Facilitating B2B relationships across a web of supply chains and partners isn't easy, and many organizations have turned to e-business portals in search of a solution. A myriad of issues, including system integration, security, real-time messaging, and application accessibility, confront early adopters looking to align their business strategy with a portal implementation.
In addition, the ongoing administrative challenges that follow, such as managing the portal and incorporating the new paradigm into existing culture and workflow, often result in increased expenditures that can be difficult to predetermine.
Portals have come a long way since bursting on to the scene just four years ago, and one of the latest to offer noteworthy advances is the WebLogic Portal 4.0 from BEA Systems. The Java-based WebLogic portal framework is an enterpriseworthy implementation replete with capabilities for Web services and portlet integration, content management, and personalization, as well as security and permissions-based accessibility.
Most importantly, WebLogic Portal includes solid administration capabilities that reduce the complexity and cost of managing larger, multichannel portals. And it supplies superb tools for mapping business logic and process flows that don't require programming expertise, so they can be used by line-of-business personnel and not merely the technically savvy.
BEA WebLogic Portal 4.0 is worthy of serious consideration by larger companies in need of a broad array of portal features aimed toward improving employee productivity and reducing the cost of partner integration, while streamlining management of large portal farms.
Although WebLogic Portal 4.0 is decidedly focused on B2C relationship building, with numerous tools for catalog development and campaign management, its solid application integration capabilities make this package readily extendible to B2B integrations as well.
WebLogic Portal is built on BEA's J2EE (Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition) 1.3-compliant WebLogic Server 6.1, offering solid performance and reliability along with provisions for scalability and fault tolerance. We were able to install the WebLogic Server, WebLogic Portal, and E-business Control Center without incident, and we had the portal's administrative GUI active and tuning run-time parameters in no time.
Even nontechnical administrators can modify the functionality and design of portal components with the E-business Control Center. Line-of-business employees gain direct control over defining access privileges, building conditional branches for custom content delivery, and even designing the look and feel of the site.
We used the Webflow and Pipeline components for defining the flow of Web page logic and mapping business logic, respectively, through a graphical interface. Topping the list of niceties, however, is the ability to establish unified views over systems and users, which greatly reduces administrative overhead, and the ability to delegate management responsibility and access across the organization.