I dunno how technically difficult this is, but consider either hiring an expert on this stuff, or hiring your core software engineering team, and hiring a consultant/freelancer type who is an expert in this stuff to get it done / up and running.
> Strategies for attracting and retaining tech talent in a non-tech industry Experiences transitioning from third-party to in-house software (success stories and cautionary tales). Potential pitfalls we might not be considering. Alternative solutions we should explore.
Part of outsourcing, is you're not just buying the technical solution, but the support and potentially the liability if something goes wrong. So it's important to consider what secondary benefits are baked into using a third-party, and deciding if you have the ability and appetite to support those as well as developing the tool.
I sort of imagine that replicating the tool / business process is the easy part, it's stuff like setting up and wrangling EDIFACT that will be the hard things.
I dunno how technically difficult this is, but consider either hiring an expert on this stuff, or hiring your core software engineering team, and hiring a consultant/freelancer type who is an expert in this stuff to get it done / up and running.
> Strategies for attracting and retaining tech talent in a non-tech industry Experiences transitioning from third-party to in-house software (success stories and cautionary tales). Potential pitfalls we might not be considering. Alternative solutions we should explore.
Part of outsourcing, is you're not just buying the technical solution, but the support and potentially the liability if something goes wrong. So it's important to consider what secondary benefits are baked into using a third-party, and deciding if you have the ability and appetite to support those as well as developing the tool.
I sort of imagine that replicating the tool / business process is the easy part, it's stuff like setting up and wrangling EDIFACT that will be the hard things.