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eBusiness

eBusiness. The Software Production View Project Summary. Objectives. Acquire experience with the activities of the first phases of the SDLC Problem analysis Identification of the solution space and evaluation of alternatives Modeling and specification Prototyping Technology evaluation

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eBusiness

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  1. eBusiness The Software Production View Project Summary

  2. Objectives • Acquire experience with the activities of the first phases of the SDLC • Problem analysis • Identification of the solution space and evaluation of alternatives • Modeling and specification • Prototyping • Technology evaluation • Apply in practice SA methods • Teamwork • Customer Interactions • Presenting the Results

  3. The Problem Space • Information gathering • (Business) domain analysis • Narrow the Scope ... Research, discussion, customer meetings

  4. eBusiness - the Target Domain eBusiness is a framework for seamless integration of critical business systems and their direct connection to key constituencies (customers, employees, suppliers and distributors) via the Web (Internet, Intranet and Extranet). As all key players - customers, employees, suppliers and distributors - are connected to the business systems and share the information they need, eBusiness actually transitions the traditional business processes to a new level with the ultimate focus on customers and Customer Relationship Management (CRM).

  5. E-business is not just one thing • Customers use the term in various ways • Decision-makers from even the largest businesses confess it’s hard to get a handle on • E-business approach among large companies varies by • Level of Involvement • (pure play, alternative channel, etc.) • Area of Focus • (customers, employees, suppliers) • Scope of Business • (business-to-business vs. consumer; • genuinely global vs. multi-local)

  6. Four levels of engagement • There are multiple models for e-business adoption, depending on level of involvement • Internet service & content providers (Yahoo!, iVillage): e-business both product and channel • Internet pure plays: delivering real products virtually (Amazon) • Mixed plays: Web is channel complementing brick-and-mortar outlets (Barnes & Noble) • Non-transactional e-business: key is automating other business processes besides sales

  7. Two types of business scope • Business-to-Consumer • The media attention is here, especially where nature of product makes e-delivery a good fit • Early emphasis on transactions, often at the expense of other e-business opportunities • Business-to-Business • The biggest economic impact is and will be here • Looking for controlled evolution: need to build an integrated architecture to support transformed business model • Within B2B, firm-to-firm interactions (EDI, for example), are being matched or overtaken in importance by firm-to-individual interactions (FedEx). Many businesses report that Internet enables decision-making to shift from center to nodes, closer to source of needs.

  8. Two categories of temperament • Most large businesses see the Internet as containing an element of threat (if not pure threat) • Many establishing defensive plays to ward off inroads from smaller, more nimble competitors • Who sees e-business as more opportunity than threat? • Those with products that can be easily delivered over the Internet (music, information) • Those who broker or establish a market for transactions (eBay, Priceline) • Visionaries who see the Internet as transformative (very few in number) for their whole business

  9. Three meanings of e-business • Despite heavy use, “e-business” lacks a single fixed meaning. Speaking clearly means understanding the customer’s dialect: • e-business is equivalent to e-commerce (among transaction-focused businesses) • e-business covers all business processes deployed onto the Internet (sales, marketing, R&D, etc.); e-commerce is a subset of e-business covering transactions where money changes hands (among business with more diverse e-applications) • e-business is a B-2-B function; e-commerce focuses on the consumer

  10. First stages of e-business • For many large companies, the initial appeal of e-business is the big pipe: • large volumes of supplier data via EDI • large volumes of bandwidth to employee desktops • large volumes of customer transactions via e-commerce, and extended customer reach in marketing/sales • Another explosive growth curve will come through targeted knowledge delivery: • not just information, but knowledge for action • flexibility and precision the key

  11. Three strategic areas Emphasis here strongly determines the direction of the evolutionary path • Focus on Employees • First generation: increase bandwidth to desktop; remote access • Next generation: empower employees through flexible work arrangements; • superior decision tools; creation of virtual teams • Focus on theCustomer • First generation: enable transactions; extend geographic reach; increase awareness • Next generation: one-to-one marketing, Web self-service • Focus on • Supply Chain • First generation: improving transaction efficiency Next generation: increasing supplier choice & efficiency; build seamless virtual enterprise

  12. Customer focus: solution spaces • Retail: • Use demographic knowledge to structure marketing, purchasing ; customize offers for individuals based on previous and predicted buying patterns • Transportation: • Optimize scheduling; tailor fares • Health Care: • compare effectiveness of treatments, devise prevention approaches

  13. Supplier focus: solution spaces • Today: efficiency transfer of volume data • Next generation: Enabling rapid shifts when it comes to location of manufacture or delivery • increases flexibility • reduces costs • allows businesses to be more responsive to short-term shifts in customer demand • Next generation: increasing disintermediation • using the Internet to bypass traditional distribution channels

  14. Spotlight: Empowered employees • What: • Types of flexibility • Home-based working • Home working • Nomadic working • “Hot desking” • Decision tools and analysis software that give employees more timely and actionable access to relevant information

  15. Spotlight: Empowered employees • Why: • Businesses gain by investing in tools and people (big ROI) rather than facilities (inevitable depreciation) • Important for recruiting and retaining skilled employees in tight labor market • Helps to optimize employee productivity • Employee loyalty highly correlated with customer loyalty

  16. Spotlight: Empowered Employees • “What we are doing is changing the way we operate with people and their locations…it doesn’t really matter where I am…it changes the world…that is the way of the future…there will definitely be people working at home, people working in satellite offices…” Partner, business services company • “Employees are demanding more flexibility. . . . It’s a good way to retain employees. . . . I think it’s going to be a necessity.” AVP Marketing, FIRE

  17. Spotlight: Empowered employees • Competitive environment: • B2B firms are working with consultants to plot the Internet’s impact on the HR future • Lucent’s play: • Networking capacity; VPNs; development of next generation wireless technology: • Lucent could use its substantial relationships with FIRE companies to make inroads here

  18. Customer e-business: Barriers • Cost-benefit analyses in these areas still poorly developed • Amazon still loses nearly $200m quarterly • Some CIOs report they won’t act unless there is a high-level executive champion • Fear of cannibalization of existing channels • Customer preference in some segments for some type of human contact

  19. Supplier e-business: Barriers • In a word, security • Creating virtual enterprise by definition multiplies access points, and thus security risks • Security solutions have at least three dimensions • access (do you have the right to log in?) • authentication (are you who you say you are?) • authorization (is this information you’re allowed to have?)

  20. Employee e-business: Barriers • Security also an issue here • allowing appropriate network access from remote & mobile terminals • Lack of workforce cohesion • company culture may get lost in the creation of virtual teams • Risk of customer dissatisfaction • if employees’ need for flexibility outpaces customers’ willingness to tolerate it

  21. Some of the materials in this section are from: “E-Biz Study” of The Taylor Research & Consulting Group, Inc.

  22. The Technology • Architectures • Tools • Languages • Environments • Products and Vendors Conference Discussion, Research

  23. The Competitive Landscape • Markets • Products • Competitors

  24. The Solution Space • Definition of Alternatives • Evaluation of Alternatives • Modeling and Specification • Documenting the Solution SRS, Meetings with the "customer"

  25. Presenting the Work • Know the audience • Know your goals • Know your strengths • Know your weaknesses • Prepare in advance • Execute: • eye contact, • voice • posture • gestures Presentations

  26. Presenting the Work • Know • the audience • your strengths • your weaknesses Presentations • Set • your goals • Prepare • the content & the form • the delivery - dry run, time • Execute • eye contact, voice • posture, gestures, movement • time

  27. Project Management: A Whole Other Dimension • Planing • Cost estimation • Decision on development tools, methods, environments • Monitoring...

  28. How well did we do? • Acquire experience with the activities of the first phases of the SDLC (5) • Problem analysis • Identification of the solution space and evaluation of alternatives • Modeling and specification • Prototyping • Technology evaluation • Apply in practice SA methods (4) • Teamwork (5-) • Customer Interactions (3) • Presenting the Results (4) (on a scale of 5) Job Well Done!

  29. Job Well Done!

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