Over a period of decades EDI has steadily gained mainstream adoption throughout businesses worldwide as the preferred means to exchange documents in the B2B transaction process. This growth in part, due to the emergence of Internet B2B, including new transport protocols like AS2 and numerous flavors of XML-based B2B document standards. EDI programs deployed via B2B Managed Services and iPaaS platforms has also helped facilitate EDI growth as the complexity of managing the integration has moved to the platforms that increase the speed, agility, and barriers of implementing EDI. The API Economy - API vs. EDI API-based B2B integration, have mostly complemented EDI rather than replaced it. EDI has grown and matured and today, like ERP systems, remains a backbone for global business. While APIs unquestionably have a role in how data can be exchanged, it’s our belief that the demise of EDI has been greatly exaggerated. This fact means that EDI is still the most broadly accepted communication tool, and will not be completely replaced by API any time soon. It is our view that we will see continue to see process based use cases where API’s are optimal and those where EDI is optimal. Once examples is in the logistics industry.
Hi,
Will you give me complete training on edi
Hii
You can share your email. We will reach out to you.
Thanks
Bro is EDI b2b having bright future?
Over a period of decades EDI has steadily gained mainstream adoption throughout businesses worldwide as the preferred means to exchange documents in the B2B transaction process. This growth in part, due to the emergence of Internet B2B, including new transport protocols like AS2 and numerous flavors of XML-based B2B document standards. EDI programs deployed via B2B Managed Services and iPaaS platforms has also helped facilitate EDI growth as the complexity of managing the integration has moved to the platforms that increase the speed, agility, and barriers of implementing EDI. The API Economy - API vs. EDI API-based B2B integration, have mostly complemented EDI rather than replaced it. EDI has grown and matured and today, like ERP systems, remains a backbone for global business. While APIs unquestionably have a role in how data can be exchanged, it’s our belief that the demise of EDI has been greatly exaggerated. This fact means that EDI is still the most broadly accepted communication tool, and will not be completely replaced by API any time soon. It is our view that we will see continue to see process based use cases where API’s are optimal and those where EDI is optimal. Once examples is in the logistics industry.
@@techbsp4456 Thank you sir🙏