Transcript ch07.pps

CHAPTER 7
E-Business and E-Commerce
CHAPTER OUTLINE
7.1 Overview of E-Business & E-Commerce
7.2 Business-to-Consumer (B2C) Electronic
Commerce
7.3 Business-to-Business (B2B) Electronic
Commerce
7.4 Electronic Payments
7.5 Ethical and Legal Issues in E-Business
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
1. Describe the six common types of electronic
commerce; provide specific personal examples
of how you have used or could use B2C, C2C,
G2C, and mobile commerce; and offer a
specific example of B2B and G2B.
2. Discuss the five online services of businessto-consumer electronic commerce, provide a
specific example of each service, and state how
you have used or would use each service.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES (continued)
3. Describe the three business models for
business-to-business electronic commerce, and
provide a specific example of each model.
4. Describe the four types of electronic
payments, provide a specific example of each
one, and explain whether you would use each
type.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES (continued)
5. Illustrate the ethical and legal issues relating
to electronic commerce with two specific
examples of each issue, and describe how you
would respond or react to the four examples
you have provided.
7.1 Overview of E-Business and
E-Commerce
Definitions and Concepts
Types of E-Commerce
E-Commerce and Search
Major E-Commerce Mechanisms
Benefits and Limitations of E-Commerce
Definitions and Concepts
Electronic commerce
 the buying, selling, transferring or exchanging of
products, services or information via computer
networks, including the Internet
Electronic business
 a broader definition of EC, including buying and
selling of goods and services, and also servicing
customers, collaborating with partners, conducting elearning and conducting electronic transactions within
an organization
Definitions and Concepts (continued)
Pure versus Partial Electronic Commerce
depends on the degree of digitization involved.
Brick-and-mortar organizations
Click-and-mortar organizations
Virtual organizations
What is your choice for buying books?
Bricks and Mortar, Partial EC, and Pure EC
Source: Rubberball/Mike Kemp/Getty Images, Inc.
Types of E-Commerce
Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
Business-to-Business (B2B)
Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C)
‘consumer’ is the final destination where the
good is used up – all other intermediate stops
are ‘business’
Source: Don Farrall/Photodisc/Getty Images, Inc.
Types of E-Commerce (continued)
Business-to-Employee (B2E)
E-Government
Source: Don Farrall/Photodisc/Getty Images, Inc.
Mobile Commerce (m-commerce)
B2B and B2C Electronic Commerce
© Toh Kheng Guan/Age Fotostock America, Inc.
Major E-Commerce Mechanisms
Auctions
Forward Auctions
a channel to many potential buyers
Reverse Auctions
one buyer, usually an organization, wants to
buy a product or a service. The buyer posts a
request for quotation (RFQ) on its Web site or
on a third-party Web site
© ZOONAR GMBH LBRF/Age Fotostock America, Inc.
Forward and Reverse Auctions
Bid
price
Bid
price
Time
Forward Auction
Time
Reverse Auction
E-Commerce Business Models
Online direct marketing to customers
Electronic tendering system by an organization
(could be a government) seeking bids for items
and/or services
Name-your-own-price [the Priceline example and
recently www.whatsyourprice.com]
Find-the-best-price
E-Commerce Business Models
(continued)
Affiliate marketing: asking partners to place logos or
banners on partner’s site. If customers click on logo, go to
vendor’s site, and buy, then vendor pays commission to partners
E-Commerce Business Models
(continued)
Viral marketing - receivers send information
about your product to their friends (think of
word-of-mouth in the age of social media)
Group purchasing - small buyers aggregate
demand to get a large volume; then the group
conducts tendering or negotiates a lower price
Online auctions
Bartering Online
Benefits of E-Commerce
Benefits to organizations
Makes national and international markets
more accessible
Lowering costs of processing, distributing,
and retrieving information
Benefits to customers
Access a vast number of products and
services around the clock (24/7/365)
Limitations of E-Commerce
Technological Limitations



Lack of universally accepted security
standards
Insufficient telecommunications bandwidth
Expensive accessibility
Non-technological Limitations



Perception that EC is unsecure
Unresolved legal issues
Lacks a critical mass of sellers and buyers
Online Service Industries
 Cyberbanking
 Online securities trading
 Online job market
 Travel services
 Online advertising
Disintermediation
 A key issue is disintermediation.
Middlemen
provide information and/or provide value-added services. When
the function(s) of these intermediaries can be automated or
eliminated, this process is called disintermediation
Online Advertising
Online Advertising methods
Banners
Pop-up ad
Pop-under ad
Permission marketing
Viral marketing
Drivers of today’s online advertising
The emergence of “communitainment.”
The increasing popularity of Usites.
Mainstreaming of the Internet.
Declining usage of traditional media.
Fragmentation of content consumption.
Consumers are multitasking and they do not
like ads.
Hulu
Source: PiperJaffray
Communitainment
 Communitainment is the blending of community,
communication, and entertainment into a new form of
online activity driven by consumers.
 The bank predicts that consumers will shift more than
50% of their content consumption over the next
decade to communitainment formats (e.g., social
networking, video, and photo sharing sites),
displacing traditional forms of media content like TV,
magazines, and large Internet sites.
 This trend presents a major challenge for advertisers.
Popular Usites
Yelp
Broadcaster - a video entertainment
community and live webcam social
network. The site allows users to
create personal profiles, post
pictures, upload videos, and chat with
the site's other users through a live
webcam chat feature.
(has been taken off the web)
Mainstreaming of the Internet
Source: Mike Flippo/Shutterstock
Declining usage of traditional media
For example, the demise
of the Boston Globe
© JUICE LIGHT LBRF/Age Fotostock America, Inc.
Eight Types of Web sites for Advertising
Portals: most popular; best for reach but not
targeting
Search: second largest reach; high
advertising value
Commerce: high reach; not conducive to
advertising
Source: PiperJaffray
Eight types of sites (continued)
Entertainment: large reach; strong
targetability
Community: emphasize being a part of
something; good for specific advertising
Communications: not good for branding;
low targetability
Eight types of sites (continued)
News/weather/sports: poor targetability
Games: good for very specific types of
advertising
Source: Don Farrall/Photodisc/Getty Images, Inc.
7.3 Business-to-Business (B2B)
Electronic Commerce
In B2B e-commerce, the buyers and sellers
are organizations.
© Richard Thomas/Age Fotostock America, Inc.
B2B Sell-Side Marketplace
Key mechanisms:
electronic catalogs and
forward auctions
Common Sell-Side
Marketplaces include:
• Ariba
•Dell Auction
•bigboXX.com
© Richard Thomas/Age Fotostock America, Inc.
B2B Buy-Side Marketplace
Key mechanism:
reverse auctions
United Sourcing Alliance
is a common Sell-Side
Marketplace
© Richard Thomas/Age Fotostock America, Inc.
Electronic Exchanges
 Vertical Exchanges – connect buyers and
sellers in a specific industry
 Horizontal Exchanges – connect buyers and
sellers across industries, frequently for
maintenance/operations/repair materials
 Functional Exchanges – typically services
required on an ‘as needed’ basis
7.4 Electronic Payments
Electronic checks (e-checks)
Electronic credit cards
Purchasing cards
Electronic cash
Stored-value money cards
Smart cards
Person-to-person payments
Frederic Lucano/Stone/Getty Images, Inc.
7.5 Ethical and Legal Issues
Ethical Issues
Privacy
Job Loss
Legal Issues Specific to E-Commerce
Fraud on the Internet
Domain Names
Cybersquatting - refers to the practice of
registering domain names solely for the
purpose of selling them later at a higher
price
Legal Issues Specific to E-Commerce
(continued)
Domain Tasting
Taxes and Other Fees
Copyright