E-Commerce: Business. Technology. Society
E-Commerce: Business. Technology. Society
E-Commerce: Business. Technology. Society
Is ubiquitous (available everywhere, all the time)
Offers global reach (across cultural/national boundaries)
Operates according to universal standards (lowers market entry
for merchants and search costs for consumers)
Provides information richness (more powerful selling
environment)
Is interactive (can simulate face-to-face experience, but on a
global scale)
Increases information density (amount and quality of information
available to all market participants)
Permits personalization/customization
Seven Unique Feature of E-Commerce
Technology
Ubiquity
Alters industry structure by creating new marketing
channels and expanding size of overall market
Creates new efficiencies in industry operations and
lowers cost of firms’ sales operations
Enables new differentiation strategies
Global Reach
Changes industry structure by lowering barriers to
entry, but greatly expands market at the same time
Lowers cost of industry and firm operations through
production and sales efficiencies
Enables competition on global scale
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Seven Unique Features of E-Commerce
Technology
Universal Standards
Changes industry structure by lowering barriers to entry
and intensifying competition within an industry
Lowers costs of industry and firm operations by
lowering computing and communications costs
Enables broad-scope strategies
Richness
Alters industry structure by reducing strength of
powerful distribution channels
Change industry and firm operations costs by lessening
reliance on sales force
Enhances post-sale support strategies
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Seven Unique Features of E-Commerce
Technology
Interactivity
Alters industry structure by reducing threat of
substitutes through enhanced customization
Reduces industry and firm costs by lessening reliance
on sales force
Enable differentiation strategies
Personalization/Customization
Alters industry structure by reducing threats of
substitutes, raising barriers to entry
Reduces value chain costs in industry and firm by
lessening reliance on sales forces
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Seven Unique Features of E-
Commerce Technology
Information Density
Changes industry structure by weakening
powerful sales channels, shifting bargaining
power to consumer
Reduces industry and firm operations costs by
lowering costs of obtaining, processing, and
distributing information about suppliers and
consumers
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Types of E-commerce
Classified by nature of market relationship
Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
Amazon.com
Business-to-Business (B2B)
Alibaba.com
Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C)
Ebay.com
E-commerce has been a stunning technological
success
Early years of e-commerce have been a mixed
success from a business perspective
Many visions developed during early days of e-
commerce not fulfilled
Predictions for the Future
Technology of e-commerce will continue to propagate
through all commercial activity
E-commerce prices will rise to cover the real cost of doing
business on the Web and pay investors reasonable rate of
return
E-commerce margins and profits will rise to levels more
typical of all retailers
In B2C and B2B, traditional Fortune 500 companies will
play growing and dominant role
Number of successful pure online companies will decline
and most successful e-commerce firms will adopt mixed
“clicks and bricks” strategies
Growth of regulatory activity worldwide
Amazon @ 15
Story of Amazon in many ways mirrors story of e-
commerce itself
Jeff Bezos, VP, D.E SHAW
Started in July 1995
Process of continuous change and exploration for profits
What are the reasons why people shop at Amazon?
Why wasn’t it profitable from Day 1?
When did it become profitable?
How many of you have used Amazon recently?
What was your experience?
Do you think Amazon will remain profitable?
Chapter 2 E-commerce Models
Components of e-commerce
Business Models
BusinessModel
Business Model
--Customer
Customervalue
value
--Scope
Scope
--Price
Price
--Resources
Resources
--Capabilities
Capabilities
--Implementations
Implementations
Internet
Internet Performance
Performance
Environment
Environment
E-Commerce Business Models
Business model
a set of planned activities designed to
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Eight Key Ingredients of a Business Model
Business Model
Key Questions
Components
Value Proposition Why should the customer buy from you?
Revenue model How will you earn money?
Market opportunity What marketspace do you intent to serve, and what is its size?
Competitive environment Who else occupies your intended marketspace?
Competitive advantage What special advantages does your firm bring to the marketspace?
Market strategy How do you plan to promote your products to attract customer?
Organizational What types of organizational structures within the firm are
development necessary to carry out the business plan?
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Revenue Model
Describes how the firm will earn revenue,
produce profits, and produce a superior
return on invested capital.
E-commerce revenue models include:
advertising model – Yahoo.com
subscription model –wsj.com
transaction fee model –ebay.com
sales model – Doubleclick.net
affiliate model – Mypoints.com
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Revenue Model
Advertising revenue model
a company provides a forum for advertisements
and receives fees from advertisers (Yahoo)
Subscription revenue model
a company offers it users content or services
and charges a subscription fee for access to
some or all of it offerings (Consumer Reports
or Wall Street Journal)
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Revenue Model
Transaction fee revenue model
a company receives a fee for enabling or
executing a transaction (eBay or E-Trade)
Sales revenue model
a company derives revenue by selling goods,
information, or services (Amazon or
DoubleClick)
Affiliate revenue model
a company steers business to an affiliate and
receives a referral fee or percentage of the
revenue from any resulting sales (MyPoints)
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Market Opportunity
Market opportunity
refers to the company’s intended marketspace
and the overall potential financial opportunities
available to the firm in that market space
defined by the revenue potential in each of the
market niches where you hope to compete
Marketspace
the area of actual or potential commercial value
in which a company intends to operate
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Competitive Environment
Refers to the other companies operating in
the same marketplace selling similar
products
Influenced by:
how many competitors are active
how large are their operations
the market share of each competitor
how profitable these firms are
how they price their products
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Competitive Advantage
Achieved by a firm when it can produce a
superior product and/or bring the product to
market at a lower price than most, or all, of
its competitors
Achieved because a firm has been able to
obtain differential access to the factors of
production that are denied their competitors
-- at least in the short term
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Competitive Advantage
Asymmetry
exists whenever one participant in a market has
more resources than other participants
First mover advantage
a competitive market advantage for a firm that
results from being the first into a marketplace
with a serviceable product or service
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Competitive Advantage
Unfair competitive advantage
occurs when one firm develops an advantage based
Perfect Market
a market in which there are no competitive
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Market Strategy
The plan you put together that details
exactly how you intend to enter a new
market and attract new customers
Best business concepts will fail if not
properly marketed to potential customers
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Organizational Development
Describes how the company will organize
the work that needs to be accomplished
Work is typically divided into functional
departments
Move from generalists to specialists as the
company grows
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Management Team
Employees of the company responsible for
making the business model work
Strong management team gives instant
credibility to outside investors
A strong management team may not be able
to salvage a weak business model
Should be able to change the model and
redefine the business as it becomes
necessary
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Major Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
Business Models
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Major Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
Business Models
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Major Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
Business Models
Portal
offers powerful search tools plus an integrated
package of content and services
typically utilizes a combines
subscription/advertising revenues/transaction fee
model
may be general or specialize (vortal)
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Major Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
Business Models
E-tailer
online version of traditional retailer
includes
virtual merchants (online retail store only)
clicks and mortar e-tailers (online distribution
channel for a company that also has physical stores)
online malls (online version of mall)
Manufacturers selling directly over the Web
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Major Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
Business Models
Content Provider
information and entertainment companies that
provide digital content over the Web
typically utilizes an advertising, subscription, or
affiliate referral fee revenue model
Transaction Broker
processes online sales transactions
typically utilizes a transactions feel revenue
model
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Major Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
Business Models
Market Creator
uses Internet technology to create markets that
bring buyers and sellers together
typically utilizes a transaction fee revenue
model
E.g. Auction
English auction
Dutch auction
Sealed-bid auction
Double auction
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English Auctions
The bidders announce their bids until no
higher bid is forthcoming
‘going . . . going . . . gone!’
Ascending-price auctions
Typically set a closing time in advance
Minimum bid plus a reserve price
Early buyout price
Dutch Auctions
Bidding starts at a high price and drops until a
bidder accepts the price
Descending price auctions
Sealed-Bid Auctions
Bidders submit their bids independently and
are usually prohibited from sharing
information with each other
First-price sealed-bid auction
The winner pays his amount
Second-price sealed-bid auction
The winner pays one increment over the second-
highest bid received
Double Auctions
Buyers and sellers submit bids to an auctioneer
The auctioneer matches the seller’s offers to
the buyer’s offer
E.g. New York Stock Exchange
Major Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
Business Models
Service Provider
offers services online
Community Provider
provides an online community of like-minded
individuals for networking and information
sharing
revenue is generated by referral fee,
advertising, and subscription
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e-Business Models
Dynamic Pricing Models
Name-Your-Price Model
Comparison-Pricing Model
Demand-Sensitive Pricing Model
Name-Your-Price Model
Allows customers to state the price they are
willing to pay
Priceline.com
Demand collect systems
Use shopping bot that takes customer’s bid to the
Priceline partners to see whether they will accept the
prices for the requested products/services
Intelligent agents
Comparison-Pricing Model
Allows customers to poll a variety of
merchants and find a desired product/service at
the lowest price
Mysimon.com
Uses intelligent-agent technology
Offers discussion groups, customer ratings, and
comparison shopping
Demand-Sensitive Pricing Model
Group purchasing
Individual buyers to shop in large groups to obtain group
discount
The more people who buy a product in a single purchase, the lower
the cost per person becomes
Mercata.com, mobshop.com, demandline.com
How it works
Buyers create requests for quotes (RFQs)
Purchasing manager monitors all aggregated RFQs
Manager negotiates through suppliers.
Major Business-to-Business (B2B)
Business Models
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Major Business-to-Business (B2B)
Business Models
B2B Hub
also known as marketplace/exchange
electronic marketplace where suppliers and
commercial purchasers can conduct
transactions
may be a general (horizontal marketplace) or
specialized (vertical marketplace)
E-distributor
supplies products directly to individual
businesses
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Major Business-to-Business (B2B)
Business Models
B2B Service Provider
sells business services to other firms
Matchmaker
links businesses together
charges transaction or usage fees
Infomediary
gather information and sells it to businesses
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Case Studies
Should we integrate our Internet business with
our traditional business or should we keep the
two separate?
Seamless Model: Office Depot
Two reasons
Existing catalog-sales support an Internet store
Existing information systems made it easy to
coordinate online stores and physical stores
Customers’ Benefit
Make shopping simple and convenient
Company’s Benefit
Cheaper to reach customers
Seamless Model: Office Depot
Added Value
Each customer has its own specialized view of the
OfficeDepot.com site
authorization
Provide additional discount for larger customers if
they place order on online
Actually increased the traffic at its physical
outlet
Joint Venture Model: KB Toy
Reasons
Don’t have much experience with catalog retailing
Tend to focus exclusively on their physical stores
KB Toy and Kbkids.com
KB Toy joined with BrainPlay.com to create
Kbkids.com
$80 million
Joint Venture Model: KB Toy
Operation
Separation
Kbkids headquarter: Denver
KB Toy headquarter: MA
Integration
Share brand: promotion
Customer service
Purchasing function
Virtual Partnership
Rite Aid and Drugstore.com
Customer benefit
Customers can pick up their Drugstore.com
prescriptions at their local Rite Aid
A Spectrum of Choices
Slightly Moderately
Partnership Separate
integrated integrated