Title: Electronic Commerce 043002
1Electronic Commerce043002
- Chapter 3 Selling on the Web Revenue
- Models and Building a Web Presence
- Dr. Mingli Song
Dr. Mingli Song - School of Computer Science,
Communication University of China, Beijing email
songmingli607_at_126.com
2Learning Objectives
- In this chapter, you will learn about
- Revenue models
- How some companies move from one revenue model to
another to achieve success - Revenue strategy issues that companies face when
selling on the Web - Creating an effective business presence (????) on
the Web - Web site usability (???)
- Communicating effectively with customers on the
Web
3Key Terms
- account aggregation ????
- addressable media ?????
- advertising-subscription mixed revenue
model ?????????? - advertising-supported revenue model ????????
- bill presentment ????
- cannibalization ??
- catalog model ??????
- category manager ??????
- channel conflict ????
- channel cooperation ????
4Key Terms
- channel distribution manager ????????
- communication modes ????
- customer-centric ???????
- demographic information ??????
- disintermediation ????
- fee-for-service revenue model ????????
- fee-for-transaction revenue model ????????
- fulfillment manager ??????
- mail order model ????
- many-to-many communication ??????
- many-to-one communication model ????????
5Key Terms
- mass media ????
- one-to-many communication model ????????
- one-to-one communication model ????????
- personal contact ????
- personal shopper ???
- portal (Web portal) ??(????)
- presence ??
- prospecting ???
- reintermediation ????
- stakeholder ?????
- stickiness ??
6Key Terms
- usability testing ?????
- virtual model ????
- Web catalogue revenue model ????????
- Web directory ????
7Revenue Models
- Revenue model of selling goods and services on
the Web - Based on mail order catalog (????) revenue model
that predates the Web - Mail order or catalog model
- Proven to be successful for wide variety of
consumer items (???) - Web catalog revenue model (????????)
- Taking the catalog model to the Web
8Computers and Consumer Electronics (????)
- Apple, Dell, Gateway, and Sun Microsystems
- Have had great success selling on the Web
- Dell
- Created value by designing entire business around
offering high degree of configuration flexibility
to its customers
9Books, Music, and Videos
- Retailers using the Web catalog model to sell
books, music, and videos (????) - Among the most visible examples of electronic
commerce - Jeff Bezos
- Formed Amazon.com in 1994
- Jason and Matthew Olim
- Formed online music store they called CDnow
- Used the Web catalog revenue model
10Luxury Goods (???)
- People are still reluctant to buy through a Web
site - Web sites of Vera Wang and Versace
- Constructed to provide information to shoppers,
not to generate revenue - Web site of Evian
- Designed for a select (???), affluent (???) group
of customers
11Clothing Retailers (?????)
- Lands End
- Pioneered (??) idea of online Web shopping
assistance with its Lands End Live feature in
1999 - Personal shopper (?????)
- Intelligent agent program that learns customers
preferences and makes suggestions - Virtual model (????)
- Graphic image built from customer measurements
12Flowers and Gifts
- 1-800-Flowers
- Created online extension to its highly successful
telephone order business - Chocolatier (????) Godiva
- Offers business gift plans on its site
13General Discounters (???)
- Discounters sell merchandize such as computer
equipment, software, consumer electronics, books,
music CDs and sports equipment at extremely low
prices - Some of these Web discount retailers originally
sold advertising on their sites to subsidize (??)
their low product prices
14General Discounters Contd
- Beyond.com
- Closed its retail operation and sells the
software it created for operating a Web catalog
site - Buy.com
- Realizes advertising revenues were not sufficient
subsidies - Relies on volume-purchasing (????) strategy to
keep prices low
15Digital Content Revenue Models (????????)
- Firms that own intellectual property (????)
- Have embraced the Web as new and highly efficient
distribution mechanism - Lexis.com
- Provides full-text search (????) of court cases
(????), laws, patent (??) databases, and tax
regulations (????)
16Digital Content Revenue Models Contd
- ProQuest
- Sells digital copies of published documents
- ACM Digital Library (?????)
- Offers subscriptions to electronic versions of
its journals to members and to library and
institutional subscribers
17Advertising-Supported Revenue Models (?????????)
- Broadcasters provide free programming (?????) to
an audience along with advertising messages
(????) - Success of online advertising hampered by
- No consensus (??) has emerged on how to measure
and charge for site visitor views - Stickiness (??) of a Web site ability to keep
visitors and attract repeat visitors - Very few Web sites have sufficient visitors to
interest large advertisers (???)
18Web Portals (??)
- Web directory (Yahoo! for example)
- A listing of hyperlinks to Web Pages
- Portal or Web portal
- Site used as a launching point to enter the Web
- Almost always includes a Web directory and search
engine - Also includes other features such as free e-mail,
chat room (???), shopping directories, file
storage services, games, etc. - Example Yahoo, AOL, AltaVista, and others
19Newspaper Publishers (?????)
- Many newspapers publish all or part of their
print content on the Web - Publishers experience sales losses as a result of
online distribution - The cost of operating Web sites cannot be covered
by the revenue generated from selling advertising
on the sites
20Targeted Classified Advertising (????) Sites
- Web employment advertising (????)
- Uses the same approach that search engine sites
use to offer advertisers (???) target markets
(????) - Used vehicle (??????) sites
- Accept paid advertising from individuals and
companies that want to sell cars, motorcycles,
boats, etc. - Give the seller the option of running the ad on
the Web site or in the print version of the
advertising newspaper
21Advertising-Subscription Mixed Revenue Models
(??????????)
- Subscribers (???)
- Pay a fee and accept some level of advertising
- Typically subjected to (??) much less advertising
- Used by
- The New York Times (????) and The Wall Street
Journal (?????)
22Advertising-Subscription Mixed Revenue Models
Contd
- Business Week (????)
- Offers some free content at its Business Week
online site - Requires visitors to buy subscription to Business
Week print magazine if they want to access the
entire site
23Fee-for-Transaction Revenue Models (????????)
- Businesses offer services and charge a fee based
on number or size of transactions processed - Disintermediation (????)
- Removal of an intermediary (??) from value chain
- Reintermediation (????)
- Introduction of a new intermediary
24Travel Agents (???)
- A number of online travel agencies began doing
business on the Web - Expedia, Travelocity, Hotels.com, and Hotel
Discount Reservations (also elong.com in China) - In addition to earning commissions (??) from the
transportation and lodging providers, these sites
generate revenue from ads on travel info pages
25Automobile Sales (????)
- Salespeople can help customers learn about
product features, arrange financing (??), make a
purchase decision their job also includes
extracting the highest possible price - The buyer can purchase a car without negotiating
with salesperson who is then taken out of value
chain - The car salesperson is disintermediated and the
Web site becomes the new intermediary
26Stockbrokers (??????)
- Charge their customers commission for each trade
executed - A number of discount brokers opened after the U.S
government deregulated (????????) the securities
(??) trading business in the early 1970s - In the 1990s, discount brokers faced new
competition from online firms
27Insurance brokers (??????)
- A number of intermediaries that sell insurance
policies (???) from variety of companies have
been online since early days of the Web - Quotesmith
- Began business in 1984 as a policy-quoting (????)
service for independent insurance brokers - Decided in 1996 to offer its service directly to
the public over the Internet - Disintermediated the independent insurance agents
it formerly worked with
28Event Tickets (??)
- The Web offers event promoters ability to sell
tickets from one virtual location to customers
practically anywhere in the world (e.g.
piao.com.cn) - Online ticket agencies reduce transaction costs
for both buyers and sellers of tickets
29Real Estate and Mortgage Loan Brokers
(????????????)
- Provides all of the services that traditional
broker might provide---except that online brokers
provide them through Web sites - IndyMac Bank Home Lending
- offers mortgage loan and seeks online review in
minutes - approved customers can print an approval letter
from their computers and take it the same day to
buy a new house
30Online Banking (????) and Financial Services (???)
- The greatest concerns that most people have are
security and reliability of the financial
institution - Online banks handle only a tiny portion of the
worlds financial transaction - Two barriers are preventing a more rapid rate of
growth in the online banking business - a lack of bill presentment (????)
- a lack of account aggregation (????)
31Fee-for-Service Revenue Models (????????)
- Fee based on value of service provided
- Services
- Range from games and entertainment to financial
advice - Online games
- Growing number of sites include premium (???)
games in their offerings - Site visitors must pay to play these premium games
32Fee-for-Service Revenue Models Contd
- Concerts and films
- As more households obtain broadband access to the
Internet - Companies are providing streaming (?) video of
concerts and films to paying subscribers - Professional Services (????)
- State laws
- One of the main forces preventing U.S.
professionals from extending their practices to
the Web
33Revenue Models in Transition (??)
- Subscription to Advertising-Supported Model
- Microsoft founded its Slate magazine Web site
- An upscale (???) news and current events
publication - Charged annual subscription fee after a limited
free introductory period - Was unable to draw sufficient number of paid
subscribers - Now operated as an advertising-supported site
34Advertising-Supported to Advertising-Subscription
Mixed Model
- Salon.com
- Operated for several years as an
advertising-supported site - Now offers optional subscription version of its
site - Subscription offering
- Motivated by companys inability to raise
additional money from investors
35Advertising-Supported to Fee-for-Services Model
- Xdrive Technologies
- Opened its original advertising-supported Web
site in 1999 - Offered free disk storage space online to users
- After two years, was unable to pay costs of
providing the service with the advertising
revenue generated - Later switched to a subscription-supported model
36Advertising-Supported to Subscription Model
- Northern Light
- Founded in August 1997 as a search engine
- Revenue model
- Combination of advertising-supported model plus a
fee-based information access service - January 2002
- Converted to a new revenue model that was
primarily subscription supported
37Multiple Transitions
- Encyclopædia Britannica (????????)
- Original offerings
- The Britannica Internet Guide
- Free Web navigation aid
- Encyclopædia Britannica Online
- Available for a subscription fee or as part of CD
package - 1999
- Converted to a free, advertising-supported site
- 2001
- Faced declining advertising revenues and returned
to a mixed model the advertising-subscription
mixed revenue model
38Revenue Strategy Issues
- Channel conflict (????)
- Occurs whenever sales activities on a companys
Website interfere with existing sales outlets
(??) - Also called cannibalization (??) because the Web
sites sales consume sales that would be made in
the companys other sales channels - Levi Strauss Company Began selling jeans online
in mid-1998 and stopped in January 2000 - Maytags Web site allowed customers to order
directly online and after 2 years of operation it
decided to incorporate online partners into its
Web site store design
39Revenue Strategy Issues Contd
- Channel cooperation (????)
- Giving customers access to the companys products
through a coordinated presence in all
distribution channels - Eddie Bauer was selling through catalog and
retail stores - The company believed that online sales could
become more attractive if customers were allowed
to return unwanted products purchased online - Eddie Bauer was able to convince all managers to
support the Web site
40Strategic Alliances (????)and Channel
Distribution Management
- Strategic alliance
- When two or more companies join forces to
undertake an activity over a long period of time - Account aggregation services
- Increase propensity (??) of customers to return
to the site - Channel distribution managers (????????)
- Companies that take over responsibility for a
particular product line within a retail store
41Creating an Effective Web Presence (??)
- An organizations presence
- The public image it conveys to its stakeholders
(?????) - Stakeholders of a firm
- Include its customers, suppliers, employees,
stockholders (??), neighbors, and the general
public
42Identifying Web Presence Goals
- On the Web, businesses and other organizations
have the luxury of building Web sites
intentionally to create distinctive presence - Each entity that establishes a Web presence
should decide features the Web site can provide
and which of those features are the most important
43Achieving Web Presence Goals
- An effective site is one that creates an
attractive presence that meets the objectives of
business or organization - Objectives of the business
- Attracting visitors to the Web site
- Making the site interesting enough that visitors
stay and explore
44Achieving Web Presence Goals Contd
- Convincing visitors to follow the sites links to
obtain information - Creating an impression consistent with the
organizations desired image - Building a trusting relationship with visitors
- Reinforcing positive images that the visitor
might already have about the organization - Encouraging visitors to return to the site
45Profit-Driven (???) Organizations
- Toyota site
- A good example of an effective Web presence
- Provides links to
- Detailed information about each vehicle model
- A dealer locator page
- Information about the company and the financing
services it offers
46Profit-Driven Organizations Contd
- Quaker Oats
- Web site does not offer a particularly strong
sense of corporate presence - Site is a straightforward presentation of links
to information about the firm - Redesigned site in 1999
- Essentially the same as previous version
47Not-for-Profit (????) Organization
- Key goal for the Web sites
- Information dissemination (??)
- Key element on any successful electronic commerce
Web site - Combination of information dissemination and a
two-way contact channel
48Web Site Usability (???)
- Motivations of Web site visitors
- Learning about products or services that the
company offers - Buying products or services that the company
offers - Obtaining information about warranty (??),
service, or repair policies (??) for products
they purchased - Obtaining general information about the company
or organization
49Web Site Usability Contd
- Motivations of Web site visitors
- Obtaining financial information for making an
investment or credit granting (??) decision - Identifying the people who manage the company or
organization - Obtaining contact information for a person or
department in the organization
50Making Web Sites Accessible (????)
- One of the best ways to accommodate a broad range
of visitor needs - Build flexibility into the Web sites interface
- Good site design
- Lets visitors choose among information attributes
- Web sites
- Can offer visitors multiple information formats
by including links to files in those formats
51Making Web Sites Accessible Contd
- Goals that should be met when constructing Web
sites - Offer easily accessible facts about the
organization - Allow visitors to experience the site in
different ways and at different levels - Provide a meaningful, two-way (interactive)
communication link with the organization - Sustain (??) visitor attention and encourage
return visits - Offer easily accessible information about
products and services
52Trust (??) and Loyalty (??)
- Studies by business researchers
- A 5 percent increase in customer loyalty can
yield profit increases between 25 and 80 - Repetition of satisfactory service
- Can build customer loyalty
- Customer service
- A problem for many electronic commerce sites
53 Usability Testing
- Companies that have done usability tests
- Conduct focus groups (????/????)
- Watch how different customers navigate through a
series of Web site test designs - Cost of usability testing
- Low compared to total cost of a Web site design
or overhaul (??)
54Customer-Centric (???) Web Site Design
- Putting the customer at the center of all site
designs - Guidelines (????)
- Design site around how visitors will navigate the
links - Allow visitors to access information quickly
- Avoid using inflated (???) marketing statements
55Customer-Centric Web Site Design Contd
- Guidelines
- Avoid using business jargon (??) and terms (??)
that visitors might not understand - Build the site to work for visitors using the
oldest browser software on the oldest computer
connected through the lowest bandwidth connection - Be consistent in use of design features and colors
56Customer-Centric Web Site Design Contd
- Guidelines
- Make sure navigation controls are clearly labeled
- Test text visibility on smaller monitors
- Make sure that color combination do not impair
viewing clarity for color-blind visitors - Conduct usability tests
57Connecting With Customers
- Personal contact model (??????)
- Firms employees individually search for, qualify
(????), and contact potential customers - Prospecting (???)
- Personal contact approach to identifying and
reaching customers - Mass media approach (??????)
- Firms prepare advertising and promotional
materials about the firm and its products
58Connecting With Customers Contd
- Addressable media (?????)
- Advertising efforts directed to a known addressee
(????) - Also called mass media
- One-to-many communication model
- Communication flows from one advertiser to many
potential buyers - One-to-one communication model
- Both buyer and seller participate in information
exchange
59Business Communication Modes
60Summary
- Models used to generate revenue on the Web
- Web catalog, digital content sales
- Advertising-supported
- Advertising-subscription mixed
- Fee-for-transaction and fee-for-service
- Companies undertaking electronic commerce
initiatives to - Form strategic alliances
- Contract with (????) channel distribution managers
61Summary
- Firms
- Must understand how the Web differs from other
media - Enlisting (??) help of users when building test
versions of the Web site - A good way to create a site that represents the
organization well - Firms must also
- Understand nature of communication on the Web
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66Toyota U.S. Home page (2004)
67Toyota U.S. Home page (2009)
68Quaker Oats old Home Page
69Quaker Oats Home Page 1999 Redesign