E-commerce essentials
2. How is e-commerce different from traditional commerce?
3. What are the driving forces behind e-commerce?
4. What are the key technology concepts behind the Internet?
5.
What are the key e-commerce questions for
management?
1.1
Terminology
· E-commerce
· E-business
· E-markets
·
Internet business
1.2
Definition
The use of the Internet and the Web to conduct commercial transactions that involve an exchange of value across organizational or individual boundaries in return for products and services
vs
the use of the Internet and the Web to conduct business activities
1.3
Types
1. Relationship-based (Rayport and Jaworksi, 2001)
Business originating from …
Business Consumers
B2B Purchasing & Procurement Supplier Management Inventory Management |
C2B Demand aggregator Cause-related advocacy group |
B2C Sales Consumer search FAQs Service & support |
C2C Auction Classified ads Games Jobs |
2. Technology-based
· P2P
· M-commerce
E-COMMERCE vs TRADITIONAL COMMERCE
2.1 7 features of e-commerce technology (Table 1.1)
1. Ubiquity
2. Global reach
3. Universal standards
4. Richness
5. Interactivity
6. Information density
7. Personalization
e-commerce vs traditional
commerce
Key elements |
E-commerce |
Traditional commerce |
Technology |
Enabler |
Facilitator |
Competitive edge |
Speed |
Differentiation |
Accessibility |
24 x 7 |
Limited time |
Customer interface |
Screen-to-face |
Face-to-face |
Customer interaction |
Self-service |
Seller influenced |
Customization |
One-to-one customization |
Mass customization |
Product promotion |
Word of mouth |
Merchandising & personal selling |
Product characteristic |
Commodity |
Perishables, feel and touch |
2.2
E-Commerce I vs E-Commerce II
(Table 1.5)
DRIVING FORCES
3.1
Economics
1. Lowering of costs
2. Increasing competition
3.
Increasing consumer power: demand for speed,
convenience, instant satisfaction, ....
3.2 Technology
1. Growth of the Internet (INTERconnected NETworks)
2. Emergence of the WWW
3. Ongoing advancement of IT
· Internet II & Next Generation Internet Projects à GigaPOP, IPv6
· Photonics (Table 3.5)
· Wireless web
Ø Internet telephony
Ø Digital libraries
Ø Distributed storage
Ø Distance learning
Ø Digital video
Ø Video teleconferencing
Ø Tele-immersion
Ø M-commerce
3.2.1
Internet
Key technology concepts of the Internet
1. Packet switching (Figure 3.4)
2. TCP/IP (Figure 3.5)
3. Client/Server computing (Figure 3.7)
Level |
Example |
End user |
You and me |
Local access providers |
Verizon, InsightCommunication |
Internet access providers |
AOL, MSN, CompuServe (Table 3.3) |
Network access providers |
MCI, Sprint, AT&T (Table 3.2) |
Backbone |
Fiber optics, routers, switches |
Internet connection options
1. Dial-up
2. Digital Subscriber Line (DSL)
3. Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN)
4. Cable
5. T1
6. T3
7.
Wireless
4.2 Internet protocol
a set of rules for formatting, ordering, and error-checking
data sent across a network
· TCP/IP (Transmission control protocol/Internet protocol) (Figure 3.6)
Layer |
Specific Protocol |
Application |
HTTP, SMTP, FTP |
Transport |
TCP |
Internet/Network |
IP, Routing |
Network Interface/Link |
PPP (Point-to-Point IP), SLIP (Serial-Line IP) |
·
· IP handles the addressing details of each packet (IP address/URL)
IP address: 32-bit numeric address in dotted quad addressing format
Universal Resource Locator: hhhh://www.xxx.yyy
where hhhh: how to access a resource, e.g., http, ftp, telnet
www: name of a specific computer
xxx: subdomain
yyy: top-level domain
Application Layer Protocols:
· HTTP (hyper text transfer protocol): transfers and displays Web pages
· SMTP (simple mail transfer protocol): requests mail delivery from a mail server, specifies the exact format of a mail message and how it should be administered
· POP (post office protocol): retrieves and/or deletes e-mails from a mail server, provides support for multipurpose Internet mail extensions (MIME) which allows attachments of binary files to e-mails
· IMAP (interactive mail access protocol): downloads, filters, organizes, deletes e-mails
· FTP (file transfer protocol): transfers files between TCP/IP-connected computers
· Global hypertext publishing
·
Universal readership
Web technology
•
Client
ware
– Browser, viewer, player, client computing
•
Server
ware
– Web server, scripting, page construction,
image manipulation, transaction protection
•
Network
ware
– Router, gateway, hub, firewall, leased lines
•
Middle
ware
– Database, data warehouse
4.3.1
Web server
Web server |
Originator |
Apache: a patchy system |
NCSA ( |
IIS (Internet Information Server) |
Microsoft |
NES (Netscape Enterprise Server) |
Netscape |
Web
server functionalities
•
HTTP
services
•
Security
& authentication (SSL protocol)
•
FTP
services
•
Searching
(search engine vs intelligent agent)
•
Data analysis
(access log analysis)
•
Site
management (authoring, publishing, link checking)
– NetMechanic’s site management tool
•
Application
construction (HTML, CGI, API)
•
Content
management (ODBC, ASP)
•
Site
development
4.3.2 WWW
standards: markup languages
· SGML (Standard generalized markup language): a meta language used for defining other markup languages to describe and format electronic documents that are independent of software applications, devices, and machines.
· HTML (Hyper text markup language): a document production language that uses a set of tags to define the format and style (headings, title bars, bullets, lines, ordered lists, graphics, tables, frames, …) of a document, i.e., how a page is displayed on the web.
·
XML (extensible Markup Language): a document
definition language that uses paired start and stop tags to define the
structure of the data to be displayed
Is your business right for e-commerce?
à Business
Plans (Table 2.1)
1. Why will customers buy from you?
2. How will you make money?
3. What is your market niche?
4. Who are your competitors?
5. What is your competitive advantage?
6. How do you promote your products or services?
7. What types of organizational structures are
necessary?
8. What kinds of managerial experiences and background
are necessary?
B2C business models (Table 2.3)
1. Portal
2. E-tailer
3. Content Provider
4. Transaction broker
5. Market creator
6. Service provider
7. Community provider