Lecture 1 Week 1 E-COMMERCE
Lecture 1 Week 1 E-COMMERCE
Lecture 1 Week 1 E-COMMERCE
E-COMMERCE
Facebook and MySpace:
It’s All About You Class Discussion
■ Have you used Facebook or MySpace, and if so, how often? What was your experience?
■ Why do you think Facebook has overtaken MySpace as the most popular social networking site?
❖ New opportunities
What is E-commerce?
■ Use of Internet and Web to transact business
■ More formally:
❖ Digitally enabled commercial transactions between and among organizations and individuals
❖ 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
■ Traditional commerce:
❖ Passive consumer
❖ Sales-force driven
❖ Fixed prices
❖ Information asymmetry
2. Global reach
3. Universal standards
4. Information richness
5. Interactivity
6. Information density
7. Personalization/customization
8. Social technology
Web 2.0
■ Applications, technologies that allow users to:
■ Examples
❖ Second Life
❖ Wikipedia
Types of E-commerce
■ Classified by market relationship
❖ Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
❖ Business-to-Business (B2B)
❖ Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C)
❖ Peer-to-Peer (P2P)
The Internet
■ Worldwide network of computer networks built on common standards
■ Can measure growth by looking at number of Internet hosts with domain names
The Web
■ Most popular Internet service
❖ HTML documents that may include text, graphics, animations, music, videos
Spider Webs, Bow Ties, Scale-Free Networks, and the Deep Web
Class Discussion
■ Why does Barabasi call the Web a “scale-free network” with “very connected super nodes”?
❖ Baxter Healthcare
■ Since then, e-commerce fastest growing form of commerce in the United States
Technology and E-commerce in Perspective
■ The Internet and Web: Just two of a long list of technologies that have greatly changed commerce
❖ Automobiles
❖ Radio
■ E-commerce growth will eventually cap as it confronts its own fundamental limitations
■ 2001–2006: Consolidation
■ 2006–Present: Reinvention
❖ Extension of technologies
■ Entrepreneurs:
❖ Extraordinary opportunity to earn far above normal returns on investment—first mover advantage
■ What explains the rapid growth in private investment in e-commerce firms in the period 1998–2000?
Was this investment irrational?
■ What was the effect of the big bust of March 2000 on e-commerce investment?
■ What is the value to investors of a company such as YouTube which has yet to show profitability?
■ Why do you think investors today would be interested in investing in or purchasing e-commerce
companies? Would you invest in an e-commerce company today?
Assessing E-commerce
■ Many early visions not fulfilled
❖ Friction-free commerce
❖ Perfect competition
❖ Disintermediation
■ E-commerce margins and profits will rise to levels more typical of all retailers
■ Number of successful pure online stores will remain smaller than integrated offline/online stores
Understanding E-commerce:
Organizing Themes
■ Technology:
■ Business:
❖ New technologies present businesses with new ways of organizing production and transacting
business
■ Society:
■ Is e-commerce any different than traditional markets with respect to privacy? Don’t merchants always
want to know their customer?
❖ Computer science
❖ Management science
❖ Information systems
■ Behavioral approach
❖ Information systems
❖ Economics
❖ Marketing
❖ Management
❖ Finance/accounting
❖ Sociology