Historically, EDI software has been designed to improve the lives of large retailers that acquire stock through B2B transactions. An EDI order management system is giving power back to the supplier with a centralized hub for processing EDI-based transactions that helps automate beyond just trade with retail partners.
EDI itself dates back to the 1980s and is widely acknowledged as being somewhat dated. It’s a set of structured documents for transactions like purchase orders, invoices, and shipping notices. This requires meticulous input for every line item and is extremely prone to error, especially at scale. The best solution is typically to implement software to automate these processes.
For suppliers and manufacturers trading with large retailers, it’s all too common that automating this process is simply inaccessible. Large retailers often enforce EDI in order to trade with them, stating their legacy software is the only way. These systems are outdated, come with enterprise pricing, and can take years to launch.
Businesses wanting to trade with retailers are left with three scenarios:
1 - They manually manage EDI transactions, having to hire a new employee for every 1-2 new partners. This drastically increases overhead costs and results in endless errors.
2 - They purchase the EDI software. Each connection is 1000s, if not 10s of thousands of dollars, and can take 6-12 months for every new partner. Meanwhile, their competitors are out-selling them on their e-commerce marketplace, or they adopt both strategies and constantly face stockouts and risk trading relationships.
3 - They decide to abandon trading with large retailers, focusing only on independent stores and DTC. This leaves them vulnerable to a competitive marketplace and requires massive marketing investments to bring people to their sites.
Needless to say, EDI systems have not improved the lives of suppliers. Fortunately, there are more modern systems that are trying to shake up the EDI world.
For businesses considering EDI systems and trading with retail partners, it’s ultimately because they want to sell more product at scale. EDI software doesn’t let you do that. It works in a silo, only automating transactions with specific trading partners.
A modern OMS challenges that by considering your entire order ecosystem.
Order Management Systems are designed to automate end-to-end workflows from wherever orders happen. Instead of piecing together integration tools on top of expensive EDI software, an OMS handles every step.
A common workflow could look like this:
A few transactions are placed:
Without an OMS, your team would have to log into each portal, check inventory in your ERP, and log back into the portals to submit, only to then send through another fulfillment portal.
It’s tedious, and it’s prone to error and stockout.
Instead, an OMS manages the flow from channel to ERP to fulfillment, meaning you never have to log into portals to manage day-to-day orders.
If you do a quick search for order management systems, you’ll probably notice that there are a lot of tools that aren’t really an OMS.
There’s a handful of OMS-adjacent technologies like ERPs, inventory, and fulfillment software, but these are the tools your OMS should integrate, not replace.
Alternatively, if you’re working with a consultant, they may have a handful of enterprise solutions that are MACH-compliant and highly reputable among billion-dollar, well-known brands. But if your feeling hindered by EDI software costs and need to optimize for B2B, these systems are going to consume your budget and leave you needing additional workarounds.
Still unsure whether an EDI OMS is right for your business? If any of the following sound familiar, it’s probably time to upgrade your order infrastructure:
You receive purchase orders by email, fax, or PDF
You're manually entering retailer or marketplace orders into your ERP
You struggle to track order status across systems or teams
You’re juggling multiple sales channels with disconnected workflows
You're required to send or receive EDI documents like 810, 850, 855, or 997
Your team spends hours each week managing or cleaning up order data
A modular OMS is a system that empowers you to scale at your own pace. You’re not stuck waiting 12 months to trade with 1 retail partner, and you’re not forced into a massive suite of tools.
If you want to optimize for EDI this year, and move to automating ecommerce workflows next, a modular system grows with you, not against you.
OrderEase stands apart from other OMS by providing a modular approach specifically designed for B2B brands. Our system is built to handle the complexities of B2B workflows, including:
Our team offers a consultative approach to empower your business to adopt only the highest opportunities to automate. We understand that for growing businesses, what matters is a system that helps you automate more EDI transactions without draining your budget or your team.
For a personalized demo of how EDI order management systems work and how OrderEase can help scale your business, get in touch.