Chapter 3 Retailing in Electronic Commerce (E-Tailing) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 3 Retailing in Electronic Commerce (E-Tailing)

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Chapter 3 Retailing in Electronic Commerce (E-Tailing) Prentice Hall, 2002 Prentice Hall, 2002 Managerial Issues First-mover advantage or wait and learn Strategic ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 3 Retailing in Electronic Commerce (E-Tailing)


1
Chapter 3Retailing in Electronic Commerce
(E-Tailing)
2
Learning Objectives
  • Define and describe the primary business models
    of electronic retailing (e-tailing)
  • Discuss various e-tail consumer aids, including
    comparison-shopping aids
  • Discuss various e-tail markets, such as
    groceries, music, cars, and others
  • Identify the critical success factors of direct
    marketing and e-tailing, along with mistakes to
    avoid

3
Learning Objectives (cont.)
  • Identify the principles of click-and-mortar
    strategies for traditional retailers
  • Describe the issue of disintermediation,
    reintermediation, and channel conflicts in
    e-tailing
  • Identify various managerial issues of concern to
    e-tailers

4
Opening Case Amazon.com
  • B2C business model where customers look for a
  • Low price
  • Fast shipment
  • Good return policy
  • Helpful customer service

5
Opening Case Amazon.com (cont.)
  • Largest Bookstore in the world
  • Offers millions of items
  • Books and music
  • DVDs and videos
  • Toys and video games
  • Electronics and software
  • Home improvement products

6
Opening Case Amazon.com (cont.)
  • Started business in 1995
  • Sales
  • 1996 15.7 million
  • 2000 1.8 billion
  • Products
  • 1999 5 million titles
  • 2000 13 million books, music, DVD/video titles

7
Opening Case Amazon.com (cont.)
Features
  • Broad selection and low prices
  • Secure payment system (1-Click order technology)
  • Gifts department
  • Online community
  • Secured payments
  • Easy browsing and searching
  • Useful product information
  • Reviews, recommendations, and personalization

8
Opening Case Amazon.com (cont.)
  • Customer relationship management
  • Creates interesting and informative front-end
  • Highly automated and efficient back-end support
  • Personalized service
  • Return customers are welcomed back by name
  • Customer wish lists available
  • E-mails customers purchase recommendations based
    on their purchasing history

9
Opening Case Amazon.com (cont.)
  • Financial performance
  • Ability to move into new areas of business should
    move them toward profitability, but makes money
    from books
  • High level of customer service and customer
    loyalty adds value

10
Opening Case Amazon.com (cont.)
  • Diversification through business alliances
  • Online sale of cars - greenlight.com
  • Online health and beauty aids - drugstore.com
  • Wireless phones multiple business partners
  • Toys - ToysrUs.com

11
E-Tailing and B2C Market Growth
  • Business-to-business (B2B)
  • Requires precise record keeping, trackability,
    accountability, and formal contracts, usually
    with high volume of transactions and large amount
    payments
  • Also online retailing
  • Business-to-consumer (B2C)
  • Ability to create direct relationships with
    consumer without intermediaries like
    distributors, wholesalers, or dealers

12
E-Tailing and B2C Market Growth (cont.)
  • The B2C Market success is derived from
  • Offering quality merchandise at good prices
  • Excellent customer service
  • Convenience

13
E-Tailing and B2C Market Growth (cont.)
  • Characteristics of goods leading to high online
    sales volumes
  • Brand recognition and guarantees
  • Digitized products
  • Frequently purchased, inexpensive items
  • Well-known items with standard specifications

14
Consumer Purchase Processand Marketing Plan
  • Purchase decision process
  • Prepurchase steps
  • Awareness of need for purchase
  • Identify basic need or want
  • Actual purchase
  • Establish decision criteria
  • Seek recommendations and information
  • Make purchase
  • Postpurchase steps
  • Assistance with installation or setup
  • Online help desks and instruction manuals

15
Figure 3-1The Consumer Purchase Decision Process
16
Consumer Purchase Processand Marketing Plan
(cont.)
  • Types of online shoppers
  • Traditionalists
  • Hunter-gatherers
  • Brand loyalists
  • Single shoppers
  • Time-starved consumers
  • Shopping avoiders
  • New technologists
  • Time-sensitive materialists or click-and-mortar
    consumers

17
Decision Criteria
  • Value propositioncustomer service, better
    prices, higher quality
  • Personal servicetreat the customer as a unique
    individual
  • Convenienceself-contained site that serves all
    the customers needs
  • Other criteriaservice after the sale

18
A Marketing Plan
  • Influence the consumers decision process through
    the marketing mix
  • Productportfolio of items available
  • Price of the products
  • Promotion of products (advertisements and
    giveaways)
  • Packaging and delivery

19
Online Purchasing Aids
  • Shopping portals
  • Comprehensive portals
  • Links to many different sellers
  • Shopping comparison sites
  • Comparison tools are available
  • Niche oriented
  • Specialize in a certain line of products
    (dogtoys.com)
  • Some collect referral fee only
  • Others have formal relationships with affiliates

20
Online Purchasing Aids (cont.)
  • Shopbots and agentstools that scout the Web for
    specific search criteria requested by consumers
  • Mysimon.com - best prices on multiple items
  • AutoBytel.com cars
  • Zdnet.com/computershopper computers
  • Office.com office supplies

21
Online Purchasing Aids (cont.)
  • Business ratings sitessites that rate e-tailers
  • Bizrate.comcompiles results provided by a
    network of shoppers
  • Gomez.comconsumer identifies relative importance
    of different criteria

22
E-Tailing Business Models
  • Subscription models charge monthly or annual
    subscription fee for service
  • Transaction fee models charge service fee based
    on the level of transaction offered
  • Advertising-supported models charge fee to
    advertisers instead of customers
  • Sponsorship models companies sponsor the
    business through donations (usually supplemental
    income)

23
Figure 3-2Disintermediation in the B2C Supply
Chain
Source M. Warkentin, et al. (2000). Used with
permission of Dr. Merrill Warkentin.
24
E-Tailing Business Models (cont.)
  • Direct marketingsell directly to consumers
  • Manufactures can sell directly to customers
  • Disintermediationremoval of business process
    layers in the value chain
  • Shortens the distribution chain
  • Eliminates inefficiencies
  • Shortens delivery time
  • Builds closer relationships with consumers

25
E-Tailing Business Models (cont.)
  • Pure-play e-tailerssell over the Internet
    without a physical sales channel
  • General purpose e-tailers (Amazon.com)
  • Broad range of products
  • Large number of consumers
  • Specialty or niche e-tailers (CatToys.com)
  • One specific product area
  • High demand items in the area
  • Effective practices for customer appeal

26
E-Tailing Business Models (cont.)
  • Traditional retailers with Web sites
  • Physical store
  • May include mail-order or catalog sales
  • Multichannel store operates both
  • Physical store
  • E-tail site

27
ODDS Grocery Market Case
  • On-Demand Delivery Services (ODDS)
  • Own fleet of delivery vehicles
  • Regular deliveries (weekly bases)
  • Delivery within short time period (1 hour or same
    day)

28
ODDS Grocery Market Case (cont.)
  • Potential online grocery shoppers
  • Shopping avoiders
  • Necessity userslimited by their ability to shop
  • New technologists
  • Time-starved consumers
  • Responsible consumers
  • Traditionals
  • Repeat customers
  • Example Parknshop in Hong Kong

29
Digital Delivery
  • Digital (soft) goods
  • Music, movies, videos, software, newspapers,
    magazines, graphics, etc.
  • Can be delivered in hard or soft form
  • Computer program on CD-ROM with owners manual
    and warranty card
  • Download from Web site after payment

30
Table 3-2Digital Goods
31
Digital Delivery (cont.)
  • Napster experienceperson-to-person sharing tool
  • Enables individual users to download music files
    from each others computers
  • Phenomenal growth of Napster community
  • New version of its file-swapping software
    includes a buy button linked to CDNow
  • May be beneficial to overall music sales as
    individuals easily sample a broader range of
    music

32
Digital Delivery (cont.)
  • New developments
  • Custom-publishing music CD sitescollection of
    personal favorites
  • Disintermediation of traditional print media
  • Journals and magazines
  • Newspapers (e.g., Wall Street Journal)

33
E-Tailing Lessons Learned
  • Profitabilityonline marginal sales dont lead to
    marginal profits
  • Brandingdrive to establish brand can lead to
    excessive spending
  • PerformanceWeb sites need to function in a fast,
    user-friendly manner
  • Static designdynamic sites with rich databases
    of information appeal most to customers

34
Managerial Issues
  • First-mover advantage or wait and learn
  • Strategic positioning
  • Trust
  • New risk exposure
  • Financial viability
  • Successes
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