Evolution of e Commerce

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The key takeaways are that e-commerce originated from EDI and expanded rapidly with the growth of the internet and browsers in the 1990s. However, this led to the dot-com bubble bursting in 2000 when many dot-com companies failed or were acquired.

E-commerce originated from EDI in the 1970s-80s but expanded with the growth of the internet in the 1990s along with browsers and pioneers like Amazon, eBay and Yahoo. The period of 1995-1999 was a golden era for e-commerce growth.

The dot-com bubble peaked in March 2000 with record NASDAQ levels but then burst, with NASDAQ falling over 50% by April 2000. Many dot-com companies either failed, were acquired or saw stock prices plummet over 70%. This was called the dot-com disaster.

Pratyush Pratap 1220329 M2 Introduction Internet and e-commerce had followed, inevitably, a similar road since these concepts

can not be mutually excluded one from the other one. Innovations in the field of Internet technologies have had instant repercussions in the online business world. From a simple usage having a regional origin located in the United States of America, the phenomenon of electronic commerce has seen a rapid spread globally, according to the innovations related to Internet technologies. The projection of electronic commerce is in perfect accordance with the development stage of the real economy. Due to the low level of development, some states have managed to create and maintain a solid base, especially the one related to IT infrastructure. Thus, due to lack of this essential element, electronic commerce has suffered. The real losers, however, are the consumers, who are deprived of a more convenient way to purchase goods and services, since nowadays almost any product from any corner of the world it may be purchased without further difficulties. E-business and e-commerce The Internet technologies (World Wide Web, intranet, extranet, etc.) and the knowledge on how to implement them in the business area is the starting point for the concept underlying the symbiosis between technology and business, bearing the name of e-business. To be more specifically, what is the definition of e-business? According to IBM, which has defined this concept in 1997,''e-business can be the key in transforming business processes using Internet technologies.'' Analysed from a general perspective, e-business may gather under its umbrella three major components: The human dimension2 that includes processes and activities related to research, development, marketing, manufacturing, logistics, management, etc. The technological-only component, akin to information-related technologies.

Commercial or e-commerce component, taken as a whole and perceived primarily as a phenomenon having a different meaning that the term known e-commerce, basically the purchase of goods and services through Internet technologies. At first, closely linked (the confusion was unavoidable most of the time) to the concept of ebusiness was the notion of e-commerce which later on had differentiated itself, now being seen as an integral part of the first. Most definitions emphasize e-commerce as being the type of transaction in which the parties interact primarily through electronic media. The beginnings and expansion of electronic commerce Electronic commerce has its origins in the implementation of EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) or the exchange of data from one computer to another through networks. During the 70s and the 80s, the subject of transactions were the information exchange or banking transfers. Since 1983, the Internet has become the main medium of transmission of data (at first only in the United States, the country of origin), having a non-commercial character. The implementation of some components later proven to be vital for the later development of the Internet (such as graphical user interface or GUI, HTML and World Wide Web) has basically proven to usher a new era. In 1991, the National Science Foundation (having to perform the management role for NSFNET, the precursor of TCP / IP) removed the prohibition on commercial-type activities on the Internet. The decision triggered within in a few years a major revolution in e-commerce. Analysts mention the period between 1995 and 1999 as a true golden era for the Internet, at this time now being developed and emerging the main browsers and other utilities, as well as the first top brands over the years, veritable symbols of the e-commerce phenomenon - Amazon (established in 1994), Ebay and Yahoo (in 1995), GeoCities (an early model for virtual community, established in 1994). With the momentum of these types of transactions, increasingly more companies began to enter the online market, the growth rate and the results being outstanding. For example, in the United States, in 1996 there were recorded total revenues of 707 million dollars, 2.6 billion the next year, following the record of 5.8 billion dollars in 199815. Again, Amazon distinguished itself by increasing the turnover from 16 million in 1996 to 1.6 billion dollars in 1999. The Dot.com bubble

The peak of the expansion of such companies and other dot.com firms was registered on 10 March 2000, when the NASDAQ Composite Index reached 5133, after a week losing about 9% from the previous value16. Until April 14, the same index has dropped 34.2% while the Dow Jones Internet Composite 53.6%17. After a year, the percentage of NASDAQ fell somewhere below the 2000 points. All companies listed on these exchanges either had very large losses related to the cost shares, regardless of scale and business-size for example, eBay's stock price fell by 27.9% of those from Amazon by 29.9% or 72% for Internet Capital. If these companies have survived the so-called dot.com bubble, many others have bankrupted or at best have been acquired by others. The Dot.com Bubble post-era Getting past the dot.com disaster and trying to regain the pattern of a coherent management, the companies involved in the electronic commerce felt that a more well-planned strategy it needed, which takes into account the improvement of e-commerce platform and last but not least a marketing emphasis on practicality, visual impact and quality of content. As was expected, the dot.com crash sites did not really affect the American industry, the overall percentage of online transactions being very small compared with total retail value. Conclusions E-commerce remains only a small part inside the economic mechanism, representing only a few percent at the macroeconomic level. Considering the current globalization process, this activity will gain more scale in the coming years if it is meaningful to take into account especially the emerging world markets at this moment, some of them still in the early stages of expansion. If evolution can be appreciated globally and according to key indicators, the question remains what will happen to the evolution of individual firms and companies. Some analysts ask themselves if there can rise problem in the future more or less followed by a second Dot.com Bubble, considering the fact that investment in companies such as these exceeds, as percentages, even the events leading up to the famous crash which happened in 2000. The takeovers of companies are now requiring hundreds and even billions of dollars (Google bought DoubleClick for 3.1 billion dollars or Skype, which was acquired by eBay 2.6 billion). The other related issue is about the high market value, either justified or not. Thus, Microsoft paid 240 million dollars for a share of

only 1.6% of the total shares of Facebook or that the same company, Microsoft, wanted to buy Yahoo in 2008 for the sum of approximately $ 45 billion, an amount considered to be too high in comparison with the value of the traded object.

Bibliography Kuechler, D. (n.d.). www.csulb.edu. Retrieved from csulb.edu:

http://www.csulb.edu/journals/jecr/issues/20054/paper1.pdf Mirescu, S. V. (n.d.). http://www.scientificpapers.org. (E. a. Journal of Knowlwdge Management, Producer) Retrieved from scientificpapers.org:

http://www.scientificpapers.org/wpcontent/files/1121_The_premises_and_the_evolution_of_electronic_commerce.pdf

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