What is E-commerce?
C2C
consumers are given a venue to trade among themselves; people can negotiate and haggle but the highest bidder gets the product
m-commerce
e-commerce to go; carried out through a portable device instead of a stationary computer
development of Facebook (2003)
eighth event in e-commerce timeline
B2B
electronic trade between companies primarily responsible for keeping the supply chain intact
group buying (wholesale), social commerce, private sample sale
emerging trends in e-commerce
online auctions
empower everybody to participate and benefit; tools and facilities are already in place
e-commerce
exchange of goods and services that take place between or among businesses conducted over computer networks
Dell was the first company to reach $1M in internet sales (1997)
fifth event in e-commerce timeline
group buying (collective buying)
prices are reduced when a minimum number of buyers make the purchase; gives retail shoppers the benefit of buying wholesale by affording them at discounted prices
introduction of Minitel (1982)
second event in e-commerce timeline
PayPal was acquired by eBay (2002)
seventh event in e-commerce timeline
development of Google (1998)
sixth event in e-commerce timeline
Groupon rejected a $6B acquisition offer from Google (2010)
tenth event in e-commerce timeline
sample sale
the selling of sample merchandise—luxury goods, usually—at bargain prices before they are distributed to local vendors
birth of world wide web (1990)
third event in e-commerce timeline
online shopping
buying and selling goods on the internet; also electronic retailing or e-tailing
social commerce
collaborative tools in social networking sites are provided so customers can help one another in generating product reviews and referrals
product, automated system (for accepting payment), shipment system, customer service
components of an online store
C2B
consumers are empowered to demand specific goods and services from an online business
development of Videotex (1979)
first event in e-commerce timeline
B2B (business to business), B2C (business to consumer), C2B (consumer to business), C2C (consumer to consumer)
four business models of e-commerce
launching of Amazon (1995)
fourth event in e-commerce timeline
electronic payments
gateways that process payments of purchased goods
P2P (peer to peer)
illegal transaction that allows computer terminals in a network to hook up without having to go to a central server; free exchange of data
private sample sale
membership-only onine shops offer sample sales that usually run for 36 to 48 hours
internet banking
monitor accounts, transfer funds, pay bills, fill loan requests, download statements and forms, enroll in investment programs, and conduct other financial transactions online
Google bought YouTube (2006)
ninth event in e-commerce timeline
online shopping, electronic payments, online auctions, internet banking, online booking and ticketing
online business applications
B2C
online businesses sell goods and services to the general public through a line of shops