Transcript: Episode 6 - The Power of Sales Order Automation
Aaron Rasmussen:They no longer had to have other people come in at 4AM to punch orders to get on the first truck because Lucy just took care of it. Now they understood the problem to rejig the process to say, know, if it is obsolete, we've now got a process in play to find the replacement product for that so we don't have revenue leakage. Just that one thing alone, finding that one piece of data paid for busy four times over.
Announcer:Welcome to The Ecommerce Experience, the podcast that turns you into an ecommerce expert. Your host, Andrew Rogencamp, shares his wealth of B2B and B2C business experience to take you on an ecommerce adventure. Each month, you'll hear from industry experts and meet people just like you looking to take their business to new heights online.
Andrew Rogencamp:Hey there, everybody, and welcome to the ecommerce experience. My name is Andrew Rogencamp, and I bring this podcast to you just to talk about different ecommerce concepts around B2B and B2C based in Australia and around the world. So here we are in August 2020. Victoria, Australia is now in stage four lockdown, and ecommerce continues to be a really important part of business continuity within the economic environment and is playing a really important really important part. So this week, I wanna talk about a thing called sales order automation.
Andrew Rogencamp:And if you recall back to my very first podcast, I talked about two different types of B2B ecommerce. And one of them is B2B for manufacturing distribution, and that's where we've got a manufacturer or distributor that's actually selling to another business, and they're typically on selling that from there. And the other one is manufacturing for business use. So that's typically the likes of companies like Staples and and companies like that that are selling products to customers that are using them in the business. It it might be stationary.
Andrew Rogencamp:It might be cleaning equipment and that sort of thing. So sales or automation plays a really important part in the manufacturing and distribution part of the B2B e commerce sphere. Because what happens in reality is is that you've got sort of three types of customers that exist in that manufacturing and distribution environment. And I guess you could break them into small, medium, and large. So if we looked at the small companies first that are buying off you, typically, they're really happy to be buying using your ecommerce website.
Andrew Rogencamp:They'll get on. They'll place orders. They'll use templates. They'll look at their favorites and all of that sort of stuff, and they'll place the order for you. So that as a as a company that's got that ecommerce application, you're actually able to have a great cost to serve saving and in and and by not having to key those orders in yourself into your sales order ERP system.
Andrew Rogencamp:And the customers also get benefit out of it, of course, by being able to self serve themselves online. They don't have to wait for a sales rep or send an email or a fax or anything like that. It can it can just easily go through. So what I wanna cover now is is the other end of town, and that's the big end of town, and that might be in Australia where you're dealing with companies like Bunnings or or Woolworths, you know, in any of the large end of town. They're normally going to be dealing with you in a couple of ways.
Andrew Rogencamp:Of the ways those big companies like Bunnings deal with you is they actually want your sales reps to be inside their store doing a thing called merchandising where they're actually your your sales reps are actually working out what the customer needs and and pretty much placing orders on their behalf. It's your responsibility to fill their shelves. But the other main way that those big companies are gonna deal with you is via EDI. Now EDI is a tool that's been around literally since the eighties, maybe even before that. And it's it's it's really just an it's EDI stands for electronic data interchange, and it's pretty much what it says is that those companies like Bunnings will send you a purchase order in the form of a electronic document.
Andrew Rogencamp:There's a they take several different formats these days. EDI factors are really old way of doing it. More more common ways these days are formats like CXML and things like that. So, essentially, they're sending you an electronic order, and that will go directly if you've got an EDI application at at your end, that will consume that. You'll send them it it will put that create a sales order in your ERP system so that you can ship that to them, and then you'll send them back things like a purchase order acknowledgment.
Andrew Rogencamp:There's other documents in the EDI chain, like advanced shipping notices and invoices you can send them back. So in a true EDI environment, you can really automate that whole exchange of information to do with what products your customer want and wants and how you're going to invoice them. You can really automate that. Downside to b two b is is that it's pretty expensive to implement from both sides. So unless you're a big supplier of some of these large companies like Bunnings, they typically will rule the roost in terms of how they wanna interact with you.
Andrew Rogencamp:So they'll just say, we're gonna deal with you via EDI. Here's our spec. You must comply. So and that's to reduce the cost of inflammation for the implementation for them. They just want it to be the same for everybody.
Andrew Rogencamp:So they're the big customer. They will dictate how things work in that environment. From your point of view, if you wanna deal with the customer EDI, you need to have some EDI software. You're gonna be paying per transaction, and often the implementation is long and drawn out because there's a lot of work from both your side and your customer's side to make sure all of your stock codes match up, that the pricing's right, and all of that sort of stuff. So, typically, in my experience, I've really only seen, you know or not only seen, but you you see it all the time, is EDI at that big end of town.
Andrew Rogencamp:So because there's a there's a high cost barrier to entry to get into EDI. So then we've got the challenge of that middle ground. And the middle ground is all of those customers that you're dealing with that are pretty sophisticated themselves. They've got their own ERP systems, and they wanna buy off you. But when they buy off you, the way they'll work out their inventory requirements and what they wanna raise on a purchase order isn't by browsing through your website.
Andrew Rogencamp:It'll be by reorder and replenishment logic that exists in their ERP system. So their ERP system's going to say in a store, maybe it's a store that's selling tools and they're buying off a tool supplier, they're gonna have a whole lot of minimum stock for each product. And because their ERP system is actively tracking what they've got on hand, they'll run a reorder report or or process maybe once a week or even once a day and work out to say that I need to buy all of these tools off this tool supplier. And what they'll do is they'll just it will just convert that into a purchase order. And typically, what they'll do is they'll send that they'll email that purchase order to you via PDF.
Andrew Rogencamp:So then the challenge is is that your end, you you know, they're not gonna go and put that they're not gonna go and email that off to you and then jump on your website and key it in. There's there's just there's just nothing in it for them to do that. It that's they see that as your job. They don't wanna be doing that for you. So you're stuck entering that order, and you think, well, why can't I get this through my ecommerce site?
Andrew Rogencamp:And that's really where sales order automation comes in. And sales order automation is a tool out there that can automatically take that PDF purchase order, recognize who it's from, and then bring that order into your ERP system and do all the validations necessary to do that. So today, I'm lucky enough to have Aaron Rasmussen from a company called Let Lucy who have developed a really cool product that specializes in sales order automation. Aaron, welcome along.
Aaron Rasmussen:No worries. Thanks for inviting me.
Andrew Rogencamp:So just first of all, tell me about the name Lucy or Let Lucy. How did that come about?
Aaron Rasmussen:Yeah. So I guess one of the things about the name was really even before we decided, you know, the name of Lucy was really about personifying the software, I suppose. I mean, we sat down and we we spoke about different ideas for names and this, you know, Automator and Autotasker and all of these different sort of software sounding names. And and the catch with those is, you know, I guess the market is a filled with those things. But b, we knew we had a little bit of a fight on our hands when it came to getting Lucy or getting the software into businesses because we really wanted her to seem like more of a colleague than an enemy.
Aaron Rasmussen:And when you're implementing automation tools, people can be a little bit fearful, especially when it comes to their jobs, their livelihood. So putting a bit of a friendly face and feel to the application was definitely high on our list. The actual name Lucy, past all that, it was just a you know, Lucy's just a nice friendly name. You know? Right.
Andrew Rogencamp:Okay.
Aaron Rasmussen:I know Lucy, she's lovely. Yeah. Okay. And I'm sure you do too.
Andrew Rogencamp:Yeah. Pretty cool. Alright. So maybe can you explain to me you know, in my intro, I talked about how this automation technology, and a lot of people don't even know it exists, can sit in the middle of your supply chain in terms of you've got all of your smaller customers ordering online, all of your bigger customers EDI. Just explain to me the process of how how a sales order automation tool works.
Aaron Rasmussen:Yeah, sure. So I guess as far as the types of things that Lucy can handle, I mean that's sort of how it all came about was that gap between e commerce and EDI. I mean, really most of our customers already have a current process in place. So they're doing the replenishments, their customers are doing the replenishments, they're getting PDF purchase orders via email. The problem is already there, the process already exists.
Aaron Rasmussen:So really Lucy just takes the current process that's happening manually where you have people taking the PDF from an email and essentially doing data entry to get that information into a system, she's repeating that same process but doing it with AI. So she picks up the order from the email, takes the attachment. It's a little bit of a process there of her getting that information. And then she uses some smarts and follows business logic to get it into the system. So it's nothing new.
Aaron Rasmussen:It's a digitization of an existing process and that's why it works so well is you don't really have to teach people about a change in process. It's just, well, it is what we've always done except for your colleague Lucy is just gonna take care of that data entry piece now.
Andrew Rogencamp:So I guess that's key from a change management type of environment. You know, I've worked over the years with many EDI implementations, and I know there's a lot of work from both sides to get that EDI implementation. This sounds to me like the the customer has no change maybe than other than changing sending where they're sending their purchase order to, or or maybe that doesn't even change.
Aaron Rasmussen:Very very minimal. Yeah. And and most people don't actually change where the orders get sent. There's just some smarts in there to decide whether or not orders could get sent to Lucy. But I suppose as far as change management goes, it's really dependent on how good customer data is.
Aaron Rasmussen:So that's, I guess, one of the benefits of Lucy is that she's pretty good at taking bad data. An example would be a product code. So your customer orders something, their product code doesn't match what's in your system. So Lucy will come up with a list of what she thinks and she attempts to fix those problems. But if the stuff that they're sending you is so bad, then that's really where the change management comes into play of trying to get customers to at least slightly come to the party.
Aaron Rasmussen:But it's not a big problem. We find that our customers start with the low hanging fruit, the guys that have data that's pretty good. And Lucy is really, really great at that. And if you really want to go the whole way and get everybody on board to automation, then there might be a small piece of change management there. But we try to do everything we can to avoid change management.
Aaron Rasmussen:People don't like change.
Andrew Rogencamp:Yeah. Yeah. On both ends too. But people certainly like the change of the cost to serve changes, I'm sure.
Aaron Rasmussen:Absolutely. And and I guess, you know, cost cost to serve, you know, you can you can talk about it in a whole bunch of different ways. And that's that's one thing that that we see with our customers is they might not necessarily reduce headcount. You know, when you think about cost to serve, you know, you're you're spending money on someone sitting there and punching those orders in, but you may be able to repurpose them. And that's probably something that we've seen more of across our customer base is having those resources.
Aaron Rasmussen:And these are real knowledge workers. They know a lot about your business. They know a lot about your customers and putting them in more outward facing roles has has reaped significant benefit.
Andrew Rogencamp:Right. Okay. And I guess there's a time to you know, sometimes somebody might email an order off to, you know, James who's who's their normal contact, but they don't know that James is off sick today or he's in training or something like that. It's that you know, what's what's generally the time between somebody sending a purchase order, a buyer sending a purchase order and that being in the system that Lucy's integrating to in their ERP system? Typically, how long does that take?
Aaron Rasmussen:So for for the Lucy side, I guess we've we've done some studies on this sort of pre Lucy, post Lucy. If Lucy takes more than sixty seconds to get an order in, there's something catastrophically wrong. It's pretty impressive. The process is very, very quick. The key point that you're generally waiting is where a decision needs to be made that sits outside Lucy's, I guess, authority to make.
Aaron Rasmussen:So she's got some smarts in there so she can make decisions on pricing if you teach her your business logic. But if she has to wait for a person, then it's just as long as that person takes. But one of the things we noticed in talking to customers before they got Lucy on board was that time period, and you mentioned someone being away, but we saw that up to 40% of a customer service rep's daily order intake, so they're to sit down and punch these orders in, was there waiting for them before they even started their working day.
Andrew Rogencamp:Oh, okay. So before they get in, these orders are coming in overnight from restaurants and you know, big big delis and stuff like that after the shops have closed.
Aaron Rasmussen:Yeah. Absolutely. You know, people are sitting there, you know, doing their ordering for the next day or, you know, systems run overnight to do those automatic replenishments. So they're having to devote their mourning and disregard other tasks to get these things in. And that was a major change we saw with one of our customers in the food industry where, you know, they no longer had to have people come in at 4AM to punch orders to get on the first truck because Lucy just took care of it.
Andrew Rogencamp:And they they're just, you know, ready to pick with their RF terminals or on picking slips at 6AM in the morning or whenever those pickers come in. So so that to me would see
Aaron Rasmussen:That's it.
Andrew Rogencamp:An increase in you know, previously, and let you know, and it sounds crazy that you have people coming in at 3AM in the morning to do these sort of things. If you don't have that, really, what's going to happen is those orders won't dispatch until the next day, which, of course, is all, you know, depending on how much you're shipping a month. In terms of velocity of cash, that's gonna I know a day is not a lot, but it's bringing that forward. But it's also increasing customer service, isn't it?
Aaron Rasmussen:Oh, it is. Yeah. I mean, if, you would know it now, even just being a consumer when you buy something, if it comes a little bit earlier, you're surprised, you're happy, and
Andrew Rogencamp:you
Aaron Rasmussen:come back because you appreciate it. Everyone's so impatient now. To have something imagine things happen overnight. You place an order and you go to bed, you run the small to medium business. And before you even start work the next day, you've got an email back from that company saying, Hey, we've got you roared up.
Aaron Rasmussen:It's going to the warehouse. Could be there at
Andrew Rogencamp:10:30 in
Aaron Rasmussen:the morning. Doesn't happen often enough. Exactly. So trying to increase that velocity is paramount, especially with people like Amazon starting to slowly push into all of the industries.
Andrew Rogencamp:Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So because I think that in terms of you know, the future, I don't I don't know if that gap's ever going to be, or not for a long time anyway, be filled. You know, it's always gonna be EDI or order online or people people sending PDFs, I don't see that going away anytime soon.
Aaron Rasmussen:No. Well, I mean, the holy grail would be to have completely connected systems and automation end to end.
Andrew Rogencamp:You're talking about that for thirty years now.
Aaron Rasmussen:They've been trying to solve that problem for thirty years.
Andrew Rogencamp:Exactly. Everybody's got different standards.
Aaron Rasmussen:That's it. It's our way or the highway. Need a system to be able to do those translations, to take what some system thinks it is and be able to talk to the other system and allow them to talk to each other. That's why something like Lucy is important over a tool like EDI. EDI is very, I know it communicates in both directions but it's very one-sided in its communication.
Aaron Rasmussen:Sort of says here's the information, That's the end of the story. You know, if you've a couple
Andrew Rogencamp:of It's black or white. So I say I'm buying a product at $5. I send it to the supplier. The supplier says, no. It's $6.
Andrew Rogencamp:It just bounces that back to my system, and my system bounces it back to them. And, you know, there's there's no room for human intervention, which when two systems disagree, somebody's gotta get a human's gotta get involved if you don't have business rules around around the, you know, the variances and the tolerances and stuff like that. So sounds like Lucy allows that Yeah. Really good combination of, you know, the the digitization of that, but still having that human element in it where decisions can be made, you know, where where tolerances are broken.
Aaron Rasmussen:Yeah. It's really up to you where you want that line to sit. She'll make decisions that you want her to make and then she'll defer to humans when necessary. And I think one of the things that's important about that, especially touching on EDI, is the kinds of people that interact with the system. If you're running EDI and something hits the brakes because of that order, you're generally deferring to technical teams who may not necessarily understand what should be happening in these cases.
Aaron Rasmussen:But with Lucy, you give you give the power to the people who know the product and the customers and the business and the logic. You know? They know that Gary, the rep, is rogue and gave them a price, you know, 10% under margin. They know how to deal with that.
Andrew Rogencamp:And I guess I'm really really starting to see that personification of Lucy now in that, really, Lucy's just this extra person that's sitting at the end of the table doing all the hard work. And when when she needs to ask a question that's outside her, you know, the rules that have been set for her, she just puts her hand up and says, you know, can you help me out here? And that that allows, you know, those other people to get on with, you know, other work while Lucy's doing the the hack work, you might say.
Aaron Rasmussen:Yeah. That that's actually the the best best way to put it. I mean, that's we'd sort of tell a similar story with our customers when when they come on board is that try and think of Lucy as a new hire that doesn't really know much about your business. You know, she may have a bit of an understanding of your industry and she definitely understands the purchase order to sales order process. But you need to teach her about your products.
Aaron Rasmussen:You need to teach her about your customers. And as she learns those things, she then starts to make those decisions herself.
Andrew Rogencamp:Obviously, you've got some integration to ERP systems. How are you going about doing that thing?
Aaron Rasmussen:Interesting journey, actually. I guess like most software that integrates, you start with one and you expand from there. One of the things that's important to us is integration. I think actually I read a blog of yours a few years ago, Andrew, where you spoke about integration versus interfacing and the difference between those two. And for us, one has always been really important to have that deep integration because we don't want to do the EDI thing where we bundle up the order or throw it at the system and say job done.
Aaron Rasmussen:It's important to get the information back from the system about what's actually wrong because it may not be small, it might not be the product code's wrong, it might actually be something more severe like that particular customer needs to be licensed for these sets of products or they're not permitted to buy that or they have to buy impact quantities of six or all those rules that are already baked into the ERP need to be exposed to Lucy and need to be exposed to any tool that you're using to automate. So integration is very important.
Andrew Rogencamp:Yeah. I always talk about integration and I always give the example of a sales rep where you you start a new sales rep and you say to that sales rep, you know, welcome aboard, Aaron. Here's here's the book of rules. Here's all the product codes, the price you must sell them at, the quantity you must sell you know, the pack quantity you must sell them at. You can't sell these products to these customers.
Andrew Rogencamp:But, Aaron, don't worry about any of that, mate. You can just do whatever you like. And having, you know, having an ecommerce system that doesn't follow those business rules or having a product like Lucy that doesn't follow those business rules really can cause you more problems than it's create you know, than it's solving really because you just get all these variances and, you know, you have those business rules in for a reason. You don't wanna if you're selling boxes of 12 glasses, you don't want somebody ordering 11 of them because it means that you've now got one of them sitting on the shelf that's probably just gonna get broken. And that that's how I talk about the difference between an interface to an ERP system, which is really just getting data in and out, and integration, which is getting data in and out and then interpreting those business rules, which is which is, I think, super important, especially in the B2B world.
Aaron Rasmussen:No. Now that we we feel exactly the same way.
Andrew Rogencamp:Yeah. Okay. Cool. So have you seen any other benefits, you know, that Lucy has bought to customers? Obviously, there's the obvious ones with the cost to serve and the better customer service.
Andrew Rogencamp:But is there anything else that, you know, you didn't expect to be a benefit to a customer that has come out?
Aaron Rasmussen:Yeah, quite a few things. I think when we started the journey with Lucy, we were really focused on, well, how do we make her usable and solve that process of PDF purchase order to sales order. But as we started to get more customers on board, we were able to start to look at collective data and really sort of see what's happening. And when we started to zoom in on some of the I guess abnormalities, we started to find some interesting things. So we put reporting high on our agenda and started to dig a bit deeper.
Aaron Rasmussen:One of the things that happened not too long ago was we noticed a discrepancy between what customers were ordering on their purchase order versus the amount of lines that actually got invoiced out. So it was very strange that a bunch of lines could just go walkabouts. So after digging deeper with that particular customer, we noticed it on it. It actually ended up being that their customers were ordering obsolete stock. And because it wasn't available in the system, what the customer service rep was doing was deleting the line, pushing the order through and letting the customer know it wasn't available anymore rather than trying to find a replacement product for that.
Aaron Rasmussen:So they ended up going on a blitz. Now they understood the problem to rejig the process to say, well, if it is obsolete, we've now got a process in play to find the replacement product for that. So we don't have revenue leakage. Just that one thing alone, finding that one piece of data paid for Lucy four times over. So while we do focus on that process of purchase order to sales order, there's a lot of other benefits that come with having that data and understanding what's happening in that process.
Aaron Rasmussen:Because if you know that there's a problem, you can improve it. If you've got people doing swivel chair integration, they're essentially masking those problems because they just kind of fix those one offs. But if you've got the data for the end to end, you can actually fix it.
Andrew Rogencamp:Interesting. Yeah. Okay. So I guess it would also have another benefit in that if your customer's always ordering products and they've got the wrong price, that's gonna cause them a problem down the track as well because you're gonna send them in they they've got a price list that is last year's price list. You've raised prices by 5% since then, and you might have raised it across the board.
Andrew Rogencamp:So everything's out by 5%. You're just gonna change that to your ERP price because the price that's that's your business rules. And you're gonna invoice that for an extra 5%. That would cause them a massive amount of extra work when they process their creditors invoice and do that three way match. They'll have all their variances.
Andrew Rogencamp:So imagine you could look at that data and go to that customer and say, hey. Here's the new price list. You need to update it and and really save that customer some downstream, you know, processing costs.
Aaron Rasmussen:Yeah. Yeah. Invoice disputes. We could we could talk forever about that. But I guess, yeah, that sort of leads back to the the reporting stuff we we touched on.
Aaron Rasmussen:We we actually provide our customers with a set of reports to help combat that exact problem. Yep. Because it's not always on the customer side. It can be on the product side too. So we give people reports at whatever interval they would prefer, weekly, monthly, whatever it might be, that actually list in detail which customers got the price wrong, on which product codes, and in what direction so they can see the delta.
Aaron Rasmussen:They're using those to then feedback to their customers via usually the rep channels, but then also to the product team if they notice that should have actually been the price and it wasn't set that in the system. I guess it's like one of those swivel chair integration things where a customer service rep would just fix the price and mask the problem and carry on. Whereas having the data, having the proof, getting others to force everybody to stop, you know, you can actually fix it. Yeah.
Andrew Rogencamp:Okay. Look, Aaron, that has been super interesting. And as I said earlier, I think there's a lot of companies out there that don't realize that that, you know, that middle section of their customers that are ordering via PDF, there are solutions out there that they can implement and and, you know, really digitize that part of the business and and get your get their customer service people, you know, adding different types of value rather than, you know, as you as you I like that term, the swivel chair integration stuff. So, yeah, thanks very much today for joining us, Aaron.
Aaron Rasmussen:Thank you.
Andrew Rogencamp:So I hope you enjoyed that chat with Aaron from Lucy. Pretty cool product, as I said. Goes to show that there are solutions out there for most problems that you can experience within a business and that, you know, there are some pretty cool solutions out there as well. And, you know, as I said, integration is a must for all of them. Look.
Andrew Rogencamp:That's it for this month's ecommerce experience podcast. We wish you well, especially if you're in Victoria. Stay strong down there, and we'll see you next month. Thanks. Bye.
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