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53-751-03 E-Commerce Sell-side: dealing electronically with clients

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53-751-03 E-Commerce Sell-side: dealing electronically with clients Jacques Robert OUTLINE Introduction How can the Web add value to the process? A model: Customer ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 53-751-03 E-Commerce Sell-side: dealing electronically with clients


1
53-751-03E-CommerceSell-side dealing
electronically with clients
  • Jacques Robert

2
OUTLINE
  • Introduction
  • How can the Web add value to the process?
  • A model Customer Lifecycle
  • Mini-Case Distrident
  • Technology to implement sell-side
  • Unresolved issues

3
How do organizations interact with clients
(consumers or business)?
  • Traditionally
  • Electronically

4
Business Objectives?

5
(No Transcript)
6
IBM CRM TECHNOLOGY INFRASTRUCTURE
7
Characteristics of B2C Buying Process

8
Characteristics of B2B Buying Process

9
How does Amazon use the Web to add value?
  • .

10
How does Dell use the Web to add value?
  • .

11
How does Banks use the Web to add value?

12
Challenge for suppliers
  • Suppliers face the difficult challenges of
    maintaining the ability to sell effectively to
    all their customers, both in traditional channels
    and through emerging e-commerce channels, while
    finding a way to differentiate themselves from
    the competition in those new electronic
    environments.

13
Objectives (source Microsoft)
  • It must make measurable impact on the suppliers
    business through
  • Increased revenue
  • Increased efficiency
  • Lower costs of doing business
  • Increased agility
  • Improved customer service and satisfaction
  • It must allow suppliers to differentiate
    themselves and compete more effectively by
    providing
  • The ability to expose the suppliers full value
    proposition and brand in electronic form
  • Lower cost and faster acquisition of new
    customers
  • Increased business from existing customers
  • It must leverage the existing strengths and
    investments of the supplier through
  • The ability to enhance and compliment existing
    business processes
  • The ability to enhance and complement existing
    technology investments (ERP, supply chain, CRM,
    logistics, collaboration, etc.)
  • The ability to increase overall business
    intelligence and decision-making abilities

14
Blake Ives Customer Service Life Cycle
15
IVES CUSTOMER SERVICE LIFE CYCLE
Where do I get it? How much? Delivered When?
What is it? Do I need One? Which One? How many?
How do I use it? How do I fix it?
How much am I spending? Is there a new one? How
do I return it?
Available at http//isds.bus.lsu.edu/cvoc/projec
ts/cslc/html/
16
PHASES OF THE CSLC
  • Requirements
  • Establish requirements establish a need for the
    product
  • Specify Determine product attributes
  • Acquisition
  • Select Source Determine where to obtain product
  • Order Order the product from a supplier
  • Authorize and Pay For Transfer funds or extend
    credit
  • Acquire take possession of the product
  • Test and Accept Make sure the product meets the
    specifications

17
PHASES OF THE CSLC
  • Ownership
  • Integrate Add to an existing inventory
  • Monitor Control access use of the product
  • Upgrade Upgrade the product if conditions change
  • Maintain Repair the product as necessary
  • Retirement
  • Transfer or Dispose Move, return, or dispose of
    product
  • Account For Monitor product related expenses

18
Technology to Create Sell-Side
19
MAIN FUNCTIONALITIES
  • Personalization
  • Secured payments
  • Client Management
  • Order management
  • Catalogue Management
  • Performance
  • Search

20
Building a store Turnkey approach
  • Turnkey Approach
  • Supplier provides everything (software, hosting,
    ASP mode).
  • Company only needs an Internet connexion and a
    web browser
  • Amount per month based on volume
  • Suppliers
  • Yahoo!Store (ca.store.yahoo.com)
  • ClicNet (www.clicnet.net)
  • Microsoft BCentral
  • Amazon.com zShops

21
Build Your Own Approach
22
Architecture
Windows 2000 Server IIS Commerce Server
Kenny
SQL Server
Internet
Edgar
SQL Request
Database
23
Necessary Software
  • Operating System
  • Windows, Unix, Linux (open source)
  • Database Server
  • SQL Server (Microsoft), DB2 (IBM), Oracle, MySQL
    (open source)
  • Http Server
  • IIS (Microsoft), Apache (open source)
  • E-Commerce Server
  • Commerce Server (Microsoft), WebSphere (IBM),
    osCommerce (open source), BEA, Broadvision,
    Iplanet (Sun)

24
Issues
  • Catalogue management
  • Categories and sub-categories
  • Product description
  • Pricing
  • Order management
  • Payment system
  • Inventory management
  • Delivery
  • User management
  • Anonymous or Authenticated users
  • Personalization
  • Campaign management
  • newspaper adds, banner
  • Indexing

25
IBMS E-BUSINESS STAGES OF ADOPTION
ABI Curriculum Guide available at
http//www-1.ibm.com/ibm/palisades/abi/curriculum
-guide.html
  • Access
  • May use the Web for e-mail and may support a
    single home page
  • Publish
  • Maintains a multi-page Web site. Uses the Web for
    e-mail, one-way communication or publishing of
    business information
  • Transact
  • Uses the Web to enable clients to execute one-way
    or two-way transactions against core business
    systems
  • Integrate Internally
  • Uses the Web to improve and/or integrate core
    business processes within the enterprise
  • Integrate Externally
  • Uses the Web to integrate business processes
    across enterprises
  • Adapt Dynamically
  • Uses the Web as the foundation for existing in a
    digital community
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