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Pertemuan 10 Understanding Public B2B Exchanges and Portals. Matakuliah : J0324/Sistem e-Bisnis Tahun : 2005 Versi : 02/02. Learning Outcomes. Pada akhir pertemuan ini, diharapkan mahasiswa akan mampu : menguraikan konsep dan aplikasi portal pertukaran informasi B2B. Outline Materi.
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Pertemuan 10Understanding Public B2B Exchanges and Portals Matakuliah : J0324/Sistem e-Bisnis Tahun : 2005 Versi : 02/02
Learning Outcomes Pada akhir pertemuan ini, diharapkan mahasiswa akan mampu : • menguraikan konsep dan aplikasi portal pertukaran informasi B2B
Outline Materi • B2B Electronic Exchanges – An Overview • B2B Portals • Third Party (Trading) Exchanges • Consortium Trading Exchanges
B2B Portals • B2B portals:Information portals for businesses • Pure information portals include: • directories of products offered by each seller • lists of buyers and what they want • other industry or general information
B2B Portal Examples • Thomas Register—information portal • Sellers distribute information on what they have to sell • Buyers can find what they need and purchase over a comprehensive and secure procurement channel • reduce costs • shrink cycle times • improve productivity
B2B Portal Examples (cont.) • Alibaba.com—started as a pure information portal and is moving toward becoming a trading exchange • Huge database is a horizontal information portal with offerings in a wide variety of product categories • Reverse auctions • Features–free email, email alerts, etc • Revenue model—advertisement and fees for special
Third Party (Trading) Exchanges • Third-party exchanges are characterized by two contradicting properties • they are neutral, not favoring either sellers or buyers • they do not have a built-in constituency of sellers or buyers and sometimes have a problem attracting enough buyers and sellers to attain financial viability
Third Party (Trading) Exchanges (cont.) • A major problem is: Market liquidity:The degree to which something can be bought or sold in a marketplace without affecting its price
Third Party (Trading) Exchanges (cont.) • Buyer aggregation model buyers’ RFQs are aggregated and then linked to a pool of suppliers that are automatically notified of the RFQs • Suitability • aggregation models work best with MROs and services that are well defined, that have stable prices, and where the supplier or buyer base is fragmented
Dynamic Trading: Matching and Auctions • Dynamic trading:Exchange trading that occurs in situations when prices are being determined by supply and demand (e.g., in auctions) • Matching • supply and demand • quantity, delivery times, and locations
Dynamic Trading: Matching and Auctions (cont.) • Auctions • Exchanges offer members the ability to conduct auctions or reverse auctions in private trading rooms • auction services as one of its many activities • fully dedicated to auctions • Many-to-many public auctions—vertical, horizontal, run on the Internet or over private lines
Building E-Marketplaces • Building e-marketplaces is a complex process • usually performed by a major B2B software company • Commerce One • Ariba • Oracle • IBM
Building E-Marketplaces (cont.) • Integration issue • Seamless integration is needed between the third-party exchange and the participants’ front and back-office systems • In private exchanges the seller’s computing system must be integrated with the customers systems
Building E-Marketplaces (cont.) • External communications • Web/client access • Data exchange • Direct application integration • Shared procedures • Process and information coordination in integration how to coordinate external communications with internal information systems
Building E-Marketplaces (cont.) • Use of Web services in integration Web Services enable different Web-based systems to communicate with each other using Internet-based protocols such as XML • System and information management in integration management of software, hardware, and several information components, including partner-profile information, data and process definitions, communications and security settings, and users’ information
Support Services for Public and Private Marketplaces • Directory services and search engines • Directory services help buyers and sellers manage the task of finding potential partners
Support Services for Public and Private Marketplaces (cont.) • Partner relationship management (PRM):Business strategy that focuses on providing comprehensive quality service to business partners • E-communities and PRM B2B application needs to provide community services such as chat rooms, bulletin boards, and possibly personalized Web pages
Support Services for Public and Private Marketplaces (cont.) • Integration (as per Keenan Report) • Business-to-exchange (B2X) hubs connect all of the Internet business services • e-merchant services • exchange infrastructure • buying and selling • member enterprises • other B2X exchanges
Implementation Issues • Private vs. public exchanges Private exchanges:E-marketplaces that are owned and operated by one company. Also known as company-centric marketplaces
Implementation Issues (cont.) • Problems with private exchanges • Transaction fees—required to pay transaction fees with existing customers • Sharing information—do not want to share business data with competitors • Cost savings—not great enough to attract buyers • Recruiting suppliers—lose direct contact with customers • Too many exchanges
Implementation Issues (cont.) • Supply chain improvers • Companies want to streamline their internal supply chains, which requires integration with internal operations instead of “plugging in” to an exchange’s infrastructure • Major problem is trust in the large corporation running the exchange
Implementation Issues (cont.) • Software agents in B2B enable customized syndication of content and services from multiple sources on the Internet to any device connected to the Internet • provide real-time, tighter integration between buyers and sellers • facilitate management of multiple trading partners and their transactions across multiple virtual industry exchanges
Example: Asite • Asite’s B2B marketplace for the construction industry • B2B e-marketplace for the construction industry in the United Kingdom • This industry is typified by a high degree of physical separation and fragmentation, and communication among the members of the supply chain is a primary problem
Asite (cont.) • Two of the major advantages of the Internet: • ability it provides to communicate more effectively • increased processing power made possible by Internet technologies • Asite decided not to build its own technology, but to establish partnerships with technology vendors that have highly specialized products
Asite (cont.) • Commerce One provides the business solution for the portal • Microsoft provides the technology platform and core applications • Attenda is the designer and manager of the Internet infrastructure • Asite is committed to strong partnerships that allow it to seamlessly interact with other e-marketplaces
Asite (cont.) • Internet browser is all that is needed to connect to Asite’s portal • Ease of access makes it particularly well suited to an industry such as construction • Construction firms streamline their supply chains
Source : Turban, Efraim, David King, Jae Lee and Dennis Viehland. Electronic Commerce. A Managerial Perspective (2004). Prentice Hall. PPT for Chapter : 7