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Developing an E-Commerce Curriculum for the New Economy H. Albert Napier, Ph.D. Rice University Napier Judd, Inc.

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Developing an E-Commerce Curriculum for the New Economy H. Albert Napier, Ph.D. Rice University Napier Judd, Inc.

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    1. Developing an E-Commerce Curriculum for the New Economy H. Albert Napier, Ph.D. Rice University Napier & Judd, Inc.

    2. 2 Agenda E-commerce Trends Driving Principles of the New Economy E-commerce Business Models

    3. 3 Agenda E-commerce Curriculum Components Sample E-commerce Curriculums Concluding Remarks

    4. 4 U. S. Online Population

    5. 5 Number Online World Total

    6. 6 Knowledge Gap: Growth in Number of Web Pages 2.1 billion unique, publicly available Web pages in July 2000 7 million new pages each day 4+ billion pages by 2001 84% of Web pages are U. S. Based

    7. 7 E-Mail #1 Internet Activity 569 million e-mail accounts in 1999 1 billion e-mail accounts by 2001 35 billion daily e-mail messages by 2005

    8. 8 Mobile Communications U. S. workers have growing preference for anytime, anywhere communication tools Laptop use up 8% Pagers use up 6% Cellular phone use up 25% PDAs use up 100%

    9. 9 Web-Related Business Spending IT products and services 1999 USD 119.1 billion 2003 USD 282.5 billion Web software spending CAGR 43% from 1999 to 2003

    10. 10 Web-Related Business Spending Spending on B2B marketplaces will grow from 2.1 billion in 2000 to 80.9 billion by 2005

    11. 11 Web-Related Business Spending Survey of IT and E-business Executives 77% plan to increase spending in 2001 4% plan to cut spending in 2001 19% plan to spend about the same in 2001 E-business spending to be 15.5% of IT budget in 2001 and 30-50% of IT budget by 2005

    12. 12 843,000 of 1.6 million new IT jobs went unfilled in U. S. 13% of new IT job vacancies were for workers with Web-related skills 20% of new IT job vacancies were for workers with database development and software engineering skills

    13. 13 Worldwide E-Commerce

    14. 14 Individuals and companies worldwide are becoming electronically linked Creating a revolution in the rules of business What’s Driving the New Economy?

    15. 15 The Internet Changes Everything in the New Economy Employee communication Way products and services are sold and distributed Way companies communicate with other companies Power shifts from seller to buyer

    16. 16 Ten Principles of the New Economy Matter Space Time People Growth Value Efficiency Markets Transactions Impulse

    17. 17 E-commerce Business Models B2C AOL www.aol.com Barnes & Noble www.bn.com eToys www.etoys.com foodlocker.com www.foodlocker.com

    18. 18 E-commerce Business Models B2B Office Depot bsdnet.officedepot.com/ Business.com HighTech Campus www.hightechcampus.com/ B2G eFederal.com www.efederal.com

    19. 19 E-commerce Business Models B2B Exchanges PlasticsNet www.plasticsnet.com NECX www.necx.com HoustonStreet.com

    20. 20 E-commerce Business Models C2C eBay www.ebay.com First Auction www.firstauction.com @AskMe.com www.askme.com C2B Priceline www.priceline.com

    21. 21 E-commerce Curriculum Components Introduction to e-commerce E-commerce technology Networking and security Web site development and administration

    22. 22 E-commerce Curriculum Components Database management Supply chain management Internet law

    23. 23 E-commerce Curriculum Components Creating an E-Business – foodlocker.com Entrepreneurship Electronic payment methods E-business plans Startup financing

    24. 24 E-commerce Curriculum Components Creating an E-Business – foodlocker.com Selecting technologies Understanding security issues Integrating front-end and back-end systems Marketing and advertising

    25. 25 Sample E-commerce Curriculum Southwest Community College, NC www.southwest.cc.nc.us/CONTED/winter2000/bus.html#Anchor-Electroni-47400 Alexandria Technical College, MN http://134.29.163.132/index.htm University of Minnesota - Extension www3.extension.umn.edu/mainstreet/ curriculum

    26. 26 Sample E-commerce Curriculum North Carolina State Graduate Program ecommerce.ncsu.edu/ Rice University, TX jonesgsm.rice.edu/ Creighton University, NE Graduate Program ecommerce.creighton.edu/masters/curriculum.htm

    27. 27 Sample E-commerce Curriculum Carnegie Mellon Institute for E-Commerce Graduate Program www.ecom.cmu.edu/ Carnegie Mellon Executive Development Program cmu-execnet.gsia.cmu.edu/executive/ index.html

    28. 28 Sample E-commerce Curriculum The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania www.wharton.upenn.edu/mba/curriculum/ ecom.html UCLA Graduate Program unex.ucla.edu/ecommerce/modules.htm

    29. 29 Concluding Remarks Technology continues rapid advances Worldwide linking of individuals and business is driving the new economy Demand for employees with high tech skills continues to grow E-commerce curriculums are critical

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