Title: ECommerce EBusiness B2B, B2C, C2C, C2B
1E-Commerce / E-Business(B2B, B2C, C2C, C2B)
- COMP1020 (Fall 2008)
- William K. Cheung
2e-Commerce
- Commerce
- Buying and selling products or services
- e-Commerce
- Buying and selling products and services
electronically - 4 models
- B2B (Business to Business)
- B2C (Business to Consumer)
- C2C (Consumer to Consumer)
- C2B (Consumer to Business)
3Exercise
B2B
B2C
C2C
C2B
4B2B
- Business to Business (B2B)
- when a business sells products and services to
customers who are primarily other businesses - typically a manufacturer-supplier relationship
- is where most of the money is (about 97)
5B2B What to trade?
Which companies will Parknshop trade with?
Paper supplier
6B2B What to trade?
What does Parknshop sell?
For sale
For own use
7B2B What to trade?
- Maintenance, repair, and operations (MRO)
materials (indirect materials) - materials necessary for running a company but do
not relate to the companys primary business
activities - e.g. air-con maintenance, repair parts, office
supplies, travel, shipping,
- Direct materials
- materials that are placed on the shelf for sale
in retail environments - or are used in production in a manufacturing
company - Relate directly to a companys primary business
activities - Quality, quantity, and delivery timing are
important
For sale
For own use
8B2B How to trade?
Paper supplier
9B2B How to trade?
Maintenance, repair, and operations (MRO)
materials
- Horizontal e-marketplace
- connects buyers and sellers
- across many industries
- All industries need office supplies, travel, and
the like - e.g. www.bigboxx.com
- Vertical e-marketplace
- connects buyers and sellers
- in a given industry
- Each industry has unique direct material needs
- e.g. www.covisint.com in the automotive
industry - conduct commerce in products and services
- platform for collaboration
10B2C
- Business to Consumer (B2C)
- when a business sells products and services to
individuals - Most consumers deal directly with a chosen
business on the Internet - Some through e-marketplaces like e-bay
11B2C How do you get to the company?
Want to order a bunch of flowers for your
girlfriend online?
WHERE to order?
12B2C How do you get to the company?
- i.e. How do companies attract us?
- Marketing Mix Tools
- set of marketing tools a company uses to pursue
its marketing objectives in reaching and
attracting potential customers - Registering with search engines
- Online ads
- Viral marketing
- Affiliate programs
13B2C How do you get to the company?
- How do companies attract customers?
- Registering with search engines
- Some search engines will list your site for free
- Most popular search engines charge a fee
- For an additional fee, your site can appear at
the top portion of a search list
14B2C How do you get to the company?
- How do companies attract customers?
- Online ads (banner ads)
- small advertisements that appear as a part of the
site
- Two variations are
- Pop-up ad small Web page advertisement that
appears on your screen outside the current Web
site - Pop-under ad pop-up ad you do not see until you
close your current browser window
15B2C How do you get to the company?
- How do companies attract customers?
- Viral marketing
- encourages users of a product or service supplied
by a B2C business to encourage friends to join in
as well - e.g. www.bluemountain.com
- Provides a link so that the recipient can send an
e-card back to the sender
16B2C How do you get to the company?
Shopping happily on amazon.com?
- How do companies attract customers?
- Affiliate programs
- arrangement between two e-commerce sites that
directs viewers from one site to another - If viewers buy at the second site, the second
site pays a small fee to the first site (usually
a percentage of the sale)
17B2C What you buy? Why you buy?
Which items do you prefer to buy them online?
Which you dont?
Source http//www.flickr.com/photos/valette/89179
6199/
Source www.canon.com.hk
Source www.chevignon-hk.com
Source http//www.flickr.com/photos/zootourist/31
7465572/
Source http//www.nike.com.hk/
Source http//www.w3sh.com/archives/2005/03/gagne
z_la_50000.html
18B2C What you buy? Why you buy?
Why do you prefer buying these things online?
Convenient
Can be down- loaded
Can be customized
19B2C What you buy? Why you buy?
- Specialty
- Higher priced
- Purchased less frequently
- e.g. stereos, computers
- Convenience
- Lower priced
- Purchased frequently
- e.g. common food items, household products
- Commoditylike
- Same no matter where you purchase it
- Price and ease of ordering are important
- e.g. books, music, movies
- Digital
- Purchased and delivered over the Internet
- Best product type for B2C e-commerce
- e.g. music, software
- Customization
- Customers can tailor make their own products
- e.g music, computers
20B2C How to pay?
- Credit Cards
- name
- credit card number
- expiry date
- does not require the
- card holders signature!
- Financial cybermediary
- Internet-based company that makes it easy for one
person to pay another person or organization over
the Internet - e.g. PayPal (www.paypal.com)
- Create an account with personal, credit card and
banking information - To pay money
- Go to the PayPal site
- Enter the amount
- Enter information of the recipient
21C2C
- Consumer-to-consumer
- Individuals selling and buying directly with each
other via a Web site - Mostly in form of auctions
- Two main forms of transactions
- Face-to-face
- Buyers pay to bank sellers mail the items ?
trustworthy? - Exchange
- e.g. www.tradeduck.com
Source http//oneredpaperclip.blogspot.com/2006/0
7/503-main-street.html
22C2B
- Consumer-to-Business
- Consumers (individuals) specify their needs to
companies and the companies offer products to
them - Possible?
- You specify your expertise and your expectations
(by posting your resume online). Some company
identifies you and offers you a job - Reverse auction
- You specify your needs
- Companies compete to obtain business
- e.g. http//www.priceline.com/
23Topic 4 E-Business
- HSBC visit - Oct 28, 2008 230-515pm
(tentatively) - No presentation ?
- The report submission will be one week after the
visit. - The table of contents is to be defined by you
this time. - The focus of your report is free as far as it is
related to what you have learned during the
visit. I think what you can grasp during the
visit will be limited and I suppose you need also
do some web search afterwards.
24One Possibility
- E.g., HSBC e-banking services
- What are the new opportunities due to the use of
e-banking services? - What are the service categories for individual
and business? - What are the threats of e-banking services and
what are the possible technical solutions? - Can you look at e-banking services from the
perspectives of different business models
discussed in this lecture? - Another focus could be issues around the data
center