Title: Week 1 Overview of Electronic Commerce
1Week 1Overview of Electronic Commerce
2Qantas 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
-
3Qantas AirwaysA New Way to Compete
- 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
4Qantas AirwaysA New Way to Compete
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
5Qantas AirwaysA New Way to Compete
- 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
6Qantas AirwaysA New Way to Compete
- 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
7Qantas AirwaysA New Way to Compete
- 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
8EC 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
9 Pure Vs. Partial Electronic Commerce
- Three dimensions
- the product (service) sold physical / digital
- the process physical / digital
- the delivery agent (or intermediary) physical /
digital - Traditional commerce
- all dimensions are physical
- Pure EC
- all dimensions are digital
- Partial EC
- all other possibilities include a mix of digital
and physical dimensions
10The Dimensions of Electronic Commerce
Digital Product
Digital process
Physical Product
Physical process
Physical agent
Digital agent
11Infrastructure
A Framework for Electronic Commerce
9
12Electronic Markets
- A market is a network of interactions and
relationships where information, products,
services, and payments are exchanged. - The market handles all the necessary
transactions. - An electronic market is a place where shoppers
and sellers meet electronically. - In electronic markets, sellers and buyers
negotiate, submit bids, agree on an order, and
finish the execution on- or off-line.
13- Classification of EC by the Nature
- of the Transactions
- 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 - 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
14Classification of EC by the Nature of the
Transactions (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 - Business-to-employee (B2E) EC model in which an
organization delivers services, information, or
products to its individual employees - 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
15Electronic Commerce is Interdisciplinary
- Marketing
- Computer sciences
- Consumer behavior and psychology
- Finance
- Economic
- Production/Logistic
- Management information systems
- Accounting and auditing
- Management
- Business law and ethics
16The Benefits ofElectronic Commerce
- 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 - The pull type processing allows for customization
of products and services which provides
competitive advantage to its implementers
17Benefits to Organizations (cont.)
- 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)
18Benefits to Customers
- Enables customers to shop or do other
transactions 24 hours a day, all year round from
almost any location - Provides customers with more choices
- Provides customers with less expensive products
and services by allowing them to shop in many
places and conduct quick comparisons - Allows quick delivery of products and services in
some cases, especially with digitized products
19Benefits to Customers (cont.)
- Customers can receive relevant and detailed
information in seconds, rather than in days or
weeks - Makes it possible to participate in virtual
auctions - Allows customers to interact with other customers
in electronic communities and exchange ideas as
well as compare experiences - Electronic commerce facilitates competition,
which results in substantial discounts.
20Benefits 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 the poor ones - 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
21The Limitations ofElectronic Commerce
- Technical Limitations of Electronic Commerce
- Lack of sufficient systems security,
reliability, standards, and communication
protocols - Insufficient telecommunication bandwidth
- The software development tools are still evolving
and changing rapidly - Difficulties in integrating the Internet and
electronic commerce software with some existing
applications and databases
22Technical Limitations of Electronic Commerce
(cont.)
- The need for special Web servers and other
infrastructures, in addition to the network
servers (additional cost) - Possible problems of interoperability, meaning
that some EC software does not fit with some
hardware, or is incompatible with some operating
systems or other components
23Non-Technical Limitations
- Other limiting factors are
- Lack of touch and feel online
- Many unresolved legal issues
- Rapidly evolving and changing EC
- Lack of support services
- Insufficiently large enough number of sellers and
buyers - Breakdown of human relationships
- Expensive and/or inconvenient accessibility to
the Internet
24The Driving Forces of Electronic Commerce
- The New World of Business
- Business pressures
- Organizational responses
- The role of Information Technology (including
electronic commerce)
25Strong competition Global economy Regional trade
agreements (e.g. WTA,NAFTA) Extremely low labour
cost in some countries Frequent and significant
changes in markets Increased power of consumers
Market and economic pressures
Changing nature of workforce Government
deregulation of banking and other
services Shrinking government budgets
subsides Increased importance of ethical and
legal issues Increased social responsibility of
organizations Rapid political changes
Societal and environmental pressures
Rapid technological obsolescence Increase
innovations and new technologies Information
overload Rapid decline in technology cost Vs.
performance ratio
Technological pressures
26Everything Will Be Changed
- Improving Direct Marketing
- Product promotion
- New sales channels
- Direct savings
- Time-to-market (reduced cycle time)
- Customer service
- Brand or corporate image
27Other Changes in the Workplace
- Transforming Organizations
- Work will change
- Technology learning
- Organizational learning
- Redefining Organization
- New product capabilities
- New business models
28Other Changes in the Workplace (cont.)
- Impacts on Manufacturing
- Pull processing, mass customization, shorter
cycle time, integration (ERP), electronic bidding
and procurement - Impacts on Finance and Accounting
- Electronic payment systems, electronic cash,
automating back office, home banking, electronic
stock trading - Human Resource Management
- Electronic recruiting, training, distance learning