Title: Agent Technology for eCommerce
1Agent Technology for e-Commerce
- Chapter 4 Shopping Agents
- Maria Fasli
- http//cswww.essex.ac.uk/staff/mfasli/ATe-Commerce
.htm
2Consumer Buying Behaviour Model
- Consumer Buying Behaviour (CBB) theory provides a
model that describes the actions and decisions
involved in buying and selling goods and services - Most CBB models involve six stages
- Need recognition
- Product brokering
- Merchant brokering
- Negotiation
- Purchase and delivery
- Service and evaluation
- Agent technology can be potentially used in every
stage
3Online shopping The problem
- Consumers attitudes towards online shopping have
changed - To search for a product, a consumer can
- Visit specific vendors sites that she is aware
of - Use standard search engines and keyword retrieval
to identify potential vendors and products - In each site visited the consumer can search for
a product, its price, specification and other
attributes
4- This approach has several shortcomings
- There may be hundreds of vendors selling the same
or similar products checking vendors requires
time - Returned results through standard search
technology may be biased - If more than one products are required there may
be no single site that caters for all - When visiting a new vendor, the consumer needs to
get acquainted with new interfaces
time-consuming and also hinders impulse shopping
5- Vendors may allow users to sign up to receive
alerts - Completing lengthy forms may be required which
may also require the user to provide personal
information the users privacy is weakened - Such services are impersonal
6Using shopping agents
- Users have more choice, but there are too many
choices information overload - Shopping agents or shopbots can enhance the
users shopping experience by - Helping them decide what to buy
- Finding specifications and reviews for products
- Comparing products, vendors and services
according to user-defined criteria - Finding the best value products and services
- Monitoring online shops for product availability,
special offers and discounts and sending alerts
7Potential benefits
- For the individual user
- Time savings
- More vendors can be queried and better deals can
be uncovered - User can have access to smaller vendors
- Help them make educated decisions
- Psychological burden-shifting
8- For the marketplace
- Shopping agents and reputation systems can help
tackle fraud - Increased competition
- Market efficiency
- Smaller vendors can be visible
- Shopping agents can be used not only on retail
markets, but also on business-to-business (B2B)
markets
9Working for the user
- To be truly useful and work for the user they
have to - Be impartial i.e. provide unbiased information to
the user - Be autonomous, proactively seek to help the user
for instance by checking for products etc. - Preserve privacy when required, the users
identity may have to be concealed to preserve her
privacy - Offer personalized services to the user
- Make comparisons based on multiple attributes
10How shopping agents work
11- Similarly to meta-search engines
screen-scraping - They parse HTML pages and look for specific
information - They rely on regularities in the layout of web
pages - Navigation regularity
- Uniformity regularity
- Vertical separation regularity
12Limitations and issues
- Current techniques for extracting information
rely on syntax - Although the information required is stored in
machine-processable and well-structured format,
agent developers have no access to this
information - Heuristics are ad-hoc, difficult and
time-consuming to develop and prone to errors - The resulting systems are cumbersome and vendor
specific - New vendors cannot be discovered and queried at
runtime - Only able to retrieve limited information and
comparisons are usually made on price alone
vendors vendors do not like that, other
attributes may be important (guarantee, service
etc.) - The information retrieved may be inaccurate
13- Shopping agents make commissions in three ways
- For each hit made to the vendors site
- For sales that result from clickthrough purchases
- For a favourable placement on the shopping
agents recommended lists - Recommendation offered may therefore be biased
- There may be discrepancies between reported and
listed prices due to commissions - Such shopping agents may create the false
impression that the best deal has been found
14- From the vendors perspective
- Although shopping agents improve their
visibility, they also put their products next to
those of competitors - To be competitive a vendor may have to reduce its
profit margins
15Shopping agents and Web services
- Web services can be used as gateways to the
vendors web sites