Honda MPE moving into online retail

The company is also considering using the in-development SAP private Cloud of its parent company, Honda Japan

Like the rest of the Australian retail landscape, Melbourne-based Honda Motorcycles and Power Equipment is facing mounting pressure on its business from cheaper goods sourced from online overseas supplier. The solution? Take competitors on at their own game.

According to company’s senior IT manager, Craig Bassett, while Honda MPE’s after-sales market of market is merchandise, accessories and parts was an important revenue source for itself and its national network of dealers, an increasingly net-savvy customer base was making the most products that were priced closer to cost than retail.

“Everyone who tries to buy a product online checks eBay or other sites to see if they can get it for cheaper, then have it shipped over here,” Basset told Computerworld Australia. “That is affecting our market.”

“People can buy a Honda motorcycle part even from Honda America and get it shipped here for cheaper than what we would sell it at a dealership – that is affecting our business.”

There alternative, Bassett says is for the company consider its own online sales site for Australian customers and offering a range of products.

“If we ... cut out freight maybe we can almost compete with overseas,” he says. “How competitive we can be will depend on the exchange rate and on the volumes people buy, so it is a bit of a gamble. Will it be profitable?”

Bassett says Honda is considering options for its online sales model and will aim to select one which will address the competing interest of helping the company compete with overseas competitors while not putting its 600-strong dealer network offside.

As for the e-commerce platform Honda MPE is assessing whether to opt for an in-house option — one favoured by his keen-to-build IT team -- or a Cloud-based solution sourced either locally or through the US — currently his preferred option.

“Honda has given us a direction: where possible outsource or go cloud-based. So we are looking at e-commerce as our next business initiative,” he says. “So, do we go and develop and eCommerce platform ourselves or go to a Cloud provider who can tailor and configure are system for us.

“If we develop ourselves there is a high risk something goes wrong or we can go with someone who has done it 50 times before.”

Honda Private Cloud

Cloud-based eCommerce platforms aren’t the only thing occupying Bassett’s time. On top of recently partnering with Nimsoft for real-time monitoring of its infrastructure, the IT manager says he’s also looking toward the next three years during which Honda Japan is expected to begin pushing out its SAP-based private cloud to its subsidiaries – including Honda MPE.

Bassett says one of the first deployments to take place when the Cloud descends from on high is a replacement of the company’s in-house developed ERP system with SAP’s finance module. That Honda Japan is desirous of setting SAP as its global standard finance platform is an added incentive.

However, Bassett says that until the Honda private Cloud comes to Australia it is difficult to assess whether moving more of Honda MPE’s systems – and in some cases migrating from existing Cloud providers such as Salesforce – is the way to go.

While the Honda Cloud may also make a lot of sense when looked at from an infrastructure and software cost-saving perspectives, taking such an approach could have hidden costs.

“Implementing SAP for a small company is a large exercise – it is probably an 18 month exercise,” he says. “It is an evolving step for us as the skills change the need to partner with different providers is going to increase.

“We have a very settled environment now but if the company decides to go SAP where do we get the skills from? They will probably come from Japan; we will ship them over and do an express install.”

Follow Tim Lohman on Twitter: @Tlohman

Follow Computerworld Australia on Twitter: @ComputerworldAU

More about: eBay, etwork, Honda, Nimsoft, SAP
References show all

Comments

1

custom-cycle-accessories

Mon 02/04/2012 - 11:00

I just priced a simple (plastic) chain slider for a Honda XR250 (part number 52170-KZ1-671, Suits 1990-2004) and approx 10 Honda dealers in NSW gave me a price from $95+
I can buy the same chain slider in the USA for abour $30-$45 and with it beinbg a small lightweight item I could have it shipped here via USPS for around $10-$15, With the dollar being in our favour it would be just a little bit less in total too
This is a ridiculous difference in pricing who is making all the extra profit here? Honda Australia or Honda stealerships as they are refered to?
Get your act together Aus Honda, You guys are forcing us to send dollars overseas

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Users posting comments agree to the Computerworld comments policy.
Login or register to link comments to your user profile, or you may also post a comment without being logged in.
Related Coverage
Related Whitepapers
Latest Stories
Community Comments
Tags: ecommerce, honda mpe, online retail
Whitepapers
All whitepapers
Sign up now to get free exclusive access to reports, research and invitation only events.
Featured Download
/downloads/product/14/gimp/

GNU Image Manipulation Program (GIMP)

When you think Open Source software, you may think of half-baked programs too hard to use, or perhaps lacking power. Well, think again. This Open ...

Computerworld newsletter

Join the most dedicated community for IT managers, leaders and professionals in Australia