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Introduction to Electronic Commerce

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Consumer shopping on the Web = about US$50 billion per year in 2001 and is ... 1991 - NSF further eased its restriction on Internet commercial activity. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Electronic Commerce


1
Chapter 1
  • Introduction to Electronic Commerce

2
Traditional Commerce and Electronic Commerce
  • To many people, electronic commerce shopping on
    the part of the Internet called the World Wide
    Web.
  • Consumer shopping on the Web about US50
    billion per year in 2001 and is expected to
    exceed US350 billion by 2004
  • E-commerce is much broader and encompasses many
    more business activities than just Web shopping.

3
Traditional Commerce and Electronic Commerce
  • Electronic commerce - business activities
    conducted using electronic data transmission via
    the Internet and World Wide Web.
  • 3 main elements of e-commerce
  • Business-to-consumer B2C
  • Business-to-business B2B
  • Transactions and business processes that support
    selling and purchasing activities on the Web
  • 4th category consumer-to-consumer C2C

4
Electronic Commerce
5
Electronic Commerce
  • Examples
  • Electronic Funds Transfers (EFTs) - used by banks
    for many years.
  • Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) occurs when one
    business transmits computer-readable data in a
    standard format to another business.

6
Electronic Commerce
  • Businesses who engage in EDI with each other
    trading partners.
  • Standard formats used in EDI - same information
    that businesses have always included in their
    standard paper invoices, purchase orders, and
    shipping documents.
  • General Electric and Wal-Mart - pioneers in using
    EDI to improve their purchasing process.

7
Value Added Network (VAN)
  • Value added network independent firm that
    offers connection and EDI transaction forwarding
    services to buyers and sellers engaged in EDI.
  • VANs - responsible for ensuring the security of
    transmitted data.
  • VANs - charge a fixed monthly fee plus a
    per-transaction charge to subscribers.

8
Activities as Business Processes
  • Business processes group of logical, related,
    and sequential activities and transactions in
    which businesses engage, including
  • Transferring funds
  • Placing orders
  • Sending invoices
  • Shipping goods to customers

9
  • What is the difference between traditional
    commerce and electronic commerce?

10
Comparing Traditional Commerce and Electronic
Commerce
11
  • What type of business processes are suitable for
  • Electronic
  • Traditional commerce
  • Electronic traditional commerce

12
Business Process Suitability to Type of Commerce
13
Electronic Commerce
  • Commodity item product or service that is hard
    to distinguish from the same products or services
    provided by other sellers, making them especially
    well suited to electronic commerce.
  • Shipping profile collection of attributes that
    affect how easily a product can be packaged and
    delivered.

14
Advantages of Electronic Commerce
  • Electronic commerce - increase sales and decrease
    costs.
  • Web advertising - reaches a large amount of
    potential customers throughout the world.
  • Web - creates virtual communities for specific
    products or services.

15
Advantages of Electronic Commerce
  • Business - can reduce costs by using electronic
    commerce in sales support and order-taking
    processes.
  • Electronic commerce - increases sale
    opportunities for the seller.
  • Electronic commerce - increases purchasing
    opportunities for the buyer.

16
Disadvantages of Electronic Commerce
  • Some business processes - difficult to be
    implemented through electronic commerce.
  • Return-on-investment - difficult to apply to
    electronic commerce.
  • Businesses - cultural and legal obstacles to
    conducting electronic commerce.

17
International Electronic Commerce
  • About 60 percent of all electronic commerce sites
    are in English - many language barriers need to
    be overcome.
  • Political structures of the world present some
    challenges.
  • Legal, tax, and privacy are concerns of
    international electronic commerce.

18
Transaction Costs
  • Transaction costs total of all costs that a
    buyer and a seller incur as they gather
    information and negotiate a purchase-sale
    transaction.
  • Another significant component of transaction
    costs investment a seller makes in equipment or
    in the hiring of skilled employees to supply the
    product and services to the buyer.

19
Economic Forces and Electronic Commerce
20
Economic Forces and Electronic Commerce
21
The Role of Electronic Commerce
  • Businesses and individuals - use electronic
    commerce to reduce transaction costs.
  • Network economic structure companies coordinate
    their strategies, resources, and skill sets by
    forming long-term, stable relationships with
    other companies and individuals based on shared
    purposes.

22
The Role of Electronic Commerce
  • Virtual companies when strategic partnerships
    occur between companies operating on the
    Internet.
  • Electronic commerce - make network economic
    structures, which rely on information sharing,
    and are much easier to construct and maintain.

23
The Role of Electronic Commerce
24
Value Chains
  • Electronic commerce includes so many activities
    and transactions that it can be difficult for
    managers to decide where and how to use it in
    their businesses.
  • One way to focus on specific business processes
    as candidates for electronic commerce - break the
    business down into a series of value-adding
    activities that combine to generate profits and
    meet other goals.

25
Value Chains
  • A strategic business unit one particular
    combination of product, distribution channel, and
    customer type.
  • A value chain a way of organizing the
    activities that each strategic business unit
    undertakes to design, produce, promote, market,
    deliver, and support the products or services it
    sells.

26
Strategic Business Unit Value Chains
27
Strategic Business Unit Value Chains
  • The support activities of a value chain for a
    strategic business unit include
  • Finance and administration
  • Human resources
  • Technology development

28
Industry Value Chains
  • Value system describes the larger stream of
    activities into which a particular business
    units value chain is embedded.
  • Industry value chain (IVC) refers to value
    systems.
  • IVC is used to identify opportunities for cost
    reduction, product improvement, or channel
    reconfiguration.

29
SWOT AnalysisEvaluating Business Unit
Opportunities
  • Most electronic commerce initiatives add value by
    either reducing transaction costs , creating some
    type of network economics effect, or a
    combination of both.
  • In SWOT analysis, you list the strengths and
    weaknesses of the business unit and then identify
    opportunities presented by the markets of the
    business unit.

30
SWOT AnalysisEvaluating Business Unit
Opportunities
31
The Internet and World Wide Web
  • Internet - large system of interconnected
    computer networks that spans the globe.
  • Internet - supports e-mail, online newspapers and
    publications, discussion groups, games, and free
    software.
  • World Wide Web - includes an easy-to-use standard
    interface for accessing Internet resources.

32
Origins of the Internet
  • Early 1960s - U.S. Department of Defense started
    research on networking computers.
  • Its researchers developed a multiple channels
    network.
  • 1969 - Defense Department used this network model
    to connect four mainframe computers at different
    locations.

33
New Uses for the Internet
  • 1972 - a researcher wrote a program that could
    send and receive messages over the network.
  • E-mail was born and became widely used.
  • The network software includes
  • File Transfer Protocol (FTP)
  • Users News Network (Usenet)

34
Commercial Use of the Internet
  • 1980 - companies used the PC to construct their
    networks.
  • 1980s - National Science Foundation (NSF) funded
    network services.
  • 1989 - NSF permitted two commercial e-mail
    services.
  • Early 1990s - Internet started to serve the
    global resource accesses.

35
Growth of the Internet
  • 1991 - NSF further eased its restriction on
    Internet commercial activity.
  • 1995 - Privatization of the Internet was
    substantially completed.
  • New structure of the Internet was based on four
    network access points (NAPs).
  • Internet service providers (ISPs) sell Internet
    access rights directly to customers.

36
Growth of the Internet, 1991 - 2001
37
Development of Hypertext
  • 1960s - Ted Nelson described his page-linking
    system hypertext.
  • 1987 - Nelson published a book about a global
    system for online hypertext publishing and
    commerce.
  • 1991 - Berners-Lee of CERN developed the code for
    a hypertext server program and made it available
    on the Internet.

38
HTML
  • Hypertext server - a computer that stores files
    written in the hypertext markup language (HTML).
  • HTML - a language that includes a set of codes
    (or tags) attached to text.
  • Hypertext link - points to another location in
    the same or another HTML document.

39
Web Browser and Markup Languages
  • Web browser - a software interface that lets
    users browse HTML documents.
  • HTML is based on the Standard Generalized Markup
    Language (SGML).
  • eXtensible Markup Language (XML) allows users to
    define new meanings for its commands in Web
    pages.

40
Graphical User Interface
  • Graphical user interface (GUI) - a way of
    presenting program control functions and program
    outputs to users.
  • Web browsers include
  • Mosaic
  • Netscape Navigator
  • Microsoft Internet Explorer

41
Growth of the World Wide Web
42
URLUniform Resource Locator
http//domain-name.top-level-domain/last-section
  • Unique address of a web page or file on the
    Internet
  • Case-sensitive

43
httphypertext transfer protocol
http//domain-name.top-level-domain/last-section
  • Protocol rules
  • Communication using links

44
Domain name
http//domain-name.top-level-domain/last-section
  • Address of the ISP
  • Domain names are registered
  • Ongoing fee is paid for each domain name

45
Last section
http//domain-name.top-level-domain/last-section
  • Directories and file names that specify a
    particular web page

46
Top-level Domain
  • Represent the purpose of the organization of
    entity
  • .com
  • .gov
  • .edu
  • .org
  • .net
  • May be a two-letter country code

47
Browser
  • Netscape Communicator
  • Microsoft Internet Explorer

48
Browser
  • Used to explore the Internet
  • Dials the ISP
  • Display web pages

49
BrowserParts of the screen
50
BrowserFunctions and Features
  • Browser display window
  • Displays contents of web page from each Internet
    site visited
  • Screen limits how much of the site you can view
    at a time. The page can be scrolled using the
    scroll bar to see its entire contents
  • Status line progress of data being transferred
    and other messages

51
BrowserFunctions and Features
  • Welcome banner on title bar
  • Browser logo animation indicates you are in the
    process of moving to a new site
  • Hot list
  • Bookmark
  • Favorites
  • Store your favorite URLs
  • Browser control panel menus and buttons

52
BrowserMenus and Buttons
  • Pull-down menu
  • Buttons
  • Convenient shortcuts for commonly used functions
  • Click button rather than locate command from
    pull-down menu
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