E-COMMERCE
LOGISTICS
Based on Kenneth C. Laudon, Carol Guercio Traver. “E-
Commerce -- Business, Technology, Society”. Pearson.
Learning Methods
Lecturing
Quiz
Case learning & discussion
Assignment & Presentation
Multimedia
Project
Practical hands-on (additional)
What will you learn?
Unique
Define e-
Features of e- Web 2.0
commerce
commerce tech
Future of e- E-commerce Types of e-
commerce evolution commerce
E-commerce Academic
themes Disciplines
Learning Objectives
After reading this chapter, you will be able to:
Define e-commerce and describe how it differs from e-business.
Identify and describe the unique features of e-commerce technology
and discuss their business significance.
Recognize and describe Web 2.0 applications.
Describe the major types of e-commerce.
Understand the evolution of e-commerce from its early years to today.
Identify the factors that will define the future of e-commerce
Describe the major themes underlying the study of e-commerce.
Identify the major academic disciplines contributing to e-commerce.
Pinterest: A Picture Is Worth
a
Thousand Words
Have you used Pinterest or any other content curation sites?
What are your main interests?
Have you purchased anything based on a pin or board on
Pinterest or any other curation site?
Why do Pinterest links drive more purchasing than Facebook
links?
Amazon.com:Tuned-Up and
Profitable
Story of Amazon in many ways mirrors story of e-
commerce itself
Amazon offers consumers four compelling reasons to
shop: selection, convenience, price and service
Founded in 1995, went public in 1997
From 1997-2000, revenues increased from $148
million to $2.7 billion but so did losses, to $1.4 billion
In 2001-2002, new focus on cost-cutting and achieving
profitability leads to first quarterly profits ever in 2002
Slide
1-6
EVERYTHING ON DEMAND : THE
“UBERIZATION” E-COMMERCE
Uber, headqurtered in San Francisco
Founded in 2009 by Travis Kalanick and Garrett Camp
Grown explosively since then to over 600 cities in 65
countries
Uber’s business model differs from traditional retail e-
commerce. Uber doesn’t sell goods, often called
“sharing economy” company.
“Digital disruption”
Slide
1-7
What is E-Commerce?
What is E-commerce?
The use of the internet and the web to transact business.
Involves digitally enabled commercial transactions between and
among organizations and individuals
Digitally enabled transactions include all transactions mediated
by digital technology
Commercial transactions involve the exchange of value across
organizational or individual boundaries in return for products or
services
Slide
1-9
E-commerce trends
Expansion of social, local, and mobile
e-commerce
Mobile platform begins to rival PC platform
Continued growth of cloud computing
Explosive growth in “Big Data”
E-books gain wide acceptance
Continued growth of user-generated content
THE DIFFERENCE
BETWEEN E-
COMMERCE AND
E-BUSINESS?
Slide
1-11
E-commerce vs. E-business
E-business:
Digital enablement of transactions and processes
within a firm, involving information systems under
firm’s control
Does not include commercial transactions involving
an exchange of value across organizational
boundaries
Slide
1-12
The Difference between
E-commerce and E-business
Figure 1.1, Page 11
Slide
1-13
Why Study E-commerce?
Has challenged much traditional business thinking
Has a number of unique features that help explain why we have so
much interest in e-commerce
E-commerce technology is different, more powerful than
previous technologies
E-commerce brings fundamental changes to commerce
Traditional commerce:
Consumer as passive targets
Mass-marketing driven
Sales-force driven
Fixed prices
Information asymmetry
Slide
1-14
Unique Features of E-
Commerce Technology
Unique Features of E-
Commerce Technology
Ubiquity
• Available just about everywhere, at all times
• Making it possible to shop from your desktop/laptop, home, work, car
Global Reach
• Permits commercial transaction to cross cultural & national boundaries
• More convenient & cost effective
Universal Standards
• There is one set of technology standard, namely Internet Standards
• Shared by all nation
• Benefit: lower market entry cost, reduce search cost, network externalities
Richness
• Refers to complexity & content of a message
• Video, audio, and text messages are possible
Unique Features of E-
Commerce Technology
Interactivity
• The technology works through interaction with the user.
• Allows for 2-way communication between merchant & consumer
• Enable merchant to engage consumer like face2face globally
Information Density
• The technology reduces information costs & raises quality
• Reduce cost of info collection, storage, processing & communication
• Increase currency, accuracy, timeliness of info
• Business Consequences: Price transparency, cost transparency, price discrimination
Personalization & Customization
• The technology allows personalized messages to be delivered to individuals as well as groups
• Merchants can target their marketing messages to specific individuals.
• Customer’s past purchase & behavior
Social Technology
• User content generation and social networking
• Provide many2many model of mass communication.
Web 2.0
The “new” Web
Applications and technologies that allow users to:
create, edit, and distribute content
share preferences, bookmarks, and online personas
participate in virtual lives
Build online communities
User-centered applications and social media technologies
User-generated content and communication
Highly interactive, social communities
Large audiences; yet mostly unproven business models
Examples: Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, Wikipedia, Tumblr
Slide
1-18
Types of E-Commerce
B2C (Amazon)
• Business selling to consumers.
• Most likely encountered by consumers
B2B (Go2Paper)
• Business selling to other business.
• Largestform of e-commerce
• Consumers to sell to each other.
C2C (e-bay) • Consumer prepares product, places for auction/sale
• Relies on the market maker to provide catalogue, search engine & transaction.
M-Commerce • Involves the use of mobile device to conduct commercial transactions
Social e-commerce • Leading social network and social e-commerce site
(Facebook)
Local e-commerce • Offers subscribers daily deals from local businesses
(Groupon)
Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
E-commerce
Involves online businesses attempting to
reach individual consumers
In 2016, total B2C revenues were about
$600 billion
Many types of business models within this
category including online retailers, content
providers, portals, transaction brokers,
service providers, market creators and
community providers
Slide
1-20
The Growth of B2C E-commerce
Figure 1.3, Page 20
SOURCE: Based on data fromEducation,
eMarketer,Inc.
Inc.,Publishing
2013a; authors’ estimates. Slid
Copyright © 2014 Pearson as Prentice
e 1-
Hall
21
Business-to-Business (B2B)
E-commerce
Involves businesses focusing on selling to
other businesses
Largest form of e-commerce ($6.7 trillion in
2016)
Two primary business models within B2B:
Net marketplaces (includes e-distributors, e-
procurement companies, exchanges and industry
consortia)
Private industrial networks (includes single firm
networks and industry-wide networks)
Slide
1-22
The Growth of B2B E-commerce
Figure 1.4, Page 21
SOURCE: Based on data fromEducation,
U.S. Census Slid
Copyright © 2014 Pearson Inc.Bureau, 2013;
Publishing authors’ estimates.
as Prentice
e 1-
Hall
23
Consumer-to-Consumer
(C2C) E-commerce
Provides a way for consumers to sell to
each other, with the help of an online
market maker
eBay most well-known example
Slide
1-24
M-commerce
Use of mobile devices to enable online
transactions
Expected to reach over $180 billion in 2016 an
to grow rapidly in the US over the next five
year
Slide
1-25
SOCIAL E-commerce
E-commerce enabled by social networks and online
social relationship
The growth of social e-commerce is being driven by a
number of factors, including the increasing popularity
of social sign-on, network notification, online
collaborative, shopping tools, social search, etc.
Social e-commerce is often intertwined with m-
commerce, particularly as more and more social
network users access those networks via mobile
devices
Slide
1-26
LOCAL E-commerce
Focus on engaging the consumer based on his or her
current geographic location
Local merchant use a variety of online marketing
techniques to drive consumers to their stores
Local e-commerce is the third prong of the mobile,
social, local e-commerce wave and, fueled by an
explosion of interest in local on-demand services such
as Uber, is expected to grow in the United States to
over $40 billion in 2016
Slide
1-27
The Growth of the
internet
What is the difference between internet & web?
The Internet
Worldwide network of computer networks built on common
standards
Created in late 1960s
Services include the Web, e-mail, file transfers, etc.
Can measure growth by looking at number of Internet hosts with
domain names
Slide
1-29
The Web
Most popular service on the Internet
Developed in early 1990s
Provides access to Web pages (HTML documents)
Can include text, graphics, animations, music, videos
Web content has grown exponentially, around 30 trillion unique
URLs, 120 billion Web pages indexes
Slide
1-30
The Mobile Platform
Most recent development in Internet infrastructure
Enable access to the Internet via wireless networks or cell phone
service
Mobile device, include tablets, smartphones, ultra-lightweight
laptops
Slide
1-31
Insight on Technology : class
discussion
will apps make the web irrelevant?
What are the advantages and disadvantages of apps, compared
with Web sites, for mobile users?
What are the benefits of apps for content owners and creators?
Will apps eventually make the Web irrelevant? Why or why not?
Potential Limitations on the
Growth of B2C E-commerce
Expensive technology
Sophisticated skill set
Persistent cultural attraction of physical markets and traditional
shopping experiences
Persistent global inequality limiting access to telephones and
computers
Saturation and ceiling effects
Slide
1-33
Origins and Growth of E-commerce
Precursors :
Baxter Healthcare
Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
French Minitel (1980 videotext system)
None had fuctionality of Internet
1995: Beginning of e-commerce
First sales of banner advertisements
Since then, e-commerce fastest growing form of commerce in U.S.
Slide
1-34
E-commerce : a brief
history
1995–2000: Invention
Key concepts developed
Limited bandwidth and media
Euphoric visions of
Friction-free commerce
Lowered search costs, disintermediation, price transparency, elimination
of unfair competitive advantage
First-mover advantages
Network profits
Dot-com crash of 2000
E-commerce : a brief
history (cont.)
2001–2006: Consolidation
Emphasis on business-driven approach
Traditional large firms expand presence
Start-up financing shrinks up
More complex products and services sold
Growth of search engine advertising
Business Web presences expand to include e-mail, display and
search advertising, and limited community feedback features
E-commerce : a brief
history (cont.)
2007–Present: Reinvention
Rapid growth of:
Online social networks
Mobile platform
Local commerce
Entertainment content develops as source of revenues
Transformation of marketing
Coordinated marketing on social, mobile, local platforms
Analytic technologies
E-Commerce Evolution
Reinvention
(2006)
• Google, social
networking
Consolidation • Web 2.0 application
(2001) • Attract huge audience
• Shift to business driven in a very short time
Innovation (1995)
• Technology success
• Did not fulfill
economist’s vision
• Ending with the collapse
in dot coms’s stock
market
Factors that will Define the
Future of E-Commerce
E-commerce technology continue to propagate
E-commerce price rise
E-commerce margins & profit rise
Traditional & experienced companies grow & play dominant role
Entrepreneur social applications
The number of successful pure online companies decline
Regulation grow
Predictions for the Future
Technology will propagate through all commercial
activity
Large, traditional companies will continue to play
dominant role, consolidating audiences
Start-up ventures can still attract large audiences in non-dominated
arenas
Integrated online/offline companies will experience
more growth than purely online companies
Additional factors:
Increased regulation and control
Cost of energy
Slide
1-40
Understanding E-commerce:
Organizing Themes
Technology: Development and mastery of digital computing
and communications technology
Business: New technologies present businesses and
entrepreneurs with new ways of organizing production and
transacting business
Society: Intellectual property, individual privacy and public
policy
Slide
1-41
The Internet
and the
Evolution
of Corporate
Computing
Figure 1.11, Page 41
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CASE READING
Insight on Society: Holding on to your privacy online
E-Commerce Study –
Themes Needed
• Development and
mastery of digital
Technology computing and
communications
technology
• New technologies
present businesses
with new ways of
Business
organizing production
and transacting
business
• Intellectual Property
Society • Individual privacy
• Public welfare Policy
Major Academic
Disciplines
Technical • Computer Science
• Management Science
approach • Information Systems
• Sociology
Behavioral • Finance & accounting
• Management
approach
• Marketing
• Economics
• Information systems
What have you learned?
Unique
Define e-
Features of e- Web 2.0
commerce
commerce tech
Future of e- E-commerce Types of e-
commerce evolution commerce
E-commerce Academic
themes Disciplines
THANK YOU