Title: Ecommerce and Supply Chain Systems
1Chapter 8
- E-commerce and Supply Chain Systems
2Agenda
- Porters Five Competitive Forces Model
- E-commerce
- E-commerce and Market Efficiency
- E-commerce Economics
- Commerce Servers
- Supply Chain
- Structure
- Performance
- Profitability
- Bullwhip Effect
- Supplier Relationship Management
- Data Exchange
- EDI
- XML
- Discussion and Case Study
3Porters Five Competitive Forces Model
- Five competitive forces for profitability
- Bargaining power of suppliers
- Bargaining power of customers
- New entrants to the market
- Rivalry among firms
- Threats of substitutions for products or services
4Porters Model of Industry Structure
5E-commerce
- Buying and selling of goods and services over
public and private computer networks - Definition of the U.S. Census Bureau
- Merchant companies as those that take title to
the goods they sell - Nonmerchant companies as those that arrange for
the purchase and sale of goods without ever
owning or taking title to those goods
6E-commerce Merchant
- B2C (business-to-consumer) sales between a
supplier and a customer - A Web-based application or Web storefront where
customers enter and manage their orders such as
Amazon.com, REI.com, and LLBean.com - B2B (business-to-business) sales between
companies - Suppliers, distributors, and retailers
- B2G (business-to-government) sales between
companies and government organizations
7E-commerce B2B, B2G, and B2C
8E-commerce Nonmerchant
- Auction match buyers and sellers and support
goods for sales through a competitive bidding
process such as e-Bay - Clearinghouses (exchanges) provide goods and
services at a stated price, and arrange for the
delivery of the goods but they never take title
such as Amazon and electronic exchanges
9E-Commerce Category
10E-commerce Market Efficiency
- Disintermediation the elimination of middle
layers in the supply chain (direct sales form
manufacturer to consumer) - Flow of price information product price
comparison by consumer - Price elasticity price change based on the
consumer demand - Market efficiency as a whole
11E-commerce Economics
- Channel conflict
- Price conflict
- Logistic expense
- Customer service expense
12Commerce Server
- A computer using Web-based programs to support
Web storefront - Display products
- Support online ordering
- Process payments
- Interface with inventory-management
- Web technology
- SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol), FTP (File
Transfer Protocol) - HTML (Hypertext Markup Language)
- Hyperlink
- URL (Uniform Resource Locator)
- Web server Apache of Linux and IIS (Internet
Information Server) - Web browser (Netscape Navigator, Internet
Explorer, and Mozillas FireFox)
13Internet Protocols and Users
14Commerce Server Three-Tier Architecture
- Three different classes of computers
- User tier browser to request and process Web
pages - Server tier generating Web pages for requests
from browsers - Web farm (a set of Web servers) to minimize
customer delays for load balancing - Database tier processing SQL requests to
retrieve and store data
15Three-Tier Architecture
16Supply Chain - Structure
- Definition a network of organizations and
facilities to transform raw materials into
products and deliver products to customers - Entity customer, retailer, distributor,
manufacturer, supplier, transportation company,
and warehouse - Relationship
- Each organization connected to just one level up
(toward the supplier) and one level down (toward
the customer) - An organization can work with many organizations
both up and down at each level
17Supply Chain Relationships
18Supply Chain - Performance
- Facilities location, size, and operations
methodology - Inventory (raw materials, in-process work, and
finished goods) size and management - Transportation (movement of materials)
in-house/outsourced, mode, and routing - Information (request, respond, and inform one
another) purpose, availability, and means
19Supply Chain - Profitability
- The difference between the sum of the revenue
generated by the supply chain and the sum of the
costs that all organizations in the supply chain
incur to obtain that revenue - The maximum profit to the supply chain will not
occur if each organization in the supply chain
maximizes its own profits in isolation
20Supply Chain Bullwhip Effect
- Definition
- The variability in the size and timing of orders
increase at each stage up the supply chain (from
customer to supplier) - Not related to erratic consumer demand
- Reduce the overall supply chain profit
- Elimination
- Every participant in the supply chain has access
to consumer-demand information from the retailer - An inter-organizational information system for
sharing data
21Supplier Relationship Management
- SRM a business process for managing all
contracts between an organizational and its
suppliers for supplies, materials, or services - Three basic processes source, purchase, and
settle
22SRM - Source
- Find vendors
- Assess capabilities
- Negotiate terms and conditions
- Formalize those terms and conditions
- Make contract
23SRM - Purchase
- Request information, quotations, and proposals
from would-be suppliers - Approve purchase
- Create an order
24SRM - Settle
- Receive goods and services
- Resolve receivables to order
- Pay according to terms and policy
- Cash management
25Summary of SRM Processes
26Integration of CRM and SRM
- SRM examines inventory, determines required
items, and automatically creates the order via
its connection to the suppliers CRM - Suppliers CRM application interfaces with the
purchasers SRM application to perform the
ordering process as cheaply and efficiently as
possible
27 Relationship between CRM and SRM
28Data Exchange
- Telephone call for message
- Fax, postal mail, email for message and document
- Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
- eXtensible Markup Language (XML)
29EDI
- A standard of formats for electronically
exchanging common business documents - Number of data fields
- Sending sequence
- Number of characters in each data field
- Standards with various versions
- Point-to-point network, value-added network, or
Internet
30XML
- A new markup language by World Wide Web
Consortium (W3C) - A superior means for organizations to exchange
documents for computer processing - XML schema
- Service description
31XML Web Services
- Purpose a standard way for programs to access
one another remotely - Use service description to obtain details of
programs existing on another computer and how to
communicate with those programs - Service user uses the information of service
description to invoke the service - XML format for all service data
- Benefit
- The automation of supply chain interactions
- Development tool
- Microsoft .Net
- IBM J2EE
32Web Services for Sharing Sales Data
33Discussion
- Problem Solving (235a-b)
- State the basic rules to prepare an employee for
attending an inter-organization negotiation or
collaboration meeting. - Ethics (247a-b)
- State the basic ethic rule to prepare employees
for the supply chain information sharing. - Security (251a-b)
- State the solution and associated reasons to
handle the installation of another companys
programs in your organization. - Reflections (253a-b)
- State your recommendations to the future business
plan for Oracle and IBM related to the fate of
relational database, SQL, and XML five years
later.
34Case Study
- Case 8-1 (258 260) questions 2, 3 and 5
35Points to Remember
- Porters Five Competitive Forces Model
- E-commerce
- E-commerce and Market Efficiency
- E-commerce Economics
- Commerce Servers
- Supply Chain
- Structure
- Performance
- Profitability
- Bullwhip Effect
- Supplier Relationship Management
- Data Exchange
- EDI
- XML
- Discussion and Case Study