e commerce quiz 2
Market Strategy
"How do you plan to promote your products or services to attract your target audience?"
Revenue Model
"How will the firm earn revenue, generate profits, and produce a superior return on invested capital?"
Management Team
"What kind of backgrounds should the company's leaders have?"
Market Opportunity
"What marketspace do you intend to serve and what is its size?"
Competitive Advantage
"What special advantages does your firm bring to the marketspace?"
Organizational Development
"What types of organizational structures within the firm are necessary to carry out the business plan?"
Competitive Environment
"Who else occupies your intended marketspace?"
Value Proposition
"Why should the customer buy from you?"
Exchanges
-Independently owned vertical digital marketplace for direct inputs -Create powerful competition between suppliers -Tend to force suppliers into powerful price competition; number of exchanges has dropped dramatically
Industry Consortia
-Industry-owned vertical digital marketplace open to select suppliers E.g.: Exostar -More successful than exchanges -Sponsored by powerful industry players -Strengthen traditional purchasing behavior
Industry Value Chains
-Set of activities performed by suppliers, manufacturers, transporters, distributors, and retailers that transform raw inputs into final products and services -Internet reduces cost of information and other transactional costs -Leads to greater operational efficiencies, lowering cost, prices, adding value for customers
Origins and Growth of E-commerce
1995: Beginning of e-commerce First sales of banner advertisements E-commerce fastest growing form of commerce in United States
Firm Value Chains
Activities that a firm engages in to create final products from raw inputs Each step adds value
types of revenue models
Advertising revenue model Subscription revenue model Transaction fee revenue model Sales revenue model Affiliate revenue model
revenue models portal
Advertising, referral fees, transaction fees, subscriptions
Revenue model(s):
Advertising, subscriptions, transaction fees, sales, and affiliate revenue.
Marketspace
Area of actual or potential commercial value in which company intends to operate
important concepts of competitive advantage
Asymmetries First-mover advantage, complementary resources Unfair competitive advantage Leverage Perfect markets
Build own vs. outsourcing
Build your own requires team with diverse skill set; choice of software tools; both risks and possible benefits
Types of E-commerce
Business-to-Consumer (B2C) Business-to-Business (B2B) Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C) Social e-commerce Mobile e-commerce (M-commerce) Local e-commerce
A strong management team
Can make the business model work Can give credibility to outside investors Has market-specific knowledge Has experience in implementing business plans
Technical approach
Computer science Management science Information systems
Traditional commerce:
Consumer as passive targets Sales-force driven Fixed prices Information asymmetry
Market Creator
Create digital environment where buyers and sellers can meet and transact
E-procurement
Creates digital markets where participants transact for indirect goods B2B service providers, application service providers (ASPs) e.g.: Ariba
Realistic market opportunity
Defined by revenue potential in each market niche in which company hopes to compete
Describing your audience
Demographics Age, gender, income, location Behavior patterns (lifestyle) Consumption patterns (purchasing habits) Digital usage patterns Content creation patterns (blogs, Facebook) Buyer personas
Characterize the marketplace
Demographics Size, growth, changes Structure Competitors Suppliers Substitute products
Business plan
Describes a firm's business model
what does organizatinoal development do
Describes how firm will organize work
System design specification
Description of main components of a system and their relationship to one another
Most important management challenges:
Developing a clear understanding of business objectives Knowing how to choose the right technology to achieve those objectives
Technology
Development and mastery of digital computing and communications technology
4 generic business strategies
Differentiation Cost Scope Focus
Private Industrial Networks
Digital network Used to coordinate communication among firms engaged in business together Typically evolve out of company's internal enterprise system e.g.: Walmart's network for suppliers
What Is E-commerce?
Digitally enabled commercial transactions between and among organizations and individuals
Technologies continue to evolve at exponential rates
Disruptive business change New opportunities
The Gold Rush Model
E-commerce infrastructure companies have profited the most: Hardware, software, networking, security E-commerce software systems, payment systems Media solutions, performance enhancement CRM software Databases Hosting services, etc.
Why Study E-commerce?
E-commerce technology is different, more powerful than previous technologies E-commerce brings fundamental changes to commerce
Major B2C Business Models
E-tailer Community provider (social network) Content provider Portal Transaction broker Market creator Service provider
2001-2006: Consolidation
Emphasis on business-driven approach
2006-Present: Reinvention
Extension of technologies New models based on user-generated content, social networks, services
Entrepreneurs
Extraordinary opportunity to earn far above normal returns on investment—first mover advantage
industries that use transcation broker
Financial services Travel services Job placement services
Co-location:
Firm purchases or leases Web server (with control over its operation), but server is located at vendor's facility
Outsourcing:
Hiring vendors to provide services involved in building site
variations of portal
Horizontal/General Vertical/Specialized (Vortal) Search
Hosting
Hosting company responsible for ensuring site is accessible 24/7, for monthly fee
Main areas where you will need to make decisions
Human resources and organizational capabilities Creating a team with the skill set needed to build and manage a successful site Hardware/software Telecommunications Site design
effect of internet on firm value chains
Increases operational efficiency Enables product differentiation Enables precise coordination of steps in chain
Computer scientists
Inexpensive, universal communications and computing environment accessible by all
system analysis/planning business objectives information requirements
Information elements that system must produce in order to achieve business objectives
Behavioral approach
Information systems Economics Marketing Management Finance/accounting Sociology
Society
Intellectual property, individual privacy, public welfare policy
First 17 years of e-commerce
Just the beginning Rapid growth and change
1995-2000: Invention
Key concepts developed Dot-coms; heavy venture capital investment
Imagine Your E-commerce Presence
Know yourself—SWOT analysis Develop an e-commerce presence map Develop a timeline: Milestones How much will this cost?
system analysis/planning business objectives
List of capabilities you want your site to have
system analysis/planning business objectives system functionalities
List of information system capabilities needed to achieve business objectives
Two components of system design
Logical design Data flow diagrams, processing functions, databases Physical design Specifies actual physical, software components, models, etc.
Implementation and maintenance
Maintenance is ongoing Maintenance costs: Similar to development costs Benchmarking
The Systems Development Life Cycle
Methodology for understanding business objectives of a system and designing an appropriate solution
The Web
Most popular Internet service Provides access to Web pages HTML documents that may include text, graphics, animations, music, videos Web content has grown exponentially Google reports one trillion unique URLs; 120 billion Web pages indexed
Economists
Nearly perfect competitive market; friction-free commerce Lowered search costs, disintermediation, price transparency, elimination of unfair competitive advantage
B2B Business Models
Net marketplaces E-distributor E-procurement Exchange Industry consortium Private industrial network
Firm Value Webs
Networked business ecosystem Uses Internet technology to coordinate the value chains of business partners Coordinates a firm's suppliers with its own production needs using an Internet-based supply chain management system
Business
New technologies present businesses with new ways of organizing production and transacting business
Digital content on the Web
News, music, video, text, artwork
what is the competitive environment influenced by
Number and size of active competitors Each competitor's market share Competitors' profitability Competitors' pricing
E-tailer
Online version of traditional retailer Revenue model: sales Low barriers to entry
Successful e-commerce value propositions
Personalization/customization Reduction of product search, price discovery costs Facilitation of transactions by managing product delivery
Business Strategy
Plan for achieving superior long-term returns on the capital invested in a business firm
Business model(s):
Portal, e-tailer, content provider, transaction broker, market creator, service provider, community provider
Transaction Broker
Process online transactions for consumers
Community Provider
Provide online environment (social network) where people with similar interests can transact, share content, and communicate
How the Internet and the WebChange Business
Rivalry among existing competitors Barriers to entry Threat of new substitute products Strength of suppliers Bargaining power of buyers
revenue model for e distributor
Sales of goods
service provider revenue model
Sales of services, subscription fees, advertising, sales of marketing data
Portal
Search plus an integrated package of content and services
revenue model for e procurement
Service fees, supply-chain management, fulfillment services
Business model
Set of planned activities designed to result in a profit in a marketplace
Revenue models
Subscription; pay per download (micropayment); advertising; affiliate referral
variations of content provider
Syndication Web aggregators
major steps of the systems development life cycle
Systems analysis/planning Systems design Building the system Testing Implementation
revenue model for broker
Transaction fees
revenue model for market creator
Transaction fees
revenue model for exchanges
Transaction, commission fees
revenue model for industry consortia
Transaction, commission fees
revenue models for community providers
Typically hybrid, combining advertising, subscriptions, sales, transaction fees, affiliate fees
Eight Unique Features of E-commerce Technology
Ubiquity Global reach Universal standards Information richness Interactivity Information density Personalization/customization Social technology
Testing
Unit testing System testing Acceptance testing
Web 2.0
User-centered applications and social media technologies User-generated content and communication Highly interactive, social communities Large audiences; yet mostly unproven business models e.g.: Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Wikipedia, StumbleUpon, Tumblr, Pinterest
E-commerce business model
Uses/leverages unique qualities of Internet and Web
service provider value proposition
Valuable, convenient, time-saving, low-cost alternatives to traditional service providers
Eight Key Elements of a Business Model
Value proposition Revenue model Market opportunity Competitive environment Competitive advantage Market strategy Organizational development Management team
E-distributor
Version of retail and wholesale store, MRO goods, and indirect goods e.g.: Grainger.com Owned by one company seeking to serve many customers
variations of etailer
Virtual merchant Bricks-and-clicks Catalog merchant Manufacturer-direct
The Internet
Worldwide network of computer networks built on common standards Created in late 1960s Services include the Web, e-mail, file transfers, etc. Can measure growth by looking at number of Internet hosts with domain names
Mobile platform solidifies Mobile e-commerce explodes Continued growth of social networks Expansion of social and local e-commerce Explosive growth in "Big Data" E-books gain wide acceptance
e-commerce trends
service provider online services
e.g.: Google—Google Maps, Gmail, etc.