Scope
Integrated business operational view (BOV) The Open-edi Reference Model (ISO/IEC 14662, Section 4) states: The intention is that the sending, by an Open-edi Party, of information from a scenario, conforming to Openedi standards, shall allow the acceptance and processing of that information in the context of that scenario by one or more Open-edi Parties by reference to the scenario and without the need for agreement. However, the legal requirements and/or liabilities resulting from the engagement of an organization in any Open-edi transaction may be conditioned by the competent legal environment(s) or the formation of a legal interchange agreement between the participating organizations.
Open-edi Parties need to observe rule-based behavior and possess the ability to make commitments in Open-edi (e.g., business, operational, technical, legal and/or audit perspectives).
This BOV-related standard addresses the fundamental requirements of the commercial and legal frameworks and their environments on business transactions, and also integrates the requirements of the information technology and telecommunications environments.
In addition to the existing strategic directions of portability and interoperability, the added strategic direction of ISO/IEC JTC1 of cultural adaptability is supported in this standard.
This BOV standard also supports requirements arising from the public policy/consumer environment, cross-sectorial requirements and the need to address horizontal issues.7)
This BOV standard integrates these different sets of requirements. See above Figure 3. This Standard allows constraints (which include legal requirements, commercial and/or international trade and contract terms, public policy (e.g. privacy/data protection, product or service labelling, consumer protection), laws and regulations) to be defined and clearly integrated into Open-edi through the BOV. This means that terms and definitions in this standard serve as a common bridge among these different sets of business operational requirements allowing the integration of code sets and rules defining these requirements to be integrated into business processes electronically.
This Standard contains a methodology and tool for specifying common business practices as parts of common business transactions in the form of scenarios, scenario attributes, roles, Information Bundles and Semantic Components. It achieves this by 1) developing standard computer process able specifications of common business rules and practices as scenarios and scenario components; and thus 2) maximizing the re-use of these components in business transactions.