Chapter 1 Foundation of Electronic Commerce

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Chapter 1 Foundation of Electronic Commerce

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Title: Chapter 1 Foundation of Electronic Commerce


1
Chapter 1
Overview of Electronic Commerce
2
Learning Objectives
  • Define electronic commerce (EC) and describe its
    various categories
  • Describe and discuss the content and framework of
    EC
  • Describe the major types of EC transactions
  • Describe some EC business models
  • Discuss the benefits of EC to organizations,
    consumers, and society

3
Learning Objectives (cont.)
  • Describe the limitations of EC
  • Describe the role of the digital revolution in EC
    and the economic impact of EC
  • Discuss the contribution of EC in helping
    organizations respond to environmental pressures
  • Discuss some major managerial issues regarding EC

4
Qantas AirwaysA New Way to Compete
  • The Problem
  • Increased fuel costs placed pressure on the
    airline industry
  • Qantas faced two major competitors and higher
    fees at Sydney Airport
  • Air traffic dwindled after September 11th
  • Qantas needed to replace aircraft in order to
    stay competitive
  • Australian economy slowed down

5
Qantas Airways (cont.)
  • The Solution
  • Bought fuel contracts for future dates
    (traditional response)
  • Took major steps to implement e-commerce (EC)
    involving buying, selling, and exchanging goods,
    services, information, and payments electronically

6
Qantas Airways (cont.)
  • Business-to-business (B2B)
  • E-marketplace member
  • Joined Airnew Co.links major airlines with
    suppliers
  • Fuel
  • Fuel services
  • Light maintenance services
  • Catering
  • Joined Corporcure.com.au with 13 other large
    Australian corporations
  • Electronically purchase general goods and
    services
  • Office supplies
  • Light bulbs
  • Maintenance services

7
Qantas Airways (cont.)
  • Formed Pan-Pacific exchange
  • E-marketplace
  • Business-to-business-to-consumer (B2B2C)
  • Provides
  • Full spectrum travel services
  • Products and services to business partners
  • Travel agencies who can use this marketplace to
    sell directly to consumers

8
Qantas Airways (cont.)
  • Business-to-customer (B2C)
  • Online booking
  • E-mails to frequent-flyer members
  • Mileage bonuses and opportunities to win 10,000
    AU
  • Wireless communications
  • Business-to-employee (B2E)
  • Online training
  • Online banking

B2C B2E
9
Qantas Airways (cont.)
  • The Results
  • Qantas expects to see an estimated 85 million AU
    in cost reductions per year by 2003
  • Qantas expects to increase annual revenues by
    700 million AU from nontravel sales
  • Outlasted one competitor

10
EC Definitions Concepts
  • Electronic Commerce (EC) is the process of
    buying, selling, or exchanging products,
    services, and information via computer networks
  • EC defined from these perspectives
  • Communications
  • Business process
  • Service
  • Online
  • Collaborations
  • Community

EC
11
EC Definitions Concepts (cont.)
  • E-business is a broader definition of EC that
    includes not just the buying and selling of goods
    and services, but also
  • Servicing customers
  • Collaborating with business partners
  • Conducting electronic transactions within an
    organization
  • Pure vs. Partial EC based on the degree of
    digitization of product, process, delivery agent

12
Exhibit 1.1The Dimensions of Electronic Commerce
13
EC Definitions Concepts (cont.)
  • Traditional commerce all dimensions are physical
  • Brick-and-mortar organizations
  • Old-economy organizations (corporations)
  • Perform all business off-line
  • Sell physical products by means of physical agents

14
EC Definitions Concepts (cont.)
  • Pure EC all dimensions are digital
  • Pure online (virtual) organizations
  • New-economy organization
  • Sell products or services only online
  • Partial EC a mix of digital and physical
    dimensions
  • Click-and-mortar organizations
  • Conduct EC activities
  • Do their primary business in the physical world

15
EC Definitions Concepts (cont.)
  • Internet vs. Non-Internet EC
  • VANsvalue-added networks
  • LANslocal area networks
  • Single computerized machines
  • Using a smart card in a vending machine
  • Using a cell phone to make an online purchase

16
Electronic Markets vs. Interorganizational
Systems
  • E-markets
  • Buyers and sellers meet to exchange
  • Goods
  • Services
  • Money
  • Information
  • Interorganizational Information Systems (IOS)
  • Between two or more organizations
  • Routine transaction processing
  • Information flow

17
The EC Framework and Field
  • An EC Framework
  • EC applications supported by infrastructure and 5
    support areas
  • People
  • Public policy
  • Technical standards and protocols
  • Business partners
  • Support services

18
Exhibit 1.2A Framework for EC
19
Classification of EC by the Nature of the
Transaction
  • Business-to-business (B2B) EC model in which
    all of the participants are businesses or other
    organizations
  • Business-to-consumer (B2C) EC model in which
    businesses sell to individual shoppers
  • Business-to-business-to-consumer (B2B2C) EC
    model in which a business provides some product
    or service to a client business the client
    business maintains its own customers, to whom the
    product or service is provided

20
Classification of EC by the Nature of the
Transaction (cont.)
  • Consumer-to-business(C2B) individuals who use
    the Internet to sell products or services to
    organizations and /or seek sellers to bid on
    products or services they need
  • Consumer-to-consumer (C2C) consumers sell
    directly to other consumers

21
Classification of EC by the Nature of the
Transaction (cont.)
  • Mobile commerce (m-commerce)EC transactions and
    activities conducted in a wireless environment
  • Location-commerce(l-commerce)
  • m-commerce transactions targeted to individuals
    in specific locations, at specific times

22
Classification of EC by the Nature of the
Transaction (cont.)
  • Intrabusiness (organizational) EC EC category
    that includes all internal organizational
    activities that involve the exchange of goods,
    services, or information among various units and
    individuals in an organization

23
Classification of EC by the Nature of the
Transaction (cont.)
  • Business-to-employee (B2E) EC model in which an
    organization delivers services, information, or
    products to its individual employees
  • Collaborative commerce (c-commerce) EC model in
    which individual or groups communicate or
    collaborate online
  • E-government Government-to-citizens (G2C) EC
    model in which a government entity buys or
    provides good, services, or information to
    businesses or individual citizens

24
Classification of EC by the Nature of the
Transaction (cont.)
  • Exchange (electronic) a public e-market with
    many buyers and sellers
  • Exchange-to-exchange (E2E) EC model in which
    electronic exchanges formally connect to one
    another for the purpose of exchanging information

25
Interdisciplinary Nature of EC
  • Management information systems
  • Accounting and auditing
  • Management
  • Business law and ethics
  • Others
  • Marketing
  • Computer sciences
  • Consumer behavior and psychology
  • Finance
  • Economics

26
Brief History of EC
  • EC applications first developed in the early
    1970s
  • Electronic funds transfer (EFT)
  • Limited to
  • Large corporations
  • Financial institutions
  • A few other daring businesses

EFT
27
Brief History of EC (cont.)
  • Electronic data interchange (EDI)electronic
    transfer of documents
  • Purchase orders
  • Invoices
  • E-payments between firms doing business
  • Enlarged pool of participants to include
  • Manufacturers
  • Retailers
  • Service providers

28
Brief History of EC (cont.)
  • Interorganizational systems (IOS)
  • Stock trading
  • Travel reservation systems
  • Internet became more commercialized in the early
    1990s
  • Almost all medium-and large-sized organization in
    the world now has a Web site
  • Most large corporations have comprehensive portals

29
Brief History of EC (cont.)
  • EC Successes
  • Pure online
  • eBay
  • VeriSign
  • AOL
  • Checkpoint
  • Click-and-mortar
  • GE
  • IBM
  • Intel
  • Schwab
  • EC Failures
  • E-tailors began to fail in 1999
  • This does not mean that ECs days are numbered
  • Large EC companies like Amazon.com are expanding
    but success or failure is not certain

30
Success Story of Campusfood.com
  • Campusfood.coms recipe for success was to
    provide interactive menus to college students
  • Using the power of the Internet to enhance
    traditional telephone ordering of meals
  • Taking thousands of orders for local restaurants,
    bringing pizzas, hoagies, and wings to the Penn
    community

31
Campusfood.com (cont.)
  • Building the companys customer base involved
  • Registering other universities
  • Attracting students
  • Generating a list of restaurants from which
    students could order food for delivery
  • Some activities are outsourced to a marketing
    firm enabling the addition of dozens of schools
    nationwide

32
Campusfood.com (cont.)
  • Built on an investment of less than 1 million
  • Private investors
  • Friends
  • Family members
  • Revenue is generated through transaction fees5
    percent commission on each order

33
Campusfood.com (cont.)
  • At campusfood.com you can
  • Navigate through a list of local restaurants,
  • Browse an interactive menu.
  • Bypass busy telephone signals to place an order
    online
  • Get access to special foods, promotions, and
    restaurant giveaways
  • Arrange electronic payment of your order

34
Business Models
  • A method of doing business by which a company can
    generate revenue to sustain itself
  • Spells out where the company is positioned in the
    value chain
  • Business models are a component of a business
    plan or a business case

35
Business Plans Business Cases
  • Business plan
  • A written document that identifies the business
    goals and outlines the plan of how to achieve them
  • Business case
  • A written document that is used by managers to
    garner funding for specific applications or
    projects its major emphasis is the justification
    for a specific investment

36
The Content of a Business Plan
  • Mission statement and company description
  • The management team
  • The market and the customers
  • The industry and competition
  • The specifics of the products and/or services
  • Marketing and sales plan
  • Operations plan
  • Financial projections and plans
  • Risk analysis
  • Technology analysis

37
Structure of Business Models
  • All business models must specify their revenue
    model (the description of how the company or an
    EC project will earn revenue)
  • Revenue sources are
  • Transaction fees
  • Subscription fees
  • Advertisement fees
  • Affiliate fees
  • Sales
  • Other models
  • Value proposition is the description of the
    benefits a company can derive from using EC

38
Typical Business Models in EC
  • Online, direct marketing
  • Electronic tendering systems
  • Reverse auction is a tendering system sellers are
    invited to bid on the fulfillment of an order to
    produce a product or provide a service the
    lowest bid wins
  • Name your own price
  • Find the best price

39
Typical Business Models in EC (cont.)
  • Affiliate marketing is an arrangement whereby a
    marketing partner (business, organization or
    individual) refers consumers to the selling
    companys Web site
  • Viral marketing is word-or-mouth marketing in
    which customers promote a product or service to
    friends or other people by using the Internet

40
Typical Business Models in EC (cont.)
  • Group purchasing is getting many small buyers
    together to by in large quantities
  • Online auctions
  • Product and service customization
  • Customization is the creation of a product or
    service according to the buyers specifications
  • Electronic marketplaces and exchanges
  • Vertical marketplace is a marketplace that
    concentrates on one industry also called
    vertical portals or vortals
  • Supply chain improvers

41
Exhibit 1.3The Business Model of 7dream.com
42
The Benefits of EC
  • Benefits to Organizations
  • Expands the marketplace to national and
    international markets
  • Decreases the cost of creating, processing,
    distributing, storing and retrieving paper-based
    information
  • Allows reduced inventories and overhead by
    facilitating pull-type supply chain management

43
Benefits of EC (cont.)
  • The pull-type processing allows for customization
    of products and services which provides
    competitive advantage to its implementers
  • Reduces the time between the outlay of capital
    and the receipt of products and services
  • Supports business processes reengineering (BPR)
    efforts
  • Lowers telecommunications cost - the Internet is
    much cheaper than value added networks (VANs)

44
Benefits of EC (cont.)
  • Benefits to consumers
  • Enables consumers to shop or do other
    transactions 24 hours a day, all year round from
    almost any location
  • Provides consumers with more choices
  • Provides consumers with less expensive products
    and services by allowing them to shop in many
    places and conduct quick comparisons

45
Benefits of EC (cont.)
  • Allows quick delivery of products and services
    (in some cases) especially with digitized
    products
  • Consumers can receive relevant and detailed
    information in seconds, rather than in days or
    weeks
  • Makes it possible to participate in virtual
    auctions
  • Allows consumers to interact with other consumers
    in electronic communities and exchange ideas as
    well as compare experiences
  • Facilitates competition, which results in
    substantial discounts

46
Benefits of EC (cont.)
  • Benefits to society
  • Enables more individuals to work at home, and to
    do less traveling for shopping, resulting in less
    traffic on the roads, and lower air pollution
  • Allows some merchandise to be sold at lower
    prices, benefiting less affluent people
  • Enables people in Third World countries and rural
    areas to enjoy products and services which
    otherwise are not available to them
  • Facilitates delivery of public services at a
    reduced cost, increases effectiveness, and/or
    improves quality

47
Interorganization and Collaboration
Orbis Corporation changes linear physical supply
chain to an electronic hub
48
Orbis Corporation (cont.)
49
The Limitations of EC
  • Technical limitations
  • There is a lack of universally accepted standards
    for quality, security, and reliability
  • The telecommunications bandwidth is insufficient
  • Software development tools are still evolving
  • There are difficulties in integrating the
    Internet and EC software with some existing
    (especially legacy) applications and databases.
  • Special Web servers in addition to the network
    servers are needed (added cost).
  • Internet accessibility is still expensive and/or
    inconvenient

50
The Digital Revolution and the Economic Impact
of EC
  • In the Digital Revolution the economy is based on
    digital technologies including
  • Digital communication networks
  • Computers
  • Software
  • Other related information technologies
  • Also called
  • Internet economy
  • New economy
  • Web economy

51
The Digital Revolution and the Economic Impact
of EC (cont.)
  • Digital networking and communication
    infrastructures provide a global platform where
    people and organizations
  • Interact
  • Communicate
  • Collaborate
  • Search for information

52
The Digital Revolution and the Economic Impact
of EC (cont.)
  • The global platform includes these
    characteristics
  • A vast array of digitizable products
  • Consumers and firms conduct financial
    transactions digitally
  • Microprocessors and networking capabilities
    embedded in physical goods

53
The Digital Revolution and the Economic Impact
of EC (cont.)
  • The term digital economy also refers to the
    convergence of computing and communication
    technologies on the Internet and other networks
    and the resulting flow of information and
    technology that is stimulating e-commerce and
    vast organizational changes

54
The Digital Revolution and the Economic Impact
of EC (cont.)
  • This convergence enables all types of information
    (data, audio, video, etc.) to be stored,
    processed, and transmitted over networks to many
    destinations worldwide
  • Web-based EC systems are accelerating the digital
    revolution by providing competitive advantage to
    organizations

55
Exhibit 1.5Cost Curve of Regular Digital
Products
56
Exhibit 1.6The Economic Effects of EC
57
Economics of Digital Systems (cont.)
  • Reach vs. richness
  • Another economic impact of EC is the trade-off
    between the number of customers a company can
    reach (called reach) and the amount of
    interactions and information services they can
    provide to customers (called richness)

58
Exhibit 1.7Reach vs. Richness
59
Contributions of EC to Organizations
  • The New World of Business
  • Business pressures
  • Organizational responses
  • The role of Information Technology (including
    electronic commerce)

60
Business Pressures
  • The term business environment refers to the
    social, economic, legal, technological, and
    political actions that affect business activities
  • Business pressures are divided into the following
    categories
  • Market (economic)
  • Societal
  • Technological

61
Exhibit 1.8Major Business Pressures the Role
of EC
62
Organizational Responses
  • Strategic systems
  • Provide organizations with strategic advantages,
    enabling them to
  • Increase their market share
  • Better negotiate with their suppliers
  • Prevent competitors from entering into their
    territory

63
FedEx Solutions
  • FedEx provides a host of Web-based logistics
    solutions to enterprise (business) customers
    providing services
  • FedEx distribution centers
  • Worldwide network of warehouses to provide
    ready-to-use warehousing services to businesses
  • Allows for instant expansion of distribution
    capabilities
  • Network is managed electronically
  • All communication with the shippers and receivers
    is done online

64
FedEx Solutions (cont.)
  • FedEx express distribution depots
  • Provides a one-stop source of express
    distribution capabilities.
  • Goods in these depots are available for delivery
    24 hours a day.
  • Service is targeted at time-critical businesses
  • All communication is done online

65
FedEx Solutions (cont.)
  • FedEx returns management
  • FedEx NetReturn designed to streamline the
    process of returns
  • Internet-based system to schedule pickup of
    packages from consumers and to obtain
    time-definite delivery
  • Online status tracking and customized reporting

66
FedEx Solutions (cont.)
  • Other value-added services
  • Products can be shipped from a FedEx-operated
    warehouse instead of the business customers
    warehouse
  • FedEx can provide a merge-in-transit service to
    customers that operate on rapid turnaround and
    delivery

67
Organizational Responses (cont.)
  • Continuous improvement efforts
  • Many companies continuously conduct programs to
    improve
  • Productivity
  • Quality
  • Customer service
  • Business process reengineering (BPR)
  • Strong business pressures may require a radical
    change
  • Such an effort is referred to as business process
    reengineering (BPR)

68
Organizational Responses (cont.)
  • Business alliances
  • Alliances with other companies, even competitors,
    can be beneficial
  • Virtual corporationelectronically supported
    temporary joint venture
  • Special organization for a specific
  • Time-limited mission
  • Electronic markets
  • Optimize trading efficiency
  • Enable their members to compete globally
  • Require the collaboration of the different
    companies and competitors

69
Organizational Responses (cont.)
  • Reduction in cycle time and time to market
  • Cycle time reductionshortening the time it takes
    for a business to complete a productive activity
    from its beginning to end
  • Extremely important for increasing productivity
    and competitiveness
  • Extranet-based applications expedite steps in the
    process of product or service development,
    testing, and implementation

70
Time-to-Market for New Drugs
  • FDA must be extremely careful in approving new
    drugs public pressure to approve new drugs
    quickly
  • FDA requires
  • Extensive research
  • Clinical testing
  • Very bulky documentation is necessary
  • Manual review process slows

71
Time-to-Market for New Drugs (cont.)
  • Computer-Aided Drug Application Systems (software
    program) offers a computerized solution
  • Network-distributed document processing system
  • Enables the pharmaceutical company to scan
    documents into a database
  • Saves time
  • Information can be processed or printed at the
    users desktop computer

72
Time-to-Market for New Drugs (cont.)
  • Remote corporate and business partners can also
    access the system
  • The overall result time-to-market of a new drug
    is reduced by up to a year
  • ISIS Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (isip.com) developed
    an extranet-based system
  • Uses CD-ROMs to submit reports to the FDA
  • Opens its intranet to FDA personnel
  • Save 6 to 12 months

73
Organizational Responses (cont.)
  • Empowerment of employees and collaborative work
  • Employees given the authority to act and make
    decisions on their own improves
  • Productivity
  • Customer relationship management (CRM)
  • Empowered sales people and customer service
    employees
  • Make customers happy quickly
  • Help increase customer loyalty

74
Organizational Responses (cont.)
  • Supply chain improvements
  • Help reduce supply chain delays, inventories and
    eliminate other inefficiencies
  • Mass customizationproduction of large quantities
    of customized items
  • Business problem is how to efficiently provide
    customization
  • EC is an ideal facilitator of mass customization
    by enabling electronic ordering to reach the
    production facility in minutes

75
Putting It All Together
  • The task facing each organization is how to put
    together the components that will enable the
    organization to gain competitive advantage by
    using EC

76
Putting It All Together (cont.)
  • The first step is to put in the right connective
    networks
  • The vast majority of EC is done on computers
    connected to
  • Internet
  • Intranet--An internal corporate or government
    network that uses Internet tools, such as Web
    browsers, and Internet protocols
  • Extranet--A network that uses the Internet to
    link multiple intranets

77
Putting It All Together (cont.)
  • Major concern of todays companieshow to
    transform themselves to take part in digital
    economy
  • ExampleToys, Inc.
  • Uses intranet for internal communications,
    collaboration, dissemination of information
  • Networked to e-marketspaces and large
    corporations
  • Corporate portal for communication and
    collaboration with business partners

78
Exhibit 1.10Networked Organizations
79
Managerial Issues
  • Is it real?
  • How to evaluate the magnitude of the business
    pressures.
  • Why is the B2B area so attractive?
  • There are so many EC failureshow can one avoid
    them?
  • What should be my companys strategy toward EC?
  • How do we transform our organization into a
    digital one?

80
Summary
  • Definition of EC and description of its various
    categories
  • The content and framework of EC
  • The major types of EC transactions
  • The major business models
  • Benefits of EC to organizations, consumers, and
    society
  • Limitations of EC
  • The digital revolution and the economic impact of
    EC
  • The role of EC in combating pressures in the
    business environment
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