Uniform Communication Standard

UCS, or Uniform Communication Standard, is used by the grocery and retail-oriented industries for electronic transactions. It is a subset of the X12 national standard consisting of some 300-plus general-purpose EDI messages. Within that large base set, many verticals are built on a small subset with narrow focus.

Usage

While starting in the grocery side of business, current users of UCS include:

  • manufacturers
  • retailers
  • wholesalers
  • brokers
  • beverage (alcohol)
  • convenience stores
  • food service industries
  • wholesale drug
  • mass merchandising
  • service merchandising
  • public warehousing

History

In the 1960s, the Transportation Data Coordinating Committee [TDCC], whose work later evolved into the ANSI X12|X12 standard began developing Electronic Data Interchange [EDI] standards primarily for transportation. From there, a variety of EDI implementations took root, including UCS. The original draft was designed by companies representing some of the industries noted earlier. By 1976 the design of an EDI standard was underway. It would take six years before the standard saw its first usage.

Scope

UCS supports both office-to-office (batch) and DSD, or "direct store delivery," transactions. The latter is an interactive method designed to replace paperwork by allowing systems ranging from small hand-held devices to large mainframe computers to be able to exchange delivery and return data.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.