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Title: American Express Canada Presentation Presenter: Yogi Schulz


1
American Express Canada Presentation Presenter
Yogi Schulz
Business 2 Business 101 Roadmap to Self-education
February 2001
2
HousekeepingItems
  • Refreshments
  • Facilities
  • Messages
  • Cellular phones beepers

3
Yogi SchulzBiography
  • President of Corvelle Management Consultants
  • Information technology related management
    consulting
  • Project management and systems development
  • Computing Canada columnist
  • Industry presenter
  • Project Management Symposium
  • CIPS Informatics
  • PMI - Information Systems SIG
  • Convergence

4
PresentationOutline
  • Introduction
  • Importance of the Internet
  • B 2 B Major Applications
  • B 2 B Benefits
  • E-commerce publications
  • Questions Answers

Web is full of E-commerce help
5
Using the Webfor Business Success
Im creating an E-business advice web site.
DOGBERT.COM had a successful IPO today,
MANAGE FASTER, YOU LAZY DOG!
Netting billions for Dogbert.
6
Presentation Objectives
  • Build an understanding of business-to-business
    application
  • categories
  • benefits
  • success criteria
  • Build awareness of available resources

Improve B 2 B E-commerce understanding
7
Importance of theInternet
  • E-mail surpassed the telephone as the most
    frequently used tool for business communication
    in 1998. Frost Sullivan 1999
  • Corporate spending on Web-based technology is
    predicted to top out at 85 billion in 1999, and
    jump to 203 billion by 2002. International Data
    Corp. 1999
  • More than 79.4 million adults, or 38 of the U.S.
    population age 16 and older, are now online.
    IntelliQuest Research 1999.
  • 71 of Internet users spend over 1/2 hour online
    each day. Pew Research Center 1999
  • Approximately 77 of all employed people use the
    Internet at work. U.S. Dept. of Commerce 1999

8
The Internet and E-commercein Canada
Source IDC Internet Commerce Market Model, V 5.0
9
Business-to-Business E-commerceDefinition
  • Conducting business transactions
  • electronically
  • not fax/phone/mail/in-person
  • online
  • typically through the web or EDI
  • not via e-mail
  • between two businesses
  • not with consumers/government

10
Business Impactof the Internet
  • Communication effect
  • dramatically reduce cost of finding and
    transferring information
  • Brokerage effect
  • access global markets with minimal incremental
    costs
  • Integration effect
  • shorten, enhance the value chain
  • Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
  • Sendil Ethiraj, Isin Guler - Ph.D. students
  • Harbir Singh - Chair, Management Department

11
Old vs. New Economyinfluenced by David Barry
Characteristics
Old
New
Currency
Money
High tech stocks
Stock exchange
NYSE
NASDAQ
Key activity
Make products
Buy/sell stocks
Owner
All of us
Bill Gates
Communication
Telephone
Voice mail
Product liability
Ridiculous
None
Distribution channel
Bricks mortar
Fedex
Strategy
Make money
Spend money
Meeting communication
Talk
Palm Pilot
12
B 2 B Major Applications Software Packages
  • Procurement
  • E-Marketplaces
  • Content Management
  • E-Marketing
  • Supply Management
  • Content Distribution
  • E-Commerce
  • Customer Support

Reference Business Week E.BIZ 11 December
2000 page EB 32
13
Procurement
  • Description
  • enables automated purchasing
  • Leading supplier - Ariba
  • www.ariba.com
  • Key competitors
  • Oracle
  • SAP
  • Commerce One
  • upstarts

14
E-Marketplaces
  • Description
  • creates online exchanges to link buyers and
    sellers
  • Leading supplier - Commerce One
  • www.commerceone.com
  • Key competitors
  • Ariba
  • FreeMarkets

15
Content Management
  • Description
  • manages thousands of pages on web sites
  • Leading supplier - Vignette
  • www.vignette.com
  • Leading supplier - Interwoven
  • www.interwoven.com
  • Key competitors
  • IntraNet Solutions
  • Plumtree

16
E-Marketing
  • Description
  • tracks customer buying patterns
  • predicts what and when theyll buy
  • Leading supplier - E.piphany
  • www.epiphany.com
  • Key competitors
  • Siebel Systems
  • SAP
  • Art Technology Group

17
Supply Management
  • Description
  • connects a companys Web operations with its
    suppliers
  • Leading supplier - i2
  • www.i2.com
  • Emerging competitors
  • Oracle
  • SAP
  • Leading Enterprise Application Integration
    competitors
  • webMethods
  • Vitria

18
Content Distribution
  • Description
  • accelerates content availability to end-users
  • Leading supplier - Akamai
  • www.akamai.com
  • Leading supplier - Inktomi
  • www.inktomi.com
  • Expected competitors
  • Oracle
  • Cisco

19
E-Commerce
  • Description
  • builds product catalogues
  • collects payments
  • tracks deliveries
  • Leading supplier - BEA Systems
  • www.beasys.com
  • Key competitors
  • BroadVision
  • IBM
  • Art Technology Group

20
Customer Support
  • Description
  • automates online customer service
  • Leading supplier - Kana Communications
  • www.kana.com
  • Leading supplier - Ask Jeeves
  • www.askjeeves.com
  • Key competitor - Siebel Systems

21
Safe Credit CardUse
22
B 2 B Benefits
  • Sellers
  • Buyers
  • Market Makers

23
B2B eCommerce BenefitsSellers
  • Lower costs in
  • marketing
  • administration
  • order fulfillment
  • Access new customers
  • Extend market reach still further by
  • creating and leveraging close collaboration among
    trading partners
  • tightening the relationship between supplier and
    buyer
  • promoting price discovery and spend aggregation
  • slashing supply chain costs

24
B2B eCommerce Benefits Buyers
  • Reduce direct and indirect supply chain costs by
  • leveraging their global scale
  • focusing their spend on preferred suppliers
  • taking advantage of dynamic models such as
    auctions and bid-quote for efficient sourcing and
    spot buying
  • Utilize new tools for logistics and payment
    creating new opportunities to
  • build transparency in the supply chain
  • decrease logistics costs
  • increase inventory turns
  • improve the overall performance of the
    manufacturing and procurement processes

Return 15-27 back in reduced costs - AMR
estimate 1999
25
B2B eCommerce Benefits Market Makers
  • Catalyze the growth of the B2B economy by
  • leveraging their domain expertise, customer
    relationships and supply chain strength
  • Reap substantial rewards by
  • delivering incredible value
  • sharing in the returns achieved by buyers and
    suppliers

26
Create MemorableWeb Sites
27
E-CommercePublications
  • Senior management
  • IT professional
  • IT research organizations

Printed and web
28
Senior Management Publications
  • Business.Com
  • www.business.com
  • CIO Canada
  • www.itworldcanada.com/cio
  • CIO Magazine
  • www.cio.com
  • Commerce Net
  • www.commerce.net
  • InfoSystems Executive
  • www.plesman.com/ise/home.html
  • NDU Information Resources Management College
  • www.nduknowledge.net

29
IT OrientedPublications - 1
  • About.com Electronic Commerce
  • ecommerce.about.com/smallbusiness/ecommerce
  • Bit Pipe
  • www.bitpipe.com
  • BizWeb - Web business guide
  • www.bizweb.com
  • www.bizweb.com/categories/web.software.html
  • BrainStorm Group
  • www.brainstorm-group.com
  • CIO Magazine
  • webbusiness.cio.com
  • CNET
  • www.cnet.com
  • ComputerWorld Canada
  • www.itworldcanada.com/cw/

30
IT OrientedPublications - 2
  • Computing Canada
  • www.plesman.com/cc/home.html
  • Cutter Information Corp.
  • www.cutter.com
  • E-Business
  • www.plesman.com/eb/home.html
  • ebiz
  • www.ebizmag.com
  • ebizQ.net
  • www.ebizq.net
  • The Eco Framework
  • eco.commerce.net
  • eco.commerce.net/rsrc/index.cfm
  • Ecom World
  • www.ecomworld.com

Excellent Glossary
31
IT OrientedPublications - 3
  • ecommerce Guide
  • ecommerce.internet.com
  • estreet
  • www.canoe.ca/eStreet/home.html
  • E-Commerce Times
  • www.ecommercetimes.com
  • Information Week
  • www.informationweek.com
  • Internet.com
  • www.internet.com
  • www.internetnews.com
  • TechRepublic
  • www.techrepublic.com

32
IT ResearchOrganizations - 1
  • Electronic Commerce Research Laboratory
  • elabweb.com
  • Forrester
  • www.forrester.com
  • Gartner Group
  • gartner5.gartnerweb.com/public/static/home/home.ht
    ml
  • Giga Information Group
  • www.gigaweb.com

33
IT ResearchOrganizations - 2
  • IDC
  • www.idc.com
  • Meta Group
  • www.metagroup.com
  • Round Table Group
  • www.round.table.com
  • Yankee Group
  • www.yankeegroup.com
  • Xephon
  • www.xephon.com

34
U. S. GovernmentE-commerce Sites - 1
  • Center for Research in Electronic Commerce
  • cism.bus.utexas.edu
  • Federal Electronic Commerce Program Office
  • www.ec.fed.gov
  • Electronic Commerce Policy
  • www.ecommerce.gov
  • Electronic Commerce Resource Center
  • www.ecrc.ctc.com
  • The Framework for Global Electronic Commerce
  • www.whitehouse.gov/WH/New/Commerce

35
U. S. GovernmentE-commerce Sites - 2
  • Government Technology
  • egov.govtech.net
  • National Electronic Commerce Coordinating Council
    (NECCC)
  • www.ec3.org
  • Electronic Commerce Knowledge Center
  • www.knowledgecenters.org
  • Office of Information Technology
  • www.itpolicy.gsa.gov

36
Canadian GovernmentE-commerce Sites
  • Canadian E-business Opportunities Roundtable
  • www.bcg.com/practice/ecommerce_canadian_roundtable
    .asp
  • Electronic Commerce Canada Inc.
  • www.ecc.ca/Index.html
  • Electronic Commerce in Canada
  • Industry Canada
  • e-com.ic.gc.ca/english

37
Canadian Government Industry Canada - E-commerce
Sites
  • Consumers and Electronic Commerce
  • strategis.ic.gc.ca/SSG/ca00622e.html?pacregionbce
    comnet
  • Electronic Commerce
  • strategis.ic.gc.ca/sc_indps/sectors/engdoc/ecom_hp
    g.html
  • The Electronic Market Place
  • strategis.ic.gc.ca/SSG/mi06840e.html
  • Net Gain Business on the Internet
  • strategis.ic.gc.ca/sc_indps/sectors/engdoc/gain_hp
    g.html
  • Retailing Resource Centre
  • strategis.ic.gc.ca/engdoc/retailer.html

38
Business 2 Business 101
Wrap UP
  • Importance of the Internet
  • B 2 B Major Applications
  • B 2 B Benefits
  • E-commerce publications

39
Any Questions?
  • Dogbert
  • will explain it
  • to you

40
American ExpressBusiness 2 Business 101
700, 205 - 5th Ave. S.W. Calgary, Alberta
Canada T2P 2V7 Phone (403) 249-5255 E-mail
YogiSchulz_at_corvelle.com Web www.corvelle.com
  • President of Corvelle Consulting
  • Information technology related management
    consulting
  • Project management and systems development
  • Computing Canada columnist

41
Bibliography- 1
  • Ariba B2B Update Exclusive
  • Don Tapscott, Chair of Digital 4Sight and
    co-author of Digital Capital
  • www.ariba.com/corporate/news/tapscott.cfm
  • B 2 B Major Applications - Software Packages
  • Business Week E.BIZ, 11 December 2000, page EB 32
  • B2B Marketplaces in the New Economy
  • Ariba white paper
  • Beyond Today's Turning Point for Net Business
  • www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/oct2000/nf200
    0105_825.htm
  • Business Week, 5 October 2000
  • Blueprint for B2B Success
  • Ventro white paper

42
Bibliography- 2
  • Content Management in E-Commerce
  • Tony White and Kathleen Hall, March 2, 2000, Giga
    Information Group
  • E-Business and the Myth of Disintermediation
  • M. Bernstein, 8 November 1999
  • gartner5.gartnerweb.com/public/static/hotc/hc00084
    111.html
  • E-commerce waits for no one
  • Victoria Berry, ComputerWorld Canada, 28 July
    2000
  • Electronic Commerce Solutions 99
  • vendor presentations about E-commerce
    technology/cases
  • www.okreg.com/ecomm

43
Bibliography- 3
  • Exchange Breaking the B2B Barrier
  • Oracle Magazine, January/February 2000, p. 66
  • Organizing for E-Business Getting It Right
  • M. Gerrard. 12 September 2000
  • gartner5.gartnerweb.com/public/static/hotc/hc00092
    498.html
  • Proper Staffing Is Key To E-Commerce Success
  • Ben Slick, Internet Week Online, 5 July 1999
  • www.internetwk.com/change/change070599-2.htm
  • Purchasing in Packs
  • Ken Ferguson, Business Week E.Biz, 1 Nov. 1999,
    p. EB33
  • By Stephen Kindel, Executive Edge, February -
    March 1999
  • www.ee-online.com/feb/feb_feat_03.htm

44
Bibliography- 4
  • Reassessing E-Commerce
  • Despite its size and explosive growth, e-commerce
    requires close attention to all of a company's
    other marketing channels
  • RosettaNet key to 3Coms supply chain
  • PC Week, 14 February 2000, p. 25
  • The secret of e-business success
  • Rod Travers, 09/15/2000, CIO
  • Supply chain management the big payoff
  • Christopher Koch - CIO Magazine, 2 October 2000
  • www.itworld.ca/portals/portal_template.cfm?viewtr
    uePortalID6ArticleID1297CategoryID3

45
Bibliography- 5
  • 10 success factors for e business
  • www.ibm.com
  • Ten Ways IT And E-Biz Projects Are Different
  • David Smith, Internet Week Online, 11 October
    1999
  • www.internetwk.com/transform/transform101199-2.htm
  • The Devil in the Details
  • How the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce hopes
    to save over 50 million a year automating the
    purchasing function
  • The Seven Caveats of On-Line Procurement
  • By Catherine Fredman, Executive Edge, April - May
    1999
  • www.ee-online.com/apr/apr_feat_04.htm

46
B2B Procurement - 1
  • Obtain product information
  • requisitioner obtains information about products
    that are available from Intranet-accessible
    electronic catalog.
  • catalog is maintained by suppliers and corporate
    purchasing department.
  • Create the order
  • requisitioner creates order by completing a
    web-based form.
  • requisitioner must know how to fill out form
    correctly, including the entry of information,
    such as product codes, cost centre codes and
    supplier codes.

Electronic automation of traditional business
practices
47
B2B Procurement - 2
  • Obtain approval
  • requisitioner seeks approval from the relevant
    authorizer(s).
  • form is routed to the correct individual or
    individuals using workflow features of software.
  • Create/transmit purchase order
  • purchase order is generated and submitted to the
    supplier for fulfillment.
  • transmission uses EDI, XML or proprietary data
    format
  • Fulfill the purchase order
  • supplier checks that the product is currently in
    stock and that the quoted price is valid.
  • supplier fulfills the customer order by removing
    it from inventory.
  • supplier transmits order confirmation to
    requisitioner.

48
B2B Procurement - 3
  • Ship the product
  • supplier relies on address on purchase order for
    delivery of goods.
  • requisitioner can access supplier web site to
    track the status of the purchase order.
  • Receive the product
  • product is delivered to and processed by the
    receiving department of the customer.
  • receiving department will notify the
    requisitioner via e-mail
  • receiving department will deliver product to
    requisitioner.

49
B2B Procurement - 4
  • Pay for the product
  • when the arrival of the product is confirmed,
    payment is made to the supplier for the amount
    stated on the purchase order.
  • Payment is made via EFT transaction.

Process description derived from The
Procurement Process http//www.microsoft.com/TRAIN
INGANDSERVICES/content/training/ samples/2260/Webf
iles/Mod02/02m8.htm
50
Features of e-Procurement - 1
  • Online discovery of product information
  • requisitioner uses a self-service Web application
    to place their order.
  • available products listed in a centrally
    maintained online catalog with pricing
    information.
  • availability can be checked directly with the
    supplier's system
  • anticipated delivery time can be provided.
  • Simplified order creation
  • requisitioner will be prompted by the application
    to fill out any required parts of the order form.
  • Look-ups for codes can be implemented.
  • Intelligent approval process
  • The application will automatically submit the
    order to the correct individual for approval. The
    requisitioner need not know the identity of this
    individual. If more than one individual is
    involved in the approval, the request can be
    automatically routed between the individuals as
    approval is gained.
  • Automatic submission of the order to the
    suppliers
  • At the end of the approval chain, the order can
    be automatically processed to segregate the goods
    from different manufacturers. The system can
    automatically combine multiple orders on a daily,
    weekly, or cost basis before creating a purchase
    order and submitting it to the supplier.
  • Automatic fulfillment of the order
  • The supplier system can automatically process the
    order. After the information on the order has
    been validated, warehousing and billing systems
    can be contacted to fulfill the order.
  • Efficient, automated shipping process
  • Orders can be sent to the pre-stored standard
    location for the purchasing company (if
    appropriate) through a shipping company (again,
    if appropriate). Links between the purchasing
    organization's systems and those of the
    supplier/shipper allow the requisitioner to track
    the progress of the order.
  • Automatic routing, inventory updates, and
    delivery of goods to the recipient
  • As goods arrive, they can be entered into a
    system that tracks goods received. The system can
    match the goods to the orders submitted and
    provide information about the recipient of the
    goods.
  • Automatic payment for the goods

51
Features of e-Procurement - 2
  • Intelligent approval process
  • application automatically submits the order to
    the correct individual for approval.
  • requisitioner need not know the identity of this
    individual.
  • if more than one individual is involved in the
    approval, the request can be automatically routed
    between the individuals as approval is gained.
  • Automatic submission of the order to the
    suppliers
  • At the end of the approval chain, the order can
    be automatically processed to segregate the goods
    from different manufacturers.
  • system can automatically combine multiple orders
    on a daily, weekly, or cost basis before creating
    a purchase order and submitting it to the
    supplier.

52
Features of e-Procurement - 3
  • Automatic fulfillment of the order
  • The supplier system can automatically process the
    order. After the information on the order has
    been validated, warehousing and billing systems
    can be contacted to fulfill the order.
  • Efficient, automated shipping process
  • Orders can be sent to the pre-stored standard
    location for the purchasing company (if
    appropriate) through a shipping company (again,
    if appropriate). Links between the purchasing
    organization's systems and those of the
    supplier/shipper allow the requisitioner to track
    the progress of the order.

53
Features of e-Procurement - 4
  • Automatic routing, inventory updates, and
    delivery of goods to the recipient
  • As goods arrive, they can be entered into a
    system that tracks goods received. The system can
    match the goods to the orders submitted and
    provide information about the recipient of the
    goods.
  • Automatic payment for the goods
  • The system may require the requisitioner to
    confirm receipt of the goods. The confirmation
    could be used as a trigger to automatically pay
    the supplier for those goods.

Process description derived from Automating the
Procurement Process http//www.microsoft.com/TRAIN
INGANDSERVICES/content/training/ samples/2260/Webf
iles/Mod02/02m9.htm
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