Transcript e-business
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2015 Spring
Topics in Business English
E-Business: Doing Business
Online
Electronic business (e-business) - Conducting business
via the Internet.
1.E-tailing, or virtual storefronts on Web sites.
2.Online business-to-business transactions.
3.E-mail, instant messaging, and other Web-enabled
communication tools and their use as media for reaching
prospective and existing customers.
4.The gathering and use of demographic, product, and other
information through Web contacts.
• builds awareness of a company’s products
and brands;
• provides the means for personalized, oneon-one communication with customers;
• and permits customers to place orders any
time from almost anywhere in the world
• Global Reach. Goods and services can be sold to
customers worldwide.
• Personalization. Companies can customize products and
reduce inventory.
• Interactivity. Customers and suppliers can negotiate
prices online.
• Right-time and integrated marketing. Online retailers
provide products when and where customers want them
and promotions can be directed to individual customers.
• Cost savings. E-business can reduce costs.
Increase a firm’s visibility, promote its offerings, and
provide information to interested parties.
Build customer goodwill and assist retailers and
other resellers in their marketing efforts.
Disseminate financial information to investors.
Enable prospective employees to apply online for
jobs.
Web
Provide
communication.
sitese-mail
are frequently
used for marketing to attract
visitors/customers.
.
• Business-to-business e-business (B2B)
Electronic business transactions
between businesses using the Internet.
• B2B transactions total $2.5 trillion.
• By some estimates, account for 90% of
all e-commerce activities.
• Can reduce cost of B2B transactions by
almost 25 percent.
• Business-to-consumer (B2C)
• Services like banking and brokerage are key aspects
of e-tailing
• Retailers set up electronic storefronts, Web sites that
sell items to consumers.
Types of B2C websites:
• shopping sites (e.g. http://www.llbean.com)
• informational sites (e.g. http://automobiles.honda.com)
Typical user is young, highly educated, urban or
suburban.
Demographics are shifting; there is decreasing difference
in Internet purchasing habits among groups.
Lower Prices
• Many products cost less online.
• Internet allows customers to easily compare prices from multiple
sellers.
Convenience
• Can order products from around the world anytime, day or night.
• Can register customer information to streamline transactions.
Personalization
• Emphasis on personalized, one-on-one marketing to increase
repeat purchases.
Privacy is among the top concerns of Internet users.
E-business sites often require passwords and use electronic
signatures, an electronic form of identity verification.
Companies can track customers’ shopping and viewing habits
through cookies.
Customers usually prefer that companies do not share their
personal information. Merchants have responded by joining
privacy organizations.
Privacy protections may soon become legally required.
Employees also have concerns that employers are monitoring
their Internet behavior.
Companies worry about data theft.
• Internet Crime Complaint Center logs more than 200,000
complaints annually.
• 50% of the complaints referred to law enforcement
agencies deal with online auctions.
• Phishing is a growing form of Internet fraud that uses email or pop-up messages to get unsuspecting victims to
disclose personal information.
• Vishing, or voice phishing, involves phone calls to credit
card customers to obtain personal and banking
information.
• Payment fraud is growing.
• 50% of shopping carts are abandoned before any
purchase is made.
– Lack of Information
– Inability to find the information they need
– Feeling overwhelmed by too much information
• Online sales can compete with business partners such
as retailers and distributors causing disputes called
channel conflict.
• Web has four main functions: e-business,
entertainment, information, and communication.
• Communication is Web’s most popular function.
• Firms use e-mail to communicate with customers,
suppliers, and other partners.
• Online Communities: Internet forums, newsgroups,
electronic bulletin boards, and Web communities that
appeal to people who share common interests.
• Spam is junk e-mail.
• Blog - short for Web log, an online journal written by
a blogger.
• May incorporate wikis, a Web page that anyone can
edit.
• Some incorporate podcasts, video & audio
recordings. Feedburner services more than 200,000
podcasts.
• Corporate blogs can help build brand trust.
– Example: Apple’s iLounge builds the iPod brand and gives
Apple ideas for product improvement.
• Employee blogs may present ethical issues.
• Banner Ads – messages placed on frequently visited
websites
• Pop-up Ads – ads that appear in separate windows
• Pre-roll Video Ads – advertisements that roll as
soon as a page is loaded
• Search marketing – companies pay for top visibility
in search results
Some companies, such as ValPak Marketing
Systems, offer virtual, searchable coupons.
It is easier to create a bad website than a good one.
Organizations must think about:
Planning and Preparation
Content and Connections
Costs and Maintenance
• Click-through rate - percentage of people presented with a
Web banner ad who click on it.
• Conversion rate - percentage of visitors to a website who make
a purchase.
What are the characteristics of a good
website?
Thank you for your
attention!