from the information, thus negating the
                                                   impact of collaboration and sharing of information. Information has a
                                                   lifetime, and its value declines at an increasing steep rate, against time.

                                                   Centralized control of supply chain operations

                                                   With services spanning multiple regions of the globe, it becomes a
                                                   challenge of immense magnitude for the organizations of the supply chain
                                                   to centrally control operations and activities. The tracking of statistical
                                                   parameters that impact the overall supply chain performance also become
                                                   difficult to detect. Often, the strategic decision making process is hindered
                                                   or flawed due to the lack of accurate numbers or even the presence of
                                                   incorrect parameters of measure. Centralization of the supply chain is a
                                                   mighty task, considering that centralization of operations even within an
                                                   organization is still a major challenge.

                                                   Correlation of data and information in near real-time, to reveal
                                                   decision enhancing business insights to managers

                                                   Correlating and making relevant business sense of the massive volumes
                                                   of operational, transactional and financial data and information that is
                                                   captured by the systems across a supply chain is by all means an impossible
                                                   task for logistics managers. Often, information is overseen or not taken
                                                   into account due to lack of co-relational insight by business managers,
                                                   resulting in exceptions, business threats and critical incidents, that later
                                                   become mountains of challenges to conquer.

                                                   Proactive response to impending business situations

                                                   In current business situations, any exception or threat requires and deserves
                                                   an instant response. Delays in responding to critical situations are the
                                                   major causes for customer dissatisfaction and operational inefficiencies. A
                                                   responsive and alerting mechanism tracking the occurrence of an event,
                                                   prompting an action, triggering processes, and broadcasting a record of
                                                   the incident across the supply chain to other players, helps in another
                                                   player benefiting from making a corresponding timely adjustment, thus,
                                                   mitigating a devastating impact on downstream operations.


                                               COMPLEX EVENT PROCESSING: THE CONCEPT
                                               Let’s take a look at what Complex Event Processing has to offer us. As the
                                               term suggests, it is the processing of complex events. In business parlance,
                                               an Event is an occurrence of significance that one would want to track
                                               within the enterprise. There is a start and a definite end to every event. As
                                               much as “it is raining” is an event, a shipment delivery confirmation receipt
                                               is also an event. Associated with an event are attributes that characterize
                                               and define the event. In the case of the ‘raining’ event, the intensity of
                                               rain, the period of rain, the region of rainfall and the quantity of rain are



 5                                             © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009




                                               all important attributes that define the event. So then, what is a complex
                                               event? A complex event is a situation where two or more events occur in
                                               different slices of time, and originate from different sources, but are logically
                                               related to each other and impact each other in a manner that is not easily
                                               comprehensible. An examination of an individual event in a complex event
                                               may reveal little or not at all, but when seen in light of another event, makes
                                               amazing business sense. Let’s us look at an example of a complex event that
                                               we may comes across in our daily life. Consider this:

                                                   You are driving on a freeway and it starts to rain (Event 1)

                                                   You then notice a ‘Slippery When Wet’ road sign, look at the Speedometer,
                                                   and notice that your speed is 75 Mph (Event 2)

                                                   Just then you recollect the fact that the speed limit on this road is 60 Mph
                                                   – information captured from the event of you viewing the ‘speed limit’
                                                   signboard a few miles earlier (Event 3)

                                                   You reduce speed to 60 Mph to comply with the speed limit (Event 4)

                                                   You also remember the fact that the car’s tyres are quite worn out and
                                                   simple human procrastination prevented you from replacing them earlier
                                                   ( Event 5)

                                                   As you take the turn into an exit, you suddenly feel the back tyres losing
                                                   grip and the car skidding towards the kerb (Event 6)

                                                   Fear immediately grips you as the car lurches uncontrollably towards the
                                                   kerb, and just as suddenly as it happened, you gain back control over the
                                                   car. How many times hasn’t this happened to all of us? Immediately, the
                                                   correlation of the sequence of events has resulted in fear that prompts you
                                                   to slow down to 40 Mph or lower. The events of the rain, bad tyres, speed
                                                   limits, and vehicle skidding, prompted an action from you to of slow
                                                   down far below the speed limit and drive more carefully (Action 1)

                                               So the complex event consists of 6 events which are co-related in an intricate
                                               manner, reveal important insights when viewed together in correlation, but
                                               were individual events of not much significance when viewed in singular
                                               terms. In a Supply Chain Management scenario, the application of Complex
                                               Event Processing technology to operations and activities of the supply
                                               chain, provides a similar type of business insight and operational visibility
                                               into activities, through correlation of multiple events across time, across
                                               systems, across participant’s enterprise systems, thus enabling the working
                                               of a centralized, ‘One’ supply chain.

                                               Some applications of CEP across industries:

                                                   Manufacturing: Procurement, distribution and for use-cases involving
                                                   lean operations and processes in manufacturing plants



 6                                             © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009




                                                       Logistics: Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI), dynamic re-scheduling in
                                                       distribution, Carrier performance monitoring and optimized tendering,
                                                       warehousing/ DC operations

                                                       Airlines and Airports: Allocation of gates and air/ land side resources
                                                       based on delays in flight arrival and departure timings

                                                       Hospitality: Monitoring demand based on website traffic rates and other
                                                       channels of enquiries

                                                       Finance: Fraud detection and stock market trading algorithms


                                               THE SOLUTION: ADVANCED CONTROL TOWER
                                               (ACT)
                                               The Advanced Control Tower is a product agnostic framework based on the
                                               Complex Event Processing (CEP) technology. It processes large volumes of
                                               seemingly independent captured events occurring across multiple systems
                                               in multiple slices of times, correlates and identifies patterns based on the
                                               business rules and previous experience, and triggers alerts or initiates
                                               processes in IT applications through actions, thus enhancing decision
                                               making, value of information and response time. Value is delivered through
                                               reducing the latency at each point in the decision making cycle.

                                                              Business                                                               Business Event
                                                              Event                                          Data Latency
                                                                                                                                       Data Captured
                                                          Data Latency
                                                                                                           Insight Latency
                                                                  Data                                                                  Insight Delivery
                                                                  Captured                                Decision Latency
                                                          Insight Latency
                                                                                                                                         Decision Mode
                                                                                                           Action Latency
                                                                         Insight                                                          Action Taken
                                                                         Delivery
                                                          Decision Latency
                                                                                    Decision
                                                                                                                     Value




                                                                                    Mode
                                                          Action Latency
                                                                                                       Action
                                               Value




                                                                                                       Taken
                                                                                                  Time                                                               Time
                                                                    Action Time                                              Action Time

                                                        Low Business Value & High Action Time                           High Business Value & Low Action Time


                                               The ACT Framework is based on the following principles

                                                       The ability to capture information from different data-sources across the
                                                       supply chain operational landscape

                                                       Correlate and put together the jig-saw puzzle of data and information to
                                                       reveal a precise and accurate situational business picture

                                                       Respond to the current business situation using inputs from ACT and
                                                       make business critical decisions


 7                                             © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009




                                                   Execute the decisions with speed, accuracy and perfection

                                               Value is maximized only when the above four aspects are synthesized with
                                               minimal time latency. As information is captured, it has to be understood
                                               and utilized. The delay in capturing, understanding and responding to an
                                               activity or an incident is the challenge and the price that businesses pay in
                                               our times.

                                                     Partner Networks                     Enterprise Applications                       Financial Transactions

                                                                                Supply Chains                         Sensor Networks


                                                                                            Advanced Control Tower

                                                           Configurable Dashboards                                           Configurable Dashboards

                                               COMPONENTS OF ACT
                                                   Scenario: A process all inclusive of events, business rules and resulting
                                                   actions and alerts

                                                   Event: An occurrence of significance (operational or transactional)

                                                   Attributes: Elements of the event

                                                   Business Rules: The Logic that ties together the events and includes
                                                   policies, requirements, and conditional statements that are used to
                                                   determine the tactical actions that take place in applications and systems

                                                   Actions: The resulting processes or transactions that need to be triggered
                                                   within applications across the enterprise/supply chain or evoked from
                                                   personnel across the organization/supply chain

                                                   Alerts: Real-time ‘Notifications’ to management and operational
                                                   personnel regarding events and actions

                                               Data is fed into the system in the form of ‘Events’ from across the supply
                                               chain landscape -IT systems, transactions and physical movements on the
                                               ground. These ‘Events’ are correlated using the business logic and upon
                                               the occurrence of a pattern of events, an insight is revealed that in turn
                                               provokes an action from a user (manually) or from a system (automatically).
                                               A set of seemingly disparate events when occurring together may signify
                                               something entirely different than from their individual occurrence. There
                                               are two types of users who can utilize the framework - Operational Users
                                               and Business Users.




 8                                             © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009




                                               Operational users

                                                   Configure Events and the associated attributes to be captured

                                                   Configure business rules that vary with business need

                                                   Select Events to monitor, Business Rules to be applied, and Actions to
                                                   be executed

                                                   Configure alerts suitable for different levels of people and route them
                                                   appropriately using the chosen medium

                                                   Configure and view real-time dashboard elements providing insight into
                                                   real-time operational parameters

                                               Business Users

                                                   Configure and select reports that provide situational visibility for the
                                                   multiple participants into the state of operations and transactions within
                                                   the supply chain

                                                   Automate the generation of reports periodically or upon the occurrence
                                                   of a pattern of events

                                                   Configure alerts and their severity levels and choose which ones to be
                                                   notified against

                                                   Respond to alerts by triggering or initiating actions


                                               BENEFITS
                                                   Enhanced situational visibility into supply chain operations both at a
                                                   strategic level and at a tactical operational level

                                                   Faster and more accurate prediction of operational irregularities and
                                                   exceptional occurrences

                                                   Better utilization of information while it is still alive to deliver high
                                                   impact

                                                   Increased process automation for better customer satisfaction and
                                                   optimized business activities




 9                                             © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
Contact Us:
     HCL Technologies Ltd
     330 Potrero Ave, Sunnyvale, CA 94085
     Tel: +1 408-733-0480
     Email: ttl@hcl.com
     Website: www.hcltech.com




10   © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
CUSTOM APPLICATION
SERVICES

ENGINEERING AND
R&D SERVICES

ENTERPRISE APPLICATION
SERVICES

ENTERPRISE
TRANSFORMATION SERVICES

IT INFRASTRUCTURE
MANAGEMENT

BUSINESS PROCESS          ABOUT HCL
OUTSOURCING
                          About HCL Technologies

                          HCL Technologies is a leading global IT services company, working
                          with clients in the areas that impact and redefine the core of their
                          businesses. Since its inception into the global landscape after its IPO in
                          1999, HCL focuses on ‘transformational outsourcing’, underlined by
                          innovation and value creation, and offers integrated portfolio of services
                          including software-led IT solutions, remote infrastructure management,
                          engineering and R&D services and BPO. HCL leverages its extensive
                          global offshore infrastructure and network of offices in 20 countries to
                          provide holistic, multi-service delivery in key industry verticals including
                          Financial Services, Manufacturing, Aerospace & Defense, Telecom,
                          Retail & CPG, Life Sciences & Healthcare, Media & Entertainment,
                          Travel, Transportation & Logistics, Automotive, Government, Energy
                          & Utilities. HCL takes pride in its philosophy of ‘Employee First’ which
                          empowers our 54,216 transformers to create a real value for the customers.
                          HCL Technologies, along with its subsidiaries, had consolidated revenues of
                          US$ 2.2 billion (Rs. 10,591 crores), as on 30th June 2009. For more information,
                          please visit www.hcltech.com

                          About HCL Enterprise

                          HCL is a $5 billion leading global Technology and IT Enterprise that
                          comprises two companies listed in India - HCL Technologies & HCL
                          Infosystems. Founded in 1976, HCL is one of India’s original IT garage
                          start-ups, a pioneer of modern computing, and a global transformational
                          enterprise today. Its range of offerings spans Product Engineering, Custom
                          & Package Applications, BPO, IT Infrastructure Services, IT Hardware,
                          Systems Integration, and distribution of ICT products across a wide
                          range of focused industry verticals. The HCL team comprises over 60,000
                          professionals of diverse nationalities, who operate from 26 countries including
                          over 500 points of presence in India. HCL has global partnerships with
                          several leading Fortune 1000 firms, including leading IT and Technology
                          firms. For more information, please visit www.hcl.in

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HCLT Whitepaper: Event Driven Supply Chain

  • 2. Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009 TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract 3 Background 4 Business Need 4 Complex Event Processing: The Concept 5 The Solution: Advanced Control Tower (ACT) 7 Components of ACT 8 Benefits 9 About HCL 11 2 © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
  • 3. Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009 ABSTRACT Until just a few years ago, decision–making relied on paper-based processes, the human mind and a basic medium of communication. Today the decisions we make are based on what our systems reveal to us and how best they provide us the data and information in the right views. But with greater information come greater responsibilities. The larger the volume of information captured, the longer the list of parameters for our managers to correlate and manage, resulting in a greater risk of making mistakes. Imagine we had a system that automatically correlated mind-boggling volumes of data and information, enabled managers to instantly understand underlying operational and business cause and effects, prompted timely responses from supply chain participants, triggered automated sequences of actions and was an intelligent system that learnt over time just like we did, and scaled up to the requirements of the supply chain operations and activities. Imagine the possibilities of the efficiencies in decision making that could be achieved using such an intelligent system. No, this is not science fiction but a peek into the possible transformations that technology is enabling for the next generation of supply chains. This paper seeks to explore applications of the Complex Event Processing technology in monitoring, managing and enhancing future Supply Chains, through real-time correlation of events, timely reaction and response to business scenarios, incidents and exceptions, and real-time routing of alerts and incidents to people within organizational hierarchies. The idea is to reduce latency in decision making through a proactive intelligent system that works like the human mind, captures the situational snapshot of the enterprise at any moment in time and maximizes business benefit through the ability to respond to a business situation in the shortest possible time. 3 © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
  • 4. Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009 BACKGROUND The supply chain domain has seen significant transformational change over the last few years. Starting from the way in which businesses are transacted and data and information are managed to the manner customers and partners collaborate, share and respond to supply chain situations. Technology has been the single strongest enabler with offerings such as enterprise applications, sensor edge technologies, middleware and integration adapters, visibility and tracking solutions, and now with concepts such as the web 2.0, the IT enabled transformational direction is only becoming steeper and more advanced. Since supply chains require strong collaboration and pervasiveness of information among the various participants, systems have been on-boarded and integrated inconsistently and the supply chain IT landscape has become a hotchpotch of multiple vendor applications and legacy systems. As a result, visibility and the lack of a single source of truth continue to challenge the efficient operations of supply chains. The siloed nature of organizations and partner collaboration issues have also contributed to this problem and resulted in distributed control of the supply chain. If a supply chain is to behave as an individual unit, respond to market demand in the most agile manner, and keep efficiencies high and costs low, the one way to do it is to have a system enabling this centralized control. So, here we are talking about a mechanism, enabled by an IT tool, where the different members of the supply chain, act as different departments of ‘One’ organization, and enhance the operations of the ‘One’ supply chain. BUSINESS NEED Players in supply chains operate on wafer-thin margins, and look to develop efficiencies through collaboration with other partners in the supply chain. A Supply Chain member’s performance is as much dependent on the other participants within the chain, as on the internal operations of the member. The supply chain system leans heavily on Visibility, Predictability and Optimization in order to stay viable and compete as a powerful force in the market place. Precision, accuracy of information, and a single source of truth is of utmost importance in making impactful decisions for all players of the chain. The efficiency of a supply chain is dependent upon how quickly each individual participant can respond to disparate events, and take timely action that is local to that individual’s enterprise. Some of the key drivers for an Event Driven Supply Chain include: Situational Visibility across operational and transactional landscapes There is a need for each member of the supply chain to obtain a real-time snapshot of the high-level critical operations and transactions that occur upstream and downstream. Often, metrics shared and made available across the participants of the chain, provide a delayed snapshot of the system. This retrospect nature of the picture diminishes the value that 4 © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
  • 5. Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009 can correspondingly be derived from the information, thus negating the impact of collaboration and sharing of information. Information has a lifetime, and its value declines at an increasing steep rate, against time. Centralized control of supply chain operations With services spanning multiple regions of the globe, it becomes a challenge of immense magnitude for the organizations of the supply chain to centrally control operations and activities. The tracking of statistical parameters that impact the overall supply chain performance also become difficult to detect. Often, the strategic decision making process is hindered or flawed due to the lack of accurate numbers or even the presence of incorrect parameters of measure. Centralization of the supply chain is a mighty task, considering that centralization of operations even within an organization is still a major challenge. Correlation of data and information in near real-time, to reveal decision enhancing business insights to managers Correlating and making relevant business sense of the massive volumes of operational, transactional and financial data and information that is captured by the systems across a supply chain is by all means an impossible task for logistics managers. Often, information is overseen or not taken into account due to lack of co-relational insight by business managers, resulting in exceptions, business threats and critical incidents, that later become mountains of challenges to conquer. Proactive response to impending business situations In current business situations, any exception or threat requires and deserves an instant response. Delays in responding to critical situations are the major causes for customer dissatisfaction and operational inefficiencies. A responsive and alerting mechanism tracking the occurrence of an event, prompting an action, triggering processes, and broadcasting a record of the incident across the supply chain to other players, helps in another player benefiting from making a corresponding timely adjustment, thus, mitigating a devastating impact on downstream operations. COMPLEX EVENT PROCESSING: THE CONCEPT Let’s take a look at what Complex Event Processing has to offer us. As the term suggests, it is the processing of complex events. In business parlance, an Event is an occurrence of significance that one would want to track within the enterprise. There is a start and a definite end to every event. As much as “it is raining” is an event, a shipment delivery confirmation receipt is also an event. Associated with an event are attributes that characterize and define the event. In the case of the ‘raining’ event, the intensity of rain, the period of rain, the region of rainfall and the quantity of rain are 5 © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
  • 6. Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009 all important attributes that define the event. So then, what is a complex event? A complex event is a situation where two or more events occur in different slices of time, and originate from different sources, but are logically related to each other and impact each other in a manner that is not easily comprehensible. An examination of an individual event in a complex event may reveal little or not at all, but when seen in light of another event, makes amazing business sense. Let’s us look at an example of a complex event that we may comes across in our daily life. Consider this: You are driving on a freeway and it starts to rain (Event 1) You then notice a ‘Slippery When Wet’ road sign, look at the Speedometer, and notice that your speed is 75 Mph (Event 2) Just then you recollect the fact that the speed limit on this road is 60 Mph – information captured from the event of you viewing the ‘speed limit’ signboard a few miles earlier (Event 3) You reduce speed to 60 Mph to comply with the speed limit (Event 4) You also remember the fact that the car’s tyres are quite worn out and simple human procrastination prevented you from replacing them earlier ( Event 5) As you take the turn into an exit, you suddenly feel the back tyres losing grip and the car skidding towards the kerb (Event 6) Fear immediately grips you as the car lurches uncontrollably towards the kerb, and just as suddenly as it happened, you gain back control over the car. How many times hasn’t this happened to all of us? Immediately, the correlation of the sequence of events has resulted in fear that prompts you to slow down to 40 Mph or lower. The events of the rain, bad tyres, speed limits, and vehicle skidding, prompted an action from you to of slow down far below the speed limit and drive more carefully (Action 1) So the complex event consists of 6 events which are co-related in an intricate manner, reveal important insights when viewed together in correlation, but were individual events of not much significance when viewed in singular terms. In a Supply Chain Management scenario, the application of Complex Event Processing technology to operations and activities of the supply chain, provides a similar type of business insight and operational visibility into activities, through correlation of multiple events across time, across systems, across participant’s enterprise systems, thus enabling the working of a centralized, ‘One’ supply chain. Some applications of CEP across industries: Manufacturing: Procurement, distribution and for use-cases involving lean operations and processes in manufacturing plants 6 © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
  • 7. Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009 Logistics: Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI), dynamic re-scheduling in distribution, Carrier performance monitoring and optimized tendering, warehousing/ DC operations Airlines and Airports: Allocation of gates and air/ land side resources based on delays in flight arrival and departure timings Hospitality: Monitoring demand based on website traffic rates and other channels of enquiries Finance: Fraud detection and stock market trading algorithms THE SOLUTION: ADVANCED CONTROL TOWER (ACT) The Advanced Control Tower is a product agnostic framework based on the Complex Event Processing (CEP) technology. It processes large volumes of seemingly independent captured events occurring across multiple systems in multiple slices of times, correlates and identifies patterns based on the business rules and previous experience, and triggers alerts or initiates processes in IT applications through actions, thus enhancing decision making, value of information and response time. Value is delivered through reducing the latency at each point in the decision making cycle. Business Business Event Event Data Latency Data Captured Data Latency Insight Latency Data Insight Delivery Captured Decision Latency Insight Latency Decision Mode Action Latency Insight Action Taken Delivery Decision Latency Decision Value Mode Action Latency Action Value Taken Time Time Action Time Action Time Low Business Value & High Action Time High Business Value & Low Action Time The ACT Framework is based on the following principles The ability to capture information from different data-sources across the supply chain operational landscape Correlate and put together the jig-saw puzzle of data and information to reveal a precise and accurate situational business picture Respond to the current business situation using inputs from ACT and make business critical decisions 7 © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
  • 8. Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009 Execute the decisions with speed, accuracy and perfection Value is maximized only when the above four aspects are synthesized with minimal time latency. As information is captured, it has to be understood and utilized. The delay in capturing, understanding and responding to an activity or an incident is the challenge and the price that businesses pay in our times. Partner Networks Enterprise Applications Financial Transactions Supply Chains Sensor Networks Advanced Control Tower Configurable Dashboards Configurable Dashboards COMPONENTS OF ACT Scenario: A process all inclusive of events, business rules and resulting actions and alerts Event: An occurrence of significance (operational or transactional) Attributes: Elements of the event Business Rules: The Logic that ties together the events and includes policies, requirements, and conditional statements that are used to determine the tactical actions that take place in applications and systems Actions: The resulting processes or transactions that need to be triggered within applications across the enterprise/supply chain or evoked from personnel across the organization/supply chain Alerts: Real-time ‘Notifications’ to management and operational personnel regarding events and actions Data is fed into the system in the form of ‘Events’ from across the supply chain landscape -IT systems, transactions and physical movements on the ground. These ‘Events’ are correlated using the business logic and upon the occurrence of a pattern of events, an insight is revealed that in turn provokes an action from a user (manually) or from a system (automatically). A set of seemingly disparate events when occurring together may signify something entirely different than from their individual occurrence. There are two types of users who can utilize the framework - Operational Users and Business Users. 8 © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
  • 9. Event Driven Supply Chains | September, 2009 Operational users Configure Events and the associated attributes to be captured Configure business rules that vary with business need Select Events to monitor, Business Rules to be applied, and Actions to be executed Configure alerts suitable for different levels of people and route them appropriately using the chosen medium Configure and view real-time dashboard elements providing insight into real-time operational parameters Business Users Configure and select reports that provide situational visibility for the multiple participants into the state of operations and transactions within the supply chain Automate the generation of reports periodically or upon the occurrence of a pattern of events Configure alerts and their severity levels and choose which ones to be notified against Respond to alerts by triggering or initiating actions BENEFITS Enhanced situational visibility into supply chain operations both at a strategic level and at a tactical operational level Faster and more accurate prediction of operational irregularities and exceptional occurrences Better utilization of information while it is still alive to deliver high impact Increased process automation for better customer satisfaction and optimized business activities 9 © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
  • 10. Contact Us: HCL Technologies Ltd 330 Potrero Ave, Sunnyvale, CA 94085 Tel: +1 408-733-0480 Email: ttl@hcl.com Website: www.hcltech.com 10 © 2009, HCL Technologies. Reproduction Prohibited. This document is protected under Copyright by the Author, all rights reserved.
  • 11. CUSTOM APPLICATION SERVICES ENGINEERING AND R&D SERVICES ENTERPRISE APPLICATION SERVICES ENTERPRISE TRANSFORMATION SERVICES IT INFRASTRUCTURE MANAGEMENT BUSINESS PROCESS ABOUT HCL OUTSOURCING About HCL Technologies HCL Technologies is a leading global IT services company, working with clients in the areas that impact and redefine the core of their businesses. Since its inception into the global landscape after its IPO in 1999, HCL focuses on ‘transformational outsourcing’, underlined by innovation and value creation, and offers integrated portfolio of services including software-led IT solutions, remote infrastructure management, engineering and R&D services and BPO. HCL leverages its extensive global offshore infrastructure and network of offices in 20 countries to provide holistic, multi-service delivery in key industry verticals including Financial Services, Manufacturing, Aerospace & Defense, Telecom, Retail & CPG, Life Sciences & Healthcare, Media & Entertainment, Travel, Transportation & Logistics, Automotive, Government, Energy & Utilities. HCL takes pride in its philosophy of ‘Employee First’ which empowers our 54,216 transformers to create a real value for the customers. HCL Technologies, along with its subsidiaries, had consolidated revenues of US$ 2.2 billion (Rs. 10,591 crores), as on 30th June 2009. For more information, please visit www.hcltech.com About HCL Enterprise HCL is a $5 billion leading global Technology and IT Enterprise that comprises two companies listed in India - HCL Technologies & HCL Infosystems. Founded in 1976, HCL is one of India’s original IT garage start-ups, a pioneer of modern computing, and a global transformational enterprise today. Its range of offerings spans Product Engineering, Custom & Package Applications, BPO, IT Infrastructure Services, IT Hardware, Systems Integration, and distribution of ICT products across a wide range of focused industry verticals. The HCL team comprises over 60,000 professionals of diverse nationalities, who operate from 26 countries including over 500 points of presence in India. HCL has global partnerships with several leading Fortune 1000 firms, including leading IT and Technology firms. For more information, please visit www.hcl.in