Lecture 3
Lecture 3
Keeran Jamil
•2
• 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?
•The environment in which e-business services are provided
•3 •4
E-Commerce Models The Merchant & Brokerage Model
•www.wiley.com/go/ebusiness •8
Advertising, Mixed, Informediary and
Transaction Fee Revenue Subscription Models
Model
• Company that receives a fee for • Advertising model is an extension of
enabling or executing a transaction traditional advertising media
• Examples: • Mixed model generates revenue both
eBay.com from advertising and subscription
E-Trade.com • Informediary is all about collecting
information about consumers and then
selling the information
• Subscription is about selling digital
products through subscription
•10
•www.wiley.com/go/ebusiness •13
•17 •18
•19 •20
E-procurement applications
NonBusiness and Government
4. Purchase order is
• The e-Commerce activity amongst 3. Order approvation
electronically placed
8. Payment request
electronically forwarded 7. Product receipt
•21
• A third party market place is not controlled • With the growth of B2B e-Commerce the
by buyers or sellers, but rather by a third need for appropriate technologies to
party. support B2B has gained importance.
• The marketplace generates fees from • Over the past decade Intranets and
matching buyers and sellers Extranets technologies have been used in
the e-Commerce environment and their
popularity is on the rise
•35 •36
B2B Applications
• If Buyers and Sellers are
Write the advantages and
Fragmented, Independent
Intermediaries are likely to be
disadvantages of B2B
successful. applications
B2B applications:
Intranets
advantages and disadvantages
• Advantages: • What is a Intranet?
– Help to automate communications between • How are they useful?
companies making them easier and quicker
• Technology behind Intranets
– Allow to cut prices drastically
• Typical Usage of Intranets within
– Help in reducing mistakes
organisations
• Disadvantages:
– Often need legacy integration
•40
Intranets Continued Extranets
• What is a Extranet?
• How are they useful?
• Technology behind Extranets
• Typical Usage of Extranets between
organisations
Extranets Continued
•From: www.sonicwall-solutions.com/
•43
Channel Structures: Disintermediation
Reintermediation
Example – Vauxhall
Traditional Organisational
Organisational Issues
Structure
• The vertical bureaucratic structure in a firm is built on • Vertical and hierarchical
the assumption that concentrating similar activities within • Function-based
functions, and thus separating activities which are not
similar,would result in economies of scale. • Product-based
• The internet and related technologies reduce • Geography-based
coordination costs and transaction costs. • Matrix-based
• Traditional business models focused on creating value • High coordination costs (costs of sending,
at the line-of-business level while the new business storing and retrieving information)
models focus on the customers and creating value at the
• Seller- or product-driven, aiming to generate
relationship level across products and channels.
value at the of line-of -business level
•51 •52
5 Business Models
New Organisational Structure
Classifications
• Hierarchical, procedural and other new
coordination mechanisms which leads to • Internet-enabled
network based business models. • Value-web
• Team-based structure. • E-business enabled
• Customer focused: value is generated at the • Market participant
relations level, across products and channels.
• Creation of internet based business models (5 • Cyber-intermediary
Business models Classifications)
•53 •54
•55 •56
The Market Participants
Cybermediaries Business Model
Business Model
• Eleven models are proposed:
Producers
Producers Internet Distributors
Distributors
Horizontal
1. Directories
Horizontal
2. Search Services
3. Malls
Focussed
Focussed Portals Vertical
4. Virtual Resellers
distributors Portals Vertical
distributors 5. Web Site Evaluators
6. Publishers
7. Auditors
Affinity
Affinity 8. Forums
Retailers
Retailers Infomediaries
Infomediaries
9. Financial Intermediaries
10.Spot Market Makers
11.Intelligent Agents
Exchanges
Exchanges Marketplaces
Marketplaces Aggregators
Aggregators
•57 •58
Types of Auctions
• Consumer Auctions : Online consumer auctions • Dutch Auctions : (also called descending-price
offer buyers the opportunity to purchase auction), usually more than one item is up for bid
products or services that are not easily available at a time. The winning bidder pays the same
at a fair price. price for all the items, which is the lowest
• Business to Business auctions : As opposed to winning bid on the items. In contrast with the
consumers, corporations use B2B auctions. A English auction, the Dutch auction starts at a
very creative B2B model is the one used by specific price and goes down.
FreeMarkets.com • Example #1: Single item requested: If 40 bids
• English Auctions : open-outcry, or open were made for 20 items, each bidder is bidding
auctions, the bidder openly offers a price and for one item, and the 20th highest bid was $65,
the maximum bid wins. In this type of auction, all 20 high bidders will pay $65—even if the
usually there is a minimum bid highest bidder bid was $95.
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• Sealed Bid Auctions : Using sealed-bid auctions the bidder
submits only one bid, and the bid is kept secret from the other
bidders. The bidder with the highest bid wins and pays his or
her bid.
• Double Auctions : Using double auctions both sellers and
buyers submit bids, which are then ranked from highest to
lowest to generate demand-and-supply profiles. From the
profiles, the maximum quantity exchanged can be determined
by matching selling offers (starting with the lowest price and
moving up) with demand bids (starting with the highest price
and moving down).
• Second-Price or Vickery Auctions :named after William
Vickrey, winner of the 1996 Nobel Prize in Economic
Sciences. Similar to sealed-bid auctions, the bids are sealed,
and each bidder is unaware of other bids. The item is
awarded to the highest bidder at a price equal to the second-
highest bid (or highest losing bid). In other words, a winner
pays less than the highest bid.