Changing market drives ASP to drugs

Finding a bug in your service provider's system would normally be cause for alarm. But in the case of Longs Drugs Stores, that event played an unlikely role in convincing the retailing giant to outsource its Web site and several critical electronic commerce applications to hosting company Intira.

The bug, as it turned out, wasn't a computer virus - it was of the garden variety, and it somehow managed to set off a fire alarm at Intira's operations centre. What impressed Brian Kilcourse, Longs' senior vice president and chief information officer, and Linda Rossi, Longs' director of Internet technology, was that the hoster was able to hand over its entire Pleasanton operation to a backup centre with practically no service disruption.

That happened just as Longs was completing its due diligence on Intira.

"We could never have done that internally," Kilcourse says. "It just brought home the point that they could keep operating under very challenging circumstances."

The hosting contract with Longs was the first major win to come out of a new alliance between Intira and Deloitte Consulting. Under the pact, Intira and Deloitte will jointly market their services to Fortune 1000 clients. Deloitte has taken a minority equity stake in Intira, and will use Intira to host and manage its Web site as well as several enterprise applications.

The Longs contract represents a multimillion-dollar win for the new partners and is another vote of confidence in the application service provider business model. The deal wasn't finalised until Longs was absolutely sure that its customers' personal information could be protected.

Intira will host a personalisation engine from BroadVision so information on Longs' Web site can be customised according to a customer's health concerns. If a customer is interested in diabetes, for example, the page presented can offer relevant information.

While the personalisation technology is viewed as a major sales and customer service tool, it also presents a security challenge. If information about a customer's health and the drugs that person is taking is compromised, there's a strong potential for abuse.

"We have absolutely promised our customers that their personal information is a sacred responsibility," Kilcourse says.

The decision to outsource the company's Web site and several key applications was based on new drivers affecting the drug retailing business.

Like many of its brick-and-mortar and dot-com competitors, Longs accepts orders for prescriptions over the Internet. It also provides health-related information. At last count, the company's site featured more than 27 million pages of content. "Our world is gravitating towards a 24 by 7 computing environment," Kilcourse says. "People are accessing our Web site and ordering prescriptions at all hours."

Rossi says there were significant technical and administrative hurdles to overcome in turning Longs' data centre into an around-the-clock operation. A cost analysis was done, and hosted services won hands down.

The pact with Intira is a good study in how new e-commerce applications are being integrated with enterprise applications. Intira will host the application that takes customer orders over the Web, along with an extensive product catalog and health-related content. But when orders are placed, the e-commerce application uses BEA Systems' WebLogic platform to tie into Longs' existing price management and financial systems.

Rossi says Longs has an advantage over competitors in that it doesn't have to spend a ton of money to acquire new customers. "Our goal is to give customers new reasons to shop in our stores," she says.

Advertisement

Talkback 0 comments

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Phil Dobbie A guide to the future of the internet
    Last week we looked at the history of the internet in Australia. It's been around for 20 years and changed our lives in so many ways. Imagine what it could do given another 20 years.
  • Array Carelessness busts Linux security
    No operating system can ever properly protect a computer from trojans as long as users continue to do silly things. Just because Linux is immune to your standard drive-by viruses it does not mean that it can escape trojan horses.
  • Array Sun shining on Ajnaware
    Graham Dawson talks about the future of iPhone app development and augmented reality.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured