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E-commerce Dynamics: Business Relationships, Models, and Environment

Explore changes in business relationships, marketplace models, revenue models, and the e-commerce environment enabled by online services. Understand the implications of marketplace structures, partner with online intermediaries, and navigate societal, legal, economic, and technological constraints.

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E-commerce Dynamics: Business Relationships, Models, and Environment

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  1. E-commerce Fundamentals Chapter 2

  2. Learning outcomes • Evaluate changes in business relationships between organizations and their customers enabled by e-commerce • Identify the main business and marketplace models for electronic communications and trading • Describe different revenue models and transaction mechanisms available through online services.

  3. Management issues • What are the implications of changes in marketplace structures for how we trade with customers and other partners? • Which business models and revenue models should we consider in order to exploit the Internet? • What will be the importance of online intermediaries and marketplace hubs to our business and what actions should we take to partner these intermediaries?

  4. E-commerce environment • Needs of customers • Local and international economic conditions • Legislation • Technological innovations

  5. Figure 2.1The environment in which e-business services are provided

  6. Local conditions

  7. Environment constraints and opportunities • Customers – which services are they offering via their web site that your organization could support them in? • Competitors – need to be benchmarked in order to review the online services they are offering – do they have a competitive advantage? • Intermediaries – are new or existing intermediaries offering products or services from your competitors while you are not represented? • Suppliers – are suppliers offering different methods of procurement to competitors that give them a competitive advantage? • Macro-environment • Society – what is the ethical and moral consensus on holding personal information? • Country specific, international legal – what are the local and global legal constraints for example on holding personal information, or taxation rules on sale of goods? • Country specific, international economic – what are the economic constraints of operating within a country or global constraints? • Technology – what new technologies are emerging by which to deliver online services such as interactive digital TV and mobile phone-based access?

  8. Lack of Privacy = Lack of Sales “Consumer privacy apprehensions continue to plague the Web. These fears will hold back roughly $15 billion in e-commerce revenue.” -Forrester Research, September 2001 “Privacy and security concerns could cost online sellers almost $25 billion by 2006.” -Jupiter Research, May 2002 “Online retail sales could be 25% higher by 2006 if consumer’s fears about privacy and security were addressed.” -Jupiter Research, 2002

  9. Figure 2.2B2B and B2C interactions between an organization, its suppliers and its customers

  10. B2B and B2C characteristics

  11. Marketplace channel structures • Describes the way a manufacturer delivers products and services to its customers

  12. Marketplace channel structures Figure 2.3Disintermediation of a consumer distribution channel showing(a) the original situation, (b) disintermediation omitting the wholesaler, and(c) disintermediation omitting both wholesaler and retailer

  13. Vauxhall

  14. Figure 2.4From original situation (a) to disintermediation (b) and reintermediation (c)

  15. Reintermediation • Creation of a new intermediary • Example: • B&Q www.diy.com • Opodo www.opodo.com • Boots www.wellbeing.comwww.handbag.com • Ford, Daimler (www.covisint.com) • Partnering with existing intermediary – Mortgage broker Charcol and Freeserve

  16. Reintermediation

  17. Online Intermediaries • Directories • Search Engines • Malls • Virtual resellers • Financial Intermediaries • Forums, fan clubs and user groups • Evaluators

  18. Blogs • Give an easy method of regularly publishing web pages, e.g. online journals, diaries or event listing • Include feedback or comments

  19. Figure 2.5 Dave Chaffey’s blog site (www.davechaffey.com)

  20. Figure 2.6Yahoo! Shopping Australia, a price comparison site based on theKelkoo.com shopping comparison technology (http://shopping.yahoo.com.au)

  21. Virtual Marketplace – an intermediary!

  22. Multi-channel Marketplace Models

  23. Importance of multi-channel marketplace models • Customer journey – modern multi-channel behavior as consumers use different media • Offline • Mixed-mode • Online

  24. Figure 2.7Example channel chain map for consumers selecting an estate agentto sell their property

  25. Meta services Search engines Portal ‘A gateway to information resources and services’ Directories News aggregators MR aggregators Comparers Exchanges

  26. Types of portal

  27. Online representation

  28. Seller-oriented- Opodo.co.uk

  29. Buyer-oriented-covisint.com

  30. Figure 2.8Variations in the location and scale of trading on e-commerce sites

  31. Commercial arrangements for transactions

  32. Figure 2.9Priceline Hong Kong service (www.priceline.com.hk)

  33. Business model Timmers (1999) defines a ‘business model’ as: An architecture for product, service and information flows, including a description of the various business actors and their roles; and a description of the potential benefits for the various business actors; and a description of the sources of revenue.

  34. Business models on the web • E-shop • E-procurement • E-malls • E-auctions • Virtual communities – B2C or B2B communities; have potential for e-mkting • Collaboration platforms – e-groups etc • Third-party marketplace • Value-chain service providers – provide function for a specific part of value chain • Information brokerage – provide info to consumer and businesses • Trust and other services – authenticate the quality of service on web etc

  35. Figure 2.10Alternative perspectives on business models

  36. Alternative Perspectives on Business Models 1.Marketplace Position Perspective- P = Manufacturer A = Retailer Y = both a retailer and a marketplace intermediary 2. Revenue Model Perspective- P sells directly using web. A and Y take commission based sales. Y also has advertising as a revenue model. 3. Commercial Arrangement perspective- All three offer fixed price sales but Y as a market place intermediary, offers alternatives.

  37. Revenue models – diff. techniques for generation of income. Publisher example: 1. Subscription access to content. 2. Pay-per-view access. 3. CPM on site display advertising. 4. CPC advertising on site. 5. Sponsorship of site sections, content or widgets. 6. Affiliate revenue (CPA or CPC). 7. Subscriber data access for e-mail marketing. 8. Access to customers for research purposes.

  38. “The Million Dollar Homepage” www.milliondollarhomepage.com

  39. Who started it? • His name is Alex Tew, a 21 years old who lives in a small town in Wiltshire, England. • He'll be starting at University in England at the end of September, where he will be reading Business Management.

  40. “I'm going to Uni a little later than normal (I will technically be a mature student), but I'm really looking forward to it. Infact, I can't wait. But Uni is not cheap, and faced with the prospect of graduating after 3 years with a huge debt, I thought I'd try and make some money ($1m should do the trick!)”

  41. What is the idea? The idea is simple: to try and make $1m (US) by selling 1,000,000 pixels for $1 each. Hence, 'The Million Dollar Homepage". Pixels are available in 100-pixel 'blocks' (each measuring 10x10 pixels). You will see the homepage is divided into 10,000 of these 100-pixel blocks (hence there are 1,000,000 pixels in total).

  42. The reason for selling them in 100-pixel blocks is because anything smaller would be too small to display anything meaningful. You can buy as many pixels as you like. When you buy some pixels, you can then display an image/ad/logo of your choice in the space you have purchased. You can also have the image click through to your own website. The pixels you buy will be displayed on the homepage permanently. The homepage will not change.

  43. “I want it to become a kind of internet time capsule. So, in the long run, I believe the pixels will offer good value. You will have a piece of internet history!”

  44. Is he genuine/is this a joke? This photo of his and his uni acceptance form should prove to any doubters 'UCAS' is the 'Universities and Colleges Admissions Service' who, as the name suggests, handle all University admissions in the UK.

  45. Why should I buy your pixels? • Because you will have an image and a link to your site on the homepage of a site that could potentially be seen by millions of people over the coming years. • The site will be online for at least 5 years, that's guaranteed, but the idea is to keep it online forever. • So you really could own a piece of 'internet history'

  46. Why can't I buy one single pixel? • You can't display anything meaningful in one pixel - nor click it easily - so visually, it would be pointless. • With thousands of random tiny coloured dots all over the place, the homepage would look ghastly. • The site would appeal more to people with businesses/websites to advertise than it would to individuals, they would pay more to have a meaningful graphic on the homepage. Hence the minimum purchase is $100 - a 10x10 block. • However! If you really want to own a single pixel, there is always the option of clubbing together with your friends/family/colleauges and buying a 10x10 block. …

  47. If you're from the UK, why are you selling the pixels in dollars?

  48. If you want money for Uni, why don't you get a job? • Although I've done many different jobs in the past, it's not really how my brain likes to work. My natural disposition is to think of ideas, and I like to create interesting things and ways of doing things. Plus this is much more fun to do, with a potential higher reward. That's not a cop-out, honest guv!

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