Session 1 Introduction
Session 1 Introduction
Session-1
Overview of E-commerce
Jagdish Bhatta
What is Commerce?
Traditional commerce may be defined as:
Dictionary Meaning
Commerce : \Com"merce\, noun.
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What is E-Commerce?
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What is E-Commerce? (Contd.)
• E-Commerce is a modern business methodology that
addresses the needs of organizations, merchants,
and consumers to cut costs while improving the
quality of goods and service and increasing the speed
of service delivery.
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Definition of E-Commerce
• From a communications perspective, EC is the
delivery of information, product/services, or
payments over telephone lines, computer networks,
or any other electronic means.
• From a business process perspective, EC is the
application of technology toward the automation of
business transactions and work flow.
• From a service perspective, EC is a tool that
addresses the desire of firms, consumers, and
management to cut service costs while improving
the quality of goods and increasing the speed of
service delivery.
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Definition of E-Commerce (Contd..)
• From an online perspective, EC provides the
capability of buying and selling products and
information on the Internet and other online services.
• From a collaboration perspective, EC is the facilitator
for inter- and intra-organizational collaboration.
• From a community perspective, EC provides place for
community members, to learn, transact and
collaborate.
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Electronic Business:
• Commonly referred to as "eBusiness" or "e-business", may be
defined as the application of information and communication
technologies in support of all the activities of business.
Commerce constitutes the exchange of products and services
between businesses, groups and individuals and can be seen
as one of the essential activities of any business.
• Electronic business methods enable companies to link their
internal and external data processing systems more efficiently
and flexibly, to work more closely with suppliers and partners,
and to better satisfy the needs and expectations of their
customers.
• In practice, e-business is more than just e-commerce. While
e-business refers to more strategic focus with an emphasis on
the functions that occur using electronic capabilities, e-
commerce is a subset of an overall e-business strategy. E-
commerce seeks to add revenue streams using the World
Wide Web or the Internet to build and enhance relationships
with clients and partners and to improve efficiency. 7
eCommerce differs from eBusiness
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eCommerce differs from eBusiness
(Contd.)
Some people use the term e-business to refer to
all the categories of e-commerce. E.g. IBM
defines e-business as: The transformation of key
business processes through the use of Internet
technologies
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Electronic Market:
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E-Commerce is Interdisciplinary
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Brief History of EC
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Brief History of EC (cont.)
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Brief History of EC (cont.)
• EC Successes • EC Failures
– Pure online – E-tailors began to fail in
• eBay 1999
• VeriSign
• AOL
– This does not mean
• Checkpoint that EC’s days are
– Click-and-mortar numbered
• GE – Large EC companies like
• IBM Amazon.com are
• Intel expanding but success
• Schwab or failure is not certain
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Pure Vs. Partial E-Commerce
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E-commerce Categories
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B2C e-commerce
• Description
– Businesses sell products or services to individual
customers (consumers)
• Example
– Walmart.com sells merchandise to consumers
through its Web site
• Web site
– www.walmart.com
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B2B E-commerce
• Description
– Businesses sell products or services to other businesses
– Types include inter-business exchanges, e-distributors,
B2B service providers, matchmakers and infomediaries
• Example
– Grainger.com sells industrial supplies to large and small
businesses through its Web site
• Web site
– www.grainger.com
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Business Processes that Support
Buy/Sell Activities
• Description
– Businesses and other organisations maintain and use
information to identify and evaluate customers, suppliers
and employees (and to support buying, selling hiring,
planning and other activities). More and more this
information is being shared
• Example
– Dell Computer uses secure internet connections to share
current sales and forecasts with suppliers who use it to
plan their production, therefore they deliver the right
quantities of components at the right time
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C2C e-commerce
• Description
– Participants in an online marketplace can buy and sell
goods with each other
• Example
– Consumers and businesses trade with each other on
eBay.com
• Web site
– www.ebay.com
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B2G e-commerce
• Description
– Business sell goods or services to governments
and government agencies
• Example
– Cal-Buy portal for businesses that want to sell
online to the State of California
• Web site
– www.pd.dgs.ca.gov/calbuy/default.htm
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E-commerce Categories: Example
• You are a computer manufacturing company who
performs the following activities on the Internet:
– Sells computers to individuals (B2C)
– Purchases parts (e.g. hard drives, power supplies etc.)
from a supplier (B2B)
– Hires staff, manage customer accounts, advertise, etc.
(Business processes)
– Sells computers to the Government to be used in schools
(B2G)
– On eBay.com individuals buy and sell this brand of
computers (C2C)
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Electronic Commerce Not New
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Technology and Business (Commerce)
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Origins of commerce
Origins of commerce predate recorded history.
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Traditional commerce
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From Traditional Commerce to E-
commerce Cont’d
Wire transfers - used
Electronic Funds Transfer (EFTs) by banks
Businesses transfer
electronic data
Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) - data not re-keyed
- high implementation
cost, thus excluded
small businesses
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Business Processes
Examples include:
Transferring funds
Placing orders
Sending invoices
Shipping goods to customers
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The Buyer’s perspective
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The Seller’s perspective
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Why eCommerce?
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Unique Features of eCommerce
Technology
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Unique Features of eCommerce Technology
(continued)
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Unique Features of eCommerce Technology
(continued)
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Unique Features of eCommerce Technology
(continued)
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Unique Features of eCommerce Technology
(continued)
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Unique Features of eCommerce Technology
(continued)
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Unique Features of eCommerce Technology
(continued)
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Seven Cs of Ecommerce
•Cost
•Convenience
•Communication
•Community
•Coordination
•Customization
•Collaboration
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Fundamental Business Goals
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Examples of eCommerce
Enabling Business Goals
Increase Revenues
A company is able, through publishing its catalogs
online, to reach more customers for the same costs as
printing and mailing its catalogs.
Decrease Costs
The same company can provide more timely product
information by updating its catalog online, than by
mailing its catalog four times a year.
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Appropriateness
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Well-suited for eCommerce
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Questionable cases
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Combinations of both
Sale/purchase of automobiles
Online banking
Sale/purchase of investment/insurance products
Consumers can research products online and make final
transactions in person.
In any business problem it is good practice to weigh the
advantages and disadvantages of a particular approach.
Evaluating the application of eCommerce technology is no
Different.
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Advantages of eCommerce
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Advantages of eCommerce
In general:
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