SEARCH searchBY TOPIC
right_division Green SCM Distribution
Bookmark us
sitemap
SCDigest Logo
distribution

Focus: Distribution/Materials Handling

Feature Article from Our Distribution and Materials Handling Subject Area - See All

From SCDigest's On-Target E-Magazine

Nov. 2, 2011

 
Supply Chain News: Innovative App Store Concept for WMS Gaining Early Traction


HighJump Has Delivered 18 Apps, more on the Way; Speeding the Development Cycle; Users Already Contributing New Apps for Others to Use

 

SCDigest Editorial Staff


At its 2010 user conference, supply chain execution software vendor HighJump Software announced an innovative approach to software enhancements with an product it called the App Station, designed to address niche or special functionality by downloading specific "apps" that could be easily added to its Warehouse Management System and likely someday other modules, rather than waiting for future version releases or company-specific customizations to the existing code.

.

SCDigest Says:

start
One potential and even breakthrough promise of the App Station approach was that HighJump customers themselves might be willing to submit apps they had developed using the Advantage Architect tool for use by other companies through the App Station.
close
What Do You Say?
Click Here to Send Us Your Comments
feedback
Click Here to See Reader Feedback

A year later, HighJump reports steady progress in both app development and user acceptance.

The App Station model, intentionally a derivative of the app store concept for smart phones and tablet PCs, is meant to provide usually relatively simple enhancements to HighJump core applications, focused right now on WMS.

The HighJump App Station features pieces of functionality that can be downloaded and added to the appropriate module in HighJump's suite that a customer already has installed.

The problem HighJump was trying to solve is in large part the issue of what new functionality to include in the base system. Often, there are requirements specific to a given vertical industry or logistics process model that are relevant to only a small set of customers. While those companies would naturally like to see the capability put into the base product, over time these little enhancement can "junk up" or bloat the system with a lot of features and code very few customers use.

Additionally, new functional requirements may pop up in the middle of a product release cycle, or just miss the inevitable cut in terms of what will be added to the next release of the product.

Of course, customers can make modifications to their own system to achieve this functionality, in HJighJump's case a process facilitated by its Advantage Architect tool, which allows customers or consultants to create their own mods without having to deal at the real code level. Nevertheless, those modifications take time, cost money, and require a level of expertise.

The App Store approach addresses these problems by offering a portfolio of pieces of new functionality that HighJump customers on a current maintenance contract can download and install for free. SCDigest got a chance earlier this year (See Cool New Product of the Month for May, 2011) to see how the process works, which showed how companies can literally download and install a new app in 20 minutes or so. When coming from the App Station, a downloaded app is fully supported and documented by HighJump.

 

(Distribution/Materials Handling Story Continues Below )

CATEGORY SPONSOR: LONGBOW ADVANTAGE - JDA SUPPLY CHAIN CONSULTANTS

Download Longbow Advantage

Business Briefs

 

 

The Keys to WMS Success,

Maximizing JDA WMS

Performance and More

 

 

 

 

 

 

The set-up with HighJump is unique because even if the download app is not exactly what a company needs, it may get them 75% of the way there, and the Advantage Architect tool can then be used either by the customer or HighJump to fine tune the app for a given company's specific need, significantly reducing the time and cost required versus starting from scratch.

Slow but Steady Growth in App Station Concept

The App Station approach was clearly an innovative idea, and one that had the potential to really change the supply chain software paradigm, raising interesting questions about how software companies going forward might think about what to put in the core code versus delivering simply as downloadable apps.

The key questions were: (1) Would these apps really work as intended? and (2) Would HighJump stay committed to the model through the usual growing pains for any new initiative, and the ever present demand on resources and where to best allocate them all software companies face?

According to Chad Collins, VP of Marketing and Product Strategy for HighJump, the answer to both questions appears to be Yes.

Collins says to date HighJump has delivered about 18 of these downloadable apps, with a number of additional ones scheduled over coming months. Those apps range from some system tools to allow easier management of the WMS application to enhanced task interleaving to a routine for OSHA vehicle inspections.

Thus far, a little over 25 companies have downloaded the apps, and most of those have put them into production.

"We're making great progress on this, and the reaction from customers and prospects has been very positive," Collins told SCDigest editor Dan Gilmore at the user conference. He added that HighJump has a dedicated a meaningful slice of its R&D budget to App Station development.

One potential and even breakthrough promise of the App Station approach was that HighJump customers themselves might be willing to submit apps they had developed using the Advantage Architect tool for use by other companies through the App Station. Collins says a number of customers have done just that, and that HighJump is currently reviewing those submissions, but that he expects many of them to be approved for App Station deployment after the company does the needed testing, makes any needed improvements, develops the documentation, etc.

Collins added that in some cases the apps are providing significant new functionality, not just simple improvements, citing the task interleaving app as an example.

This continues to be a development worth following.

 

What is your reaction to the App Store concept? What do you see as pros or cons? Let us know your thoughts at the Feedback section below.


Recent Feedback

 

No Feedback on this article yet

 

 
.