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261446 Information Systems

Explore the world of e-commerce, its impact on businesses and consumers, and the unique opportunities and challenges it presents. Discover the evolution of the tourism supply chain and the role of digital markets in shaping it.

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261446 Information Systems

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  1. 261446 Information Systems Week 10 E-Commerce: Digital Products, Digital Goods

  2. Week 10 Topics • E-Commerce & The Internet • E-Commerce: Business & Technology

  3. Case Studies • Case Study #1) Groupon’s Business Model: Social and Local • Case Study #2) To Pay or Not to Pay: Zagat’s Dilemma

  4. What is “E”-Commerce? • What does the “E” mean? • E-Business? • E-Learning? • E-Governance? • E-Mail? • E-…

  5. E-Commerce • “Digitally enabled commercial transactions between and among organisations and individuals” • Many of which occur over the Internet and the Web • Commercial transactions? • Exchange of value • Money, products, services…

  6. E-Commerce • Massive growth since 1995 • 1995 – Netscape accepted first ads, creating the idea that the Web would be a new medium for advertising & sales.

  7. E-Commerce • Fastest growing form of Commerce (compared to physical retail stores, services & entertainment • Social & Mobile commerce fastest growing forms • Wave 1 transformed the books, music & air travel markets; Wave 2 transforms marketing & advertising, telecoms, movies, TV, jewelry, real estate, online travel, bill payments, software. • Online demographic has broadened to match ordinary shoppers • Small businesses and entrepreneurs are flowing the marketplace, using the infrastructure of E-commerce giants, such as Amazon / Google. • Mobile take advantage of location-based services

  8. E-Commerce • Wireless / Ubiquitous devices & connections take off • Broadband becomes standard • Social Networking offer new platform for e-commerce • New Internet models of computing emerge • Apps, Cloud computing, SaaS, Web 2.0

  9. Why is E-Commerce Different? • Unique Nature of environment • Ubiquity • Global Reach • Universal Standards • Richness • Interactivity • Information Density • Personalisation / Customisation • Social Technology

  10. Ubiquity • Technology available everywhere • Home, Work, using desktop and mobile devices. • The marketplace is extended beyond traditional boundaries, removed from temporal or geographic location. • Marketplace is anytime, anywhere • Customer convenience is enhanced, shopping costs reduced.

  11. Global Reach • Technology breaches national boundaries • Across cultural and national boundaries, seamlessly and without modification • Potentially billions of consumers and millions of businesses

  12. Universal Standards • One set of technology standards • IP • Disparate computer systems can easily communicate with each other

  13. Richness • Video, audio, text messages • New media is easily integrated into a single marketing message & consumer experience

  14. Interactivity • Technology works by interacting with the user • Customers are engaged in a dialog, dynamically adjusting experiences to the individual. • The consumer is a co-participant in the process

  15. Information Density • Information costs are reduced, while quality raised • Information processing, storage and communication costs have dramatically dropped. • Currency, accuracy and timeliness improve. • Information is plentiful, cheap and more accurate

  16. Personalisation / Customisation • Personalised messages can be delivered to individuals and groups • Advertising messages based on an individual’s characteristics

  17. Social Technology • Content Generation and Social Networking • User generated content, alongside distribution.

  18. E-Commerce • The Internet reduces Information Asymmetry • Where one party in a transaction has more information, relevant to the transaction, than another party. • This information influences relative bargaining power • How much do you know about how much products really cost?

  19. E-Commerce • Digital Markets afford Dynamic Pricing • The price of a product can vary depending on demand characteristics, or the supply situation • Online retailed like Amazon can change prices based on time of the day, demand for the product, supply, the user’s prior visits to the site.

  20. Disintermediation • Digital Markets afford suppliers to directly connect with their end-users. • This may eliminate an intermediary

  21. Travel Agents? • Traditionally an intermediary facing disintermediation? • The internet offers a new distribution channel, but… • Customer fears regarding security • Lack of social interaction

  22. Evolution of the Tourism Supply Chain • As well as having an impact on individual firms, ICT’s have had an impact on the tourism industry as a whole • The supply chain has changed • Strategy of major players • Selective introduction of technology

  23. Material Suppliers Service Providers GDS/CRS Distributors Supplier Reservation Centers & Ticket Offices Brick & Mortar Travel Agents Internet Travel Agents Supplier Websites Con- solidators Customer Tourism SupplyChain

  24. Computerised Reservation Systems (CRS) • Introduced by the Airline industry in the 1970’s • Simple database system managing seats on flights, shared between partners • Terminals added to high volume agencies. • Easy to manage inventory, and facilitate distribution channel • Later hotels and tour operators also used similar CRS

  25. Global Distribution System (GDS) • With the networked economy the CRS could be distributed more easily. • Applications with more sophisticated features were developed • Sabre, Galileo International, Amadeus, Worldspan • Originally intended as B2B, but with the internet has turned to B2C too

  26. Porter’s 5 Forces • Framework for analysing industries & developing business strategy • Threat of Substitutes • Threat of New Entrants • Bargaining Power of Customers • Bargaining Power of Suppliers • Competitive Rivalry • Lets take a look at some of the forces having an impact on the tourism supply chain.

  27. Threat of Substitutes • This concerns whether a substitute product or service exists which customers could be tempted to use as an alternative. For instance, when a traveler could travel by train rather than airplane. The strength of this threat depends on how well the current product is differentiated, and how well the substitute product matches the needs of the customer, as well as switching costs involved.

  28. Threat of new entrants • This concerns how feasible it is for more competitors to enter the marketplace. Various things can affect the likelihood of new entrants emerging, for instance the capital requirements for set up costs, any learning curve advantages, government policy or access to distribution channels. • If we consider traditional brick and mortar travel agents, the capital requirements are high, and access to distribution channels limited, compared to online travel agents where start up costs are minimal and access to distribution channels universal.

  29. Bargaining Power of Customers / Suppliers • This covers the balance of power in a supplier/customer relationship. • For airlines operating in a natural monopoly, the customer switching costs could be substantial, leading to powerful airlines • The role of the GDS within the tourism industry became increasingly more powerful as utilizing an alternative distribution channel became increasingly more expensive

  30. Bargaining Power of Customers / Suppliers • Another important factor in this power relationship comes from the potential to forward or backward integrate. • Travel agents are generally unable to backward integrate to their suppliers (i.e. a Travel Agent is not able to start offering flights or rooms in their own hotel). • On the other hand, airlines and hotel chains, particularly with the affordances of the Internet, are able to forward integrate and develop their own distribution channels as alternatives to using a travel agent. • This supports the idea that the balance of power lies in the producers favour.

  31. Competitive Rivalry • This concerns the intensity of competition within the market, often influenced by the number and diversity of competitors. In a saturated market, many players will lose power, unless they can differentiate their product offering from their competitors. One popular means of differentiation is through the integration of ICT’s, which could be as simple as adding a new online distribution channel, or by setting up an electronic booking system.

  32. Travel Agents • If organizations, or certain business models, can establish a means to radically affect their strength relative to organizations around them, then the supply chain can be revolutionized. • With the introduction of ICT’s, and the ability for airlines and hotels to directly target their customers through the Internet, the tourism supply chain was drastically altered. • And the role of the Travel Agent has changed

  33. The future of Intermediaries? • Modern ICT infrastructure allows the creation of extended global enterprises, where companies such as airlines have the ability to vertically integrate and directly target their end customers.

  34. Alternatively… • ICTs have afforded complex interconnections between the firms operating within a supply chain, and thus the creation of virtual corporations or networked organizations. • Here each organization focuses on their core competencies, be it operating planes and flight schedules or distributing the product.

  35. Intermediaries • Add a significant cost to the value chain • Leading to higher final prices • Pressure to bypass intermediaries and internalise their value added functions • This happened when airlines were under particular pressure to reduce costs, due to rising oil prices

  36. Disintermediation • The role of travel agents includes: • Transaction processing • Information provision • Other industries (e.g. Banking) have shown these functions are most readily replaced by technology • And that technology can be managed by the supplier

  37. Disintermediation • Airlines capped / reduced transaction commissions • And made more efforts towards direct sales • E-tickets remove the need for physically based transactions • Some travel agents reacted by recommending preferred suppliers, based on commissions available • This compromises the perceived independence of the Travel Agent.

  38. Re-intermediation • It’s not all bad news! • E-Ticketing has reduced the importance of the ticket, and increased the importance of personalised service • ICT’s can capture, store and process information, but they can’t analyse the semantics of that information • Human intermediaries are needed to assess the quality and reliability of online information

  39. The role of intermediaries • Lets extend the role of intermediaries; • Search and Evaluation • Needs Assessment and Product Matching • Customer Risk Management • Product Distribution • Product Information Dissemination • Purchase Influence • Provision of Customer Information • Producer Risk Management • Transaction Economies of Scale • Integration of Consumer and Producer Needs

  40. The role of intermediaries • Part of that role can be taken over by ICTs • Some can’t • Needs assessment • Product Matching • Travel agents provide a neutral aggregation service to reduce customer’s risks

  41. Reinventing the Travel Agent? • Before the internet • TAs had exclusive access to information • All the information to make intelligent travel decisions • TAs were among the first small businesses to install computer terminals • Airlines allowed access to CRS / GDS • Wide range of tourism products

  42. Reinventing the Travel Agent? • With the reduction / elimination of airline commissions • TAs have to cut costs (particularly Brick and Mortar TAs) • The internet affords this • Physical limitations removed • Expanded potential market

  43. Reinventing the Travel Agent? • Inventories of accurate travel information in databases • Databases of customers, complete with personal preferences, used within CRMs • Diverse supplier’s products combined to make innovative packages • Golf + Hotel + Flight = Golfing Holiday • The travel agent becomes a trusted counsel for the prospective traveler

  44. Reinventing the Travel Agent? • 4 key roles • An information broker, passing information between guests and suppliers • Processing transactions by booking rooms or flights and then transferring money • Provide advice to customers, specific to their requirements • Providing value added services by integrating a wider variety of travel products

  45. Intermediary? • Or reinvented as an Infomediary? • But the infomediary product is easily copied and redistributed… • …so new new ways to add value are needed. • Previously TAs were agents for the product/service providers • i.e. the airlines & the hotels • Now they are agents for the people • i.e. the customers

  46. Digital Goods? • Marginal Costs of producing another unit is about zero • It costs nothing to copy a music file • Cost of producing 1st unit is relatively high • nearly the total cost of the product, as inventory & distribution is negligible • Cost of delivery very low • What is the effect?

  47. Types of E-Commerce • B2C • Business to Consumer • Retailing products to individual shoppers • B2B • Business to Business • Sales of goods & services among businesses • C2C • Consumer to Consumer • Enabling consumers to sell goods to other consumers

  48. E-Commerce Business Models • There are various business models operating in E-Commerce • Portals • E-tailers • Content Providers • Transaction Brokers • Market Creators • Service Providers • Community Providers

  49. Portals • Gateways to the web • Gain income through attracting large audiences, advertising, referral fees • Include Horizontal, Vertical & Affinity Portals

  50. E-tailer • Online Retail Stores • From Amazon to small enterprises • Some are “Bricks & Clicks” Retailers • Others are pure virtual organisations

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