Aggregate All your Data in One Location
Order Information Integration
Apart from this, it is also possible to integrate sales, orders, invoices, and quotes. Again, this can be a one way or two-way integration between the systems. It may include things like the overall details of the order. So, for instance,
someone goes to Magento eCommerce and places an order. The order and all the associated information get sunk into Oracle EBS. The data includes the line items, tax information, product-specific tax classes, shipping information, delivery fee,
customs and duties, any discounts, items ordered, payment information, and transaction data, etc.
It makes it easier to fetch profile information, transaction IDs, and order information. So you can effectively handle any customer service requests like refunds. You would be able to track all this information between Oracle EBS and Magento
eCommerce.
Ultimately, we recommend that you explore all of the scenarios. However, most of the time it is common to have invoices go from Oracle EBS into Magento so that users can pay
for invoices from Oracle EBS inside of Magento. Similarly, quotes can go from Oracle EBS into Magento. They can be converted into what are called "negotiable checkouts" or "negotiable quotes" inside of Magento. Essentially, end users can then
pay for them inside Magento after which they are sent back to Oracle EBS as an order.