Title: EBUSINESS: Principles and Models
1E-BUSINESS Principles and Models
- Christer Carlsson, Pär Landor and Pirkko Walden
- IAMSR / Ã…bo Akademi University
2Introduction
- The .com revolution was hype
- There is no new economy
- E-commerce, e-business should be quickly
forgotten (says the paper products industry) - Lots of youngsters got rich with other peoples
money ...
3Furniture.com
- Ekonomiska problem
- Finansieringsproblem
- Leveransproblem
- Förlust 45 miljoner dollar
4Babygear.com
- Finansieringsproblem
- Outvecklad detaljhandel
- Ineffektiv lagerverksamhet
5Boxman.com
- Ekonomiska problem
- Finansiering genom riskkapital upphörde
- Likviditetskris
6Boo.com
- Splittrad verksamhet
- Svag priskonkurrenskraft
- Halvfärdig teknologi
- Förlust 120 miljoner dollar under de första sex
månaderna
7Introduction cont.
- Is there any substance in e-business?
- Will this really become something to build on?
- Will we see some real business opportunities, or
will there only be a new wave of hype ? - E-business is real and it will produce and build
on superior performance the classical basis for
strategic advantages
8E-Business
Figure 3. There are huge markets online. No
matter from which point of view you look at it.
European Online Market1 in 2001 To Equal USD
3.23 Billion
Â
European Online Market in 2001 (to equal USD 3.23
Billion)
Â
1 Keenan Vision. http//www.epaynews.com/statist
ics/purchases.html1
1
Keenan Vision. http//www.epaynews.com/statisti
cs/purchases.html1
9E-Business
Figure 3. There are huge markets online. No
matter from which point of view you look at it.
European Online Market1 in 2001 To Equal USD
3.23 Billion
Â
Online Purchase Revenues 1999-2004 (in USD)
Â
Â
1
Keenan Vision. http//www.epaynews.com/statisti
cs/purchases.html1
1
Forrester Research.
http//www.epaynews.com/statistics/purchases.html
1
10E-Business
Figure 3. There are huge markets online. No
matter from which point of view you look at it.
European Online Market1 in 2001 To Equal USD
3.23 Billion
Â
Â
Where the eCommerce Dollars Are (2000-2004)
Â
Â
1
Keenan Vision. http//www.epaynews.com/statisti
cs/purchases.html1
1
IDC.
http//www.epaynews.com/statistics/purchases.html
1
11E-Business
- E-commerce is commerce with an e component. The
e component includes the Internet, and other IT
aspects (e.g. telecommunications, PCs,
mainframes, ERP systems etc.). The c side ?
commerce ? involves the exchange of value between
parties enabled via electronic means, though not
confined to it, as bricks now support clicks and
vice versa. E-commerce is a good concept for at
least three reasons. Â Keen-McDonald
12E-Business
- It is a reminder of what really matters commerce
and its correlated commercial relationships. - E-commerce downplays the notion of this being
electronic while still keeping the "e" that
distinguishes it from previous models of
commerce. - Finally, e-commerce signals that while the
Internet is the core enabler of this new era, it
includes many other information technology
components such as databases, transaction
processing software, and others.
13E-Business
- Commerce is the issue. Commerce is conducted
within a network or relationships governed by
rules, implemented through interfaces, and
providing new sourcing options among network
players. An e-Process view looks at the Web as a
means to the end creating competitive advantage
that comes from leveraging the site to support
its processes and economic fundamentals. Â
Keen-McDonald
14E-Business
- E-commerce connects customers, consumers,
suppliers, and companies that previously could
never be so interlinked. Customers, trust, brand
and fulfilment form the basis for rules in the
e-commerce world. Customers are the drivers of
eCommerce success and choice is what makes the
customer. Keen-McDonald
15E-Business
- Customers are different in the "e" world as they
have choices, the information to make those
choices, and the confidence to choose. Customer
trust is the one force that generates the rules
in eCommerce. While that may sound trite,
recognize that customers have to choose to use
the web for business and trust that their
commitments will be met, their expectations
realized governs what you can and cannot do on
the web. Keen-McDonald
16E-Business
- The trust premium in e-commerce is the
relationship that provides the vehicle for
accelerating your e-commerce brand. Remember a
brand is a promise and keeping the promise builds
trust that makes fulfilment critical to
e-commerce success. These dynamics set out the
imperatives to building customer relationships Â
Keen-McDonald
17E-Business
- Build your company entirely around your customer
recognize that your processes define the
dynamics and value potential of the relationship.
Those processes must be designed from the
customer in, not the business out. - Avoid the self-commoditization of your business
that is an almost inevitable result of pushing
your products and services online recognize
that you must compete based on the ability to
form and deliver relationships that have
intrinsic value.
18E-Business
- Build value networks that let you focus on your
relationship strengths companies no longer need
to own their value chain in order to compete, use
eProcess sourcing to concentrate your management
attention and capital where it matters most.
19E-Business Value Networks
20HIERARCHICAL ORGANISATION
21VIRTUAL CORPORATIONS
SUPPLIER
CUSTOMER
VIRTUAL CORPORATION
22OUT-TASKING IN-SOURCING
PARTNER I
PARTNER II
VIRTUAL CORPORATION
23E-Business
- Nobody owns the consumer and nobody ever will.
Especially the new, empowered, post-Internet
consumer. The best anyone can hope for is the
first chance to please the consumer. The first
shot at delivering relevant, reliable services at
the right price. The first shot at listening,
learning and adapting to user needs. The first
shot at earning trust and, eventually, loyalty.
24E-Business
- E-commerce enables a potential level of
relationship intensity that can provide for
massive business expansion, innovation, and
profitability. Yet, this potential is very hard
to attain and requires expensive up-front
investment. The average revenue per employee for
Internet companies is 65 percent higher than the
average U.S. business. It is the ability to
transform your capital and margin structures that
makes e-commerce an opportunity not to be missed.
25E-Business
26E-Business
- Accenture
- Marketing is key ? as the cost of customer
acquisition makes marketing critical to business
success - Physical operations can matter as much as or more
than online ones - Clicks and bricks (online plus offline channels)
are the new game - Technology guarantees the integrity of the
transaction and technical excellence is required
27E-Business
- Accenture (cont.)
- Organizational capabilities and processes must
change BPR activities - Breaking down functional stovepipes - processes
are executed across a virtual value network
rather than a vertical enterprise - The customers perspective defines the value of a
process
28E-Business
- The e-Process company has clearly-defined rules
with clean process interfaces and a technology
platform build around application program
interfaces (APIs). Rules are the initial focus as
the company looks for the best way to source and
enforce those rules across the network through
electronic links to value network players and the
companys internal capabilities.
29E-Business
- Companies must turn transactions into repeat
business, build repeat business into sustained
relationships, and transform the balance sheet
and operating costs through innovative sourcing.
That is what generated process wealth.
30E-Business
- Companies must focus on e-Processes and
relationships instead of traditional industry
boundaries for products and services. - Many labels can be applied to Amazon at the same
time retailer, portal, market maker, and auction
house. - Yet, its core eProcess identity is to be the
owner of a premier set of sustained, retail
customer relationships
31Business Models
- (according to Timmers 2000)
- Which business models are relevant for the
Internet? - What is your business model?(where are you going
to make money, why are people paying and
continuing to pay for your service?) - Barriers to EC the lack of a business model
32What is a business model?
- An architecture for product, service and
information flows, including a description of the
various business actors and their roles and - A description of the potential benefits for the
various business actors and - A description of the source of revenue(Paul
Timmers 2000)
33Why is it not enough?
- A business model in itself does not yet provide
an understanding of how it will contribute to
realizing the business mission and objectives of
any of the companies that are actors within the
model - We also need to know about the companies
marketing strategies in order to assess the
commercial visibility of the business model - How is the competitive advantage being built?
- What is the positioning?
- What is the marketing mix?
- Which product-market strategy is being followed?
-
34 Identifying Architectures
- Systematic approach
- Can be based on
- Value chain de-and reconstruction
- Identifying value chain elements and possible
ways to integrate information along the value
chain - Value-chain elements
- Primary elements inbound logistics, operations,
outbound logistics, marketing and sales, service - Supporting elements technology development,
procurement, human resource management and
corporate infrastructure - Information patterns one to many, one to one
35Current Business Models
- E-shops
- Web presence, http//bellaboats.fi
- Web marketing
- To promote the company and its goods/services
- Ordering and paying is increasingly added
- Often combined with traditional marketing
channels - Benefits sought increased demand, a low-cost
route to global presence, cost reduction in
promotion and sales - Benefits for the customers better prices, wider
choice, better information and convenience in
selecting, buying and delivery, 24 hours
availability - http//www.fleurop.com/
36Current Business Models
- E-procurement
- Electronic tendering and procurement of
products/services - Large companies or public authorities
- Benefits sought wider choice of suppliers,
leading to lower cost, better quality, improved
delivery reduced cost of procurement - For suppliers more tendering opportunities,
lower cost of submitting a tender, reduction of
cost
37Current Business Models
- E-malls
- A collection of e-shops, http//www.malls.com
- Enhanced by a common umbrella
- Example Mall Bodensee http//www.emb.ch
- When specializing in a certain market segment,
more of an industry marketplace - Example http//www.industry.net
- Benefits for customers easy access to other
e-shops, ease of use through common user
interface elements - Benefits for the e-shops lower costs and
complexity of being on the web - Revenues from the membership fees and advertising
38Current Business Models
- E-auctions
- Offer an electronic implementation of bidding
mechanisms - Can be accompanied with a multimedia presentation
of goods - May offer integration of the bidding process with
contracting, payments and delivery - The sources of income for the auction provider
- selling the technology platform.
- transaction fees
- advertising
39Current Business Models
- E-auctions
- Benefits for suppliers and buyers
- Increased efficiency and time savings
- No need for physical transport until the deal has
been established - Global sourcing
- Examples http//www.infomar.com
and http//www.fastparts.com http//www.eBay.com
40Current Business Models
- Virtual communities
- The ultimate value comes from the members who add
their information on to a basic environment
provided by company operating the virtual
community - Membership fees and advertising generate
revenues - Can be an add-on to other marketing operations in
order to build customer loyalty and receive
customer feedback - Example http//www.amazon.co.ukhttp//www.iVilla
ge.com
41Current Business Models
- Collaboration platforms
- Provide a set of tools and an information
environment for collaboration between enterprises - Can focus on specific functions
- Collaborative design and engineering
- Project support to a virtual team
- Business opportunities managing the platform in
selling the specialist tools
42Current Business Models
- Third-party marketplaces
- Emerging model if companies wish to leave web
marketing to a third party - Often additional, online channel to other
existing channels - Offer at least a user interface to the suppliers
product catalogue - Examples http//www.simnet.orghttp//www.citius.
be - Amazon Associates program for online
bookstores, anyone who wishes to sell books
43Current Business Models
- Value-chain integrators
- Focus on integrating multiple steps of the value
chain,with potential to exploit the information
flow between those steps as further added value - Revenues comes from the consultancy fees or
possibly transaction fees - Example http//www.cordis.lu/esprit/home.html
44Current Business Models
- Value-chain service providers
- Specialize in a specific function in the value
chain, making that into their distinct
competitive advantage - Electronic payments
- Logistics
- Examples http//www.fedex.com,
http//www.ups.com - Amazon Advantage catalogue service for
publishers, is absorbed into Amazons catalogue
45Current Business Models
- Information Brokerage, Trust and Other Services
- Add value to the huge amount of data available on
the open networks or coming from integrated
business operations, such as information search,
http//www.yahoo.comcustomer profiling,business
opportunities brokerage, investment advice etc. - Business information and consultancy, trusted
third-party services
46Trends in Internet Business Models
Functional integration
E-auctions
Lower
Higher
Degree of Innovation
47Trends in Internet Business Models