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Introduction to E-Business and E-Commerce

Learn about the meaning and scope of e-business and e-commerce, the reasons for their adoption, and the challenges of managing them in an organization. Explore the impact of the internet on business and the opportunities and risks of e-business. Understand the distinction between e-commerce and e-business and the relationship between intranets, extranets, and the internet.

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Introduction to E-Business and E-Commerce

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  1. Chapter 1 Introduction to e-business and e-commerce Professor: NabilElmjati

  2. Learning outcomes Define the meaning and scope of e-business and e-commerce and their different elements Summarize the main reasons for adoption of e-commerce and e-business and barriers that may restrict adoption Outline the ongoing business challenges of managing e-business and e-commerce in an organization.

  3. Management issues How do we explain the scope and implications of e-business and e-commerce to staff? What is the full range of benefits of introducing e-business and what are the risks? How do we evaluate our current e-business capabilities?

  4. E-business innovation Discussion Which company / website impacted on Internet or the web? How do we measure their success? What made them successful?

  5. Figure 1.1 Google circa 1998Source: Wayback machine archive: http://web.archive.org/web/19981111183552/google.stanford.edu

  6. The impact of the Internet on business Andy Grove, Chairman of Intel, one of the early adopters of e-commerce, has made a meteorological analogy with the Internet. He says: Is the Internet a typhoon force, a ten times force, or is it a bit of wind? Or is it a force that fundamentally alters our business? (Grove, 1996)

  7. E-business opportunities Reach Over 1 billion users globally Connect to millions of products Richness Detailed product information on 20 billion + pages indexed by Google. Blogs, videos, feeds… Personalized messages for users Affiliation Partnerships are key in the networked economy

  8. Internet risks – what can go wrong with a transactional site?

  9. Internet risks – what can go wrong with a transactional site? Web sites that fail because of spike in visitor traffic Hacker penetrating the security of the system A company emails customer without receiving their permission Problems with fulfilment E-mail customer-service enquiries from the web site don’t reach the right person

  10. What is e-commerce and e-business? Write down a definition for each E-commerce: E-business:

  11. What is e-commerce and e-business? E-commerce : All electronically mediated information exchange between an organization and its external stakeholders (Chaffey) Digitally enabled commercial transactions between and among organizations and individuals

  12. What is e-commerce and e-business? E-business: All electronically mediated information exchanges, both within an organization and with external stakeholders supporting the range of business process (Chaffey) Digital enablement of transactions and processes within a firm, involving information systems under firm’s control. Does not include commercial transactions involving an exchange of value across organizational boundaries (Laudon)

  13. What is e-commerce and e-business? Activity 1.2 Use Google Syntax for: 'E-business' 'E-commerce' 'Internet ‘ ‘Marketing’. 'E-marketing' 'Digital marketing'

  14. Figure 1.2 The distinction between buy-side and sell-side e-commerce

  15. Figure 1.3 Three definitions of the relationship between e-commerce and e-business

  16. What is e-commerce and e-business? Activity 1.3, P. 11 Discussion—Question 1 Intranet vs. Extranet

  17. Intranet vs. Extranet P. 11, Activity 1.3 Discussion—Question 1

  18. Figure 1.4 The relationship between intranets, extranets and the Internet

  19. Why Study E-commerce? • E-commerce technology is different, more powerful than previous technologies • E-commerce bringing fundamental changes to commerce • Traditional commerce: • Passive consumer • Sales-force driven • Fixed prices • Information asymmetry

  20. Unique Features of E-commerce Technology • Global reach • Universal standards • Information richness • Interactivity • Information density • Personalization/customization • Social technology

  21. Origins & Growth of E-commerce • Precursors: • Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) • 1995: Beginning of e-commerce • First sales of banner advertisements • Since then, e-commerce fastest growing form of commerce in the United States

  22. The Growth of B2C E-commerce SOURCES: eMarketer, Inc., 2009a; U.S. Census Bureau, 2009b;

  23. The Growth of B2B E-commerce SOURCES: U.S. Census Bureau, 2009a; authors’ estimates.

  24. E-commerce: A Brief History • 1995–2000: Innovation • Key concepts developed • Dot-coms; heavy venture capital investment • 2001–2006: Consolidation • Emphasis on business-driven approach • 2006–Present: Reinvention • Extension of technologies • New models based on user-generated content, social networking, services

  25. Types of E-commerce • Selling Side • Transaction e-commerce sites • Service-oriented relationship-building site • Brand-building sites • Portal, publisher or media sites

  26. Types of E-commerce • Digital Marketing • The management and execution of marketing using e-media in conjunction with digital data about customer • Involves using digital technology • ………… • To achieve these objectives • ………….. • Through using these marketing tactics • ………..

  27. Figure 1.5 First Direct Interactive (www.firstdirect.com)

  28. Figure 1.6 Blendtec viral campaign micro-site (www.willitblend.com)

  29. Web 2.0 and Beyond • Web 2.0 • Features-p. 24 • Web 2 examples • Web 3.0 Features-pp. 24-25 Box 1.1 • Research the web to discover what Web 3.0 technology and features have been used by which company

  30. Figure 1.7 Evolution of web technologiesSource: Adapted from Spivack (2007)

  31. e-Commerce and SCM • What’s Supply Chain Management (SCM) • The coordination of all supply activities of an organization from its supplier and partners to its customers (Both the buy Side and Sell side) • Value Chain The value chain is a related concept that describes the different value-adding activities that connect a company’s supply side. We can identify an internal value chain within the boundaries of an organization and an external value chain where these activities are performed by partners. Note that in the era of e-business a company will manage many interrelated value chains, so in chapter 6 we also consider the concept of a value network.

  32. Business-Consumer Model of e-Commerce • Classified by market relationship • Business-to-Consumer (B2C) • Business-to-Business (B2B) • Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C) • Classified by technology used • Peer-to-Peer (P2P), e.g., BitTorrent and Napster • Mobile commerce (M-commerce)

  33. Figure 1.8 Summary and examples of transaction alternatives between businesses, consumers and governmental organizations

  34. Mini Case Study • How does Betfair gains profit • What’s the challenges they may face

  35. Figure 1.9 Betfair peer-to-peer gambling exchange

  36. E-government What is it? E-government refers to the application of e-commerce technologies to government and public service. What are the benefits? • Citizens-facilities for dissemination of information and use of online services at local and national levels. For example, at a local level you can find out when refuse is collected and at national level it is possible to fill tax returns. • Suppliers-government departments have a vast network of suppliers. The potential benefits (and pitfalls) of electronic supply chain management and e-procurement described in chapters 6 and 7 are equally valid for government. • Internal communications _ this includes information collection and dissemination and e-mail and workflow systems for improving efficiency within government departments.

  37. E-Business Opportunities what goals does a business can achieve through e-business?

  38. Business Adoption of E-Commerce/Business Activity: You are in a team of advisers at a local business link List Drivers to adoption of sell-side e-commerce by business and how you can reinforce these by marketing benefits Barriers to adoption of sell-side e-commerce by business and how you can reinforce these by stressing benefits

  39. Cost/efficiency and competitiveness drivers Cost/efficiency drivers Increasing speed with which supplies can be obtained Increasing speed with which goods can be dispatched Reduced sales and purchasing costs Reduced operating costs Competitiveness drivers Customer demand Improving the range and quality of services offered Avoid losing market share to businesses already using e-commerce

  40. E-business Risks and Barriers for Adoption • Strategy level issues • Practical risks

  41. Figure 1.12 Barriers to development of online technologiesSource: DTI (2002)

  42. Potential Limitations on B2C E-commerce* • Expensive technology • Sophisticated skill set • Persistent cultural attraction of physical markets and traditional shopping experiences • Persistent global inequality limiting access to telephones and computers • Saturation and ceiling effects

  43. Evaluating an Organization’s E-business Capability • Is any company ready for e-commerce?

  44. Figure 1.13 A simple stage model for buy-side and sell-side e-commerce

  45. Figure 1.14 Variation in different online activities by genderSource: UK National Statistics (2006) Individuals accessing the Internet – Report from the UK National Statistics Omnibus Survey. Published online at www.statistics.gov.uk

  46. Internet risks – what can go wrong with a transactional site? Web sites that fail because of spike in visitor traffic Hacker penetrating the security of the system A company emails customer without receiving their permission Problems with fulfilment E-mail customer-service enquiries from the web site don’t reach the right person

  47. Case Study: E-Bay

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