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Naveed Siddiqui
PhD. M.B.E. PgDip Information Technology
Founder & CEO – Naveed Media Academy
www.facebook.com/NaveedAhmedSiddiqui33
www.linkedin.com/in/dr-naveed-siddiqui-191a4b2b
www.youtube.com/user/nvd30
www.youtube.com/user/NaveedAhmedSiddiqui3
nasiddiqui333@gmail.com
0092 337 0492400
Electronic Commerce
E-MARKETPLACES: STRUCTURE,
MECHANISMS, ECONOMICS,
AND IMPACTS
3
Learning Objectives
1. Define e-marketplaces and list their
components.
2. List the major types of electronic
markets and describe their features.
3. Describe the types of intermediaries
in EC and their roles.
4. Describe electronic catalogs,
shopping carts, and search engines.
4
Learning Objectives
5. Describe the various types of auctions and
list their characteristics.
6. Discuss the benefits, limitations, and impacts
of auctions.
7. Describe bartering and negotiating online.
8. Define m-commerce and explain its role as a
market mechanism.
5
Learning Objectives (cont.)
9. Discuss liquidity, quality, and success
factors in e-marketplaces.
10. Describe the economic impact of EC.
11. Discuss competition in the digital
economy.
12. Describe the impact of e-marketplaces on
organizations.
6
How Raffles Hotel Is
Conducting EC
The Problem
Very competitive industry
Owns and manages luxury and business
hotels worldwide
Spends lavishly on every facet of its
operation
Success depends on the company’s ability
to lure customers to its hotels and
facilities and on its ability to contain costs
7
How Raffles Hotel Is
Conducting EC (cont.)
The Solution
Address two types of issues
Business-to-consumer
maintains a diversified corporate portal
(raffles.com), open to the public
introduces customers to the company and its
services
information on the hotels
a reservation system
links to travelers’ resources
CRM program
an online store for Raffles products
8
How Raffles Hotel Is
Conducting EC (cont.)
The Results
Corporate portal helps in customer acquisition
Promotions and direct sales enable the hotel to
maintain a relatively high occupancy
Private marketplace forces suppliers to disclose
their prices and increases competition among
suppliers
Company is saving about $1 million a year on
procurement
Company is expanding aggressively in the Asian
markets
9
How Raffles Hotel Is
Conducting EC (cont.)
What we can learn…
Old-economy hotel transformed itself into
a click-and-mortar business by creating
two separate electronic markets:
10
How Raffles Hotel Is
Conducting EC (cont.)
B2C market—selling its services to
consumers
B2B private market—to buy from its
suppliers and to sell products to other
hotels
Used several e-commerce mechanisms:
corporate portal
electronic catalogs
e-procurement using reverse auctions
11
Electronic Marketplaces
Markets play a
central role in the
economy facilitating
the exchange of:
information
goods
services
payments
Markets create
economic value for:
buyers
sellers
market
intermediaries
society at large
12
Electronic Marketplaces (cont.)
Three main functions of markets
1. matching buyers and sellers
2. facilitating the exchange of information,
goods, services, and payments
associated with market transactions
3. providing an institutional infrastructure,
such as a legal and regulatory
framework, that enables the efficient
functioning of the market
13
Electronic Marketplaces (cont.)
In recent years markets have seen a
dramatic increase in the use of IT—EC
has:
increased market efficiencies by
expediting or improving functions
been able to significantly decrease
the cost of executing these functions
14
Marketspace
Marketspace: A marketplace in
which sellers and buyers exchange
goods and services for money (or for
other goods and services), but do so
electronically
15
Marketspace Components
Customers
Sellers
Products
Infrastructure
Front end
Back end
Intermediaries
Other business
partners
Support
services
16
Marketspace Components (cont.)
Digital products:
Goods that can be
transformed to
digital format and
delivered over the
Internet
Front end: The
portion of an
e-seller’s business
processes through
which customers
interact, including
the seller’s portal,
electronic catalogs,
a shopping cart, a
search engine, and
a payment gateway
17
Marketspace Components (cont.)
Back end: The activities
that support online
order-taking. It includes
fulfillment, inventory
management,
purchasing from
suppliers, payment
processing, packaging,
and delivery
Intermediary: A
third party that
operates
between sellers
and buyers
18
Types of Electronic Markets
Electronic storefront: A
single or company Web
site where products and
services are sold
Mechanisms necessary
for conducting the sale:
electronic catalogs
search engine
e-auction facilities
payment gateway
shipment court
customer services
19
Types of Electronic Markets (cont.)
e-mall (online mall): An online
shopping center where many stores
are located
some are merely directories
some provide shared services (e.g.,
choicemall.com).
some are actually large click-and-mortar
retailers
some are virtual retailers (e.g., buy.com)
20
Types of Electronic Markets (cont.)
Types of stores and malls
General stores/malls
Specialized stores/malls
Regional versus global stores
Pure online organizations versus click-
and-mortar stores
21
Types of Electronic Markets (cont.)
e-marketplace:
An online market, usually B2B, in which buyers
and sellers exchange goods or services; the
three types of e-marketplaces are private, public,
and consortia
Private e-marketplaces:
Online markets owned by a single company; can
be either sell-side or buyside marketplaces
Sell-side e-marketplace:
A private e-market in which a company sells
either standard or customized products to
qualified companies
22
Types of Electronic Markets
(cont.)
Buy-side e-marketplace:
A private e-market in which a company makes
purchases from invited suppliers
Public e-marketplaces:
B2B markets, usually owned and/or managed by
an independent third party, that include many
sellers and many buyers; also known as
exchanges
Consortia:
E-marketplaces owned by a small group of large
vendors, usually in a single industry
23
Information Portals
Information portal: a single point
of access through a Web browser to
business information inside and/or
outside an organization
24
Information Portals (cont.)
Six types of portals
1. Commercial (public) portals
2. Corporate portals
3. Publishing portals
4. Personal portals
5. Mobile portals: a portal accessible via a mobile
device
6. Voice portals: a portal accessed by telephone
or cell phone
25
Intermediation and Syndication
in E-Commerce
Intermediaries (brokers) provide value-
added activities and services to buyers
and sellers
Intermediaries in the physical world are
wholesalers and retailers
Infomediaries:
electronic intermediaries that control
information flow in cyberspace, often
aggregating information and selling it to
others
26
Exhibit 2.2 Infomediaries and
Information Flow Model
27
Intermediation and Syndication
in E-Commerce (cont.)
Roles and value of
intermediaries in
e-markets
Search costs
Lack of privacy
Incomplete
information
Contract risk
Pricing inefficiencies
28
Intermediation and Syndication
in E-Commerce (cont.)
E-distributors in B2B
e-distributor:
An e-commerce intermediary that connects
manufacturers (suppliers) with buyers by
aggregating the catalogs of many suppliers
in one place—the intermediary’s Web site
Maintenance, repair, and operation items
(MROs):
Routine items that are usually not under
regular contract with suppliers
29
Intermediation and Syndication
in E-Commerce (cont.)
Disintermediation and reintermediation
Disintermediation:
Elimination of intermediaries between
sellers and buyers
Reintermediation:
Establishment of new intermediary roles
for traditional intermediaries that were
disintermediated
30
Intermediation and Syndication
in E-Commerce (cont.)
Syndication as an EC mechanism
Syndication:
The sale of the same good (e.g., digital content)
to many customers, who then integrate it with
other offerings and resell it or give it away free
31
Diamonds Forever—Online
The age-old business of gem buying is
very inefficient: Several layers of
intermediaries can jack up the price of
a gem 1,000% between wholesale and
final retail prices
32
Diamonds
Forever—Online (cont.)
American Don Kogen made his fortune in
Chanthaburi (Thailand)—one of the world’s
leading centers for processing gems
He started by purchasing low-grade gems from
sellers that arrived early in the morning and then
selling them for a small profit to dealers who
arrived late in the day
This quick turnover of inventory helped him build
up his capital resources
He reached the U.S. gem market using
advertising
33
Diamonds
Forever—Online (cont.)
Using faxes, he shortened the order time
In 1998, Kogen decided to use the Internet—
establishing thaigem.com and sold his first gem
online
By 2001, the revenue from his online business
reached $4.3 million, and it more than doubled
(to $9.8 million) in 2002
Online sales account for 85 percent of the
revenue
The buyers are mostly dealers or retailers such
as Wal-Mart or QVC
34
Diamonds
Forever—Online (cont.)
He buys raw or refined gems from all over the
world, some online, catering to the demand of
his customers
Thaigem’s competitive edge is low prices
The proximity to gem processing factories and
the low labor cost enable prices significantly
lower than his online competitors
35
Diamonds
Forever—Online (cont.)
Unsatisfied customers can return
merchandise within 30 days, no questions
asked
Delivery to any place in the world is made
via Federal Express, at about $15 per
shipment
36
Electronic Catalogs
Electronic catalogs:
The presentation of product information in an
electronic form; the backbone of most e-selling
sites
Electronic catalogs can be classified
by the following dimensions:
1. The dynamics of the information presentation
2. The degree of customization
3. Integration with business processes
37
Exhibit 2.4 Comparison of Online
Catalogs with Paper Catalogs
38
Electronic Catalogs (cont.)
Customized catalogs
A catalog assembled specifically for a
company, usually a customer of the
catalog owner
39
Electronic Catalogs (cont.)
Two approaches to customized
catalogs
Let the customers identify the interesting
parts out of the total catalog
Let the system automatically identify the
characteristics of customers based on
their transaction records
40
Electronic Catalogs (cont.)
Search engine
A computer program that can access a database
of Internet resources, search for specific
information or keywords, and report the results
Software (intelligent) agent:
Software that can perform routine tasks that
require intelligence
Electronic shopping cart:
An order-processing technology that allows
customers to accumulate items they wish to buy
while they continue to shop
41
Electronic Catalogs at
Boise Cascade
Boise Cascade Office Products
$4-billion office products wholesaler
customer base includes over 100,000
large corporate customers and 1 million
small ones
900-page paper catalog used to be
mailed to customers once each year
Boise also sent mini-catalogs tailored to
customers’ individual needs based on
past buying habits and purchase patterns
42
Electronic Catalogs at
Boise Cascade (cont.)
In 1996, the company placed its
catalogs online
Customers view the catalog at boiseoffice.com
and can order straight from the site or submit
orders by e-mail
The orders are shipped the next day
Customers are then billed
In 1997, the company generated 20
percent of its sales through the Web
site
43
Electronic Catalogs at
Boise Cascade (cont.)
Boise expects the Internet business to
generate 80 percent of its total sales by
2004
Boise prepares thousands of individualized
catalogs for its customers
paper customer catalog, primarily because
As of 2002, the company has been sending
paper catalogs only when specifically
requested
It used to take about 6 weeks to produce a
single of the time involved in pulling
together all the data
44
Electronic Catalogs at
Boise Cascade (cont.)
Now the process of producing a Web
catalog that is searchable, rich in
content, and available in a variety of
formats takes only 1 week
One major advantage of customized
catalogs is pricing
Boise estimates that electronic orders
cost approximately 55 percent less to
process than paper-based orders
45
Electronic Catalogs at
Boise Cascade (cont.)
46
Auctions as EC Market
Mechanisms
Auction:
A market mechanism by which a seller places an
offer to sell a product and buyers make bids
sequentially and competitively until a final price
is reached
Auctions can be done:
online
off-line
at public sites (eBay)
at private sites (by invitation)
47
Auctions as EC Market
Mechanisms (cont.)
Electronic auctions (e-auctions):
Auctions conducted online
Host sites on the Internet serve as
brokers, offering services for sellers to
post their goods for sale and allowing
buyers to bid on those items
Conventional business practices that
traditionally have relied on contracts and
fixed prices are increasingly being
converted into auctions with bidding for
online procurements
48
Auctions as EC Market
Mechanisms (cont.)
Dynamic pricing:
Prices that
change based on
supply and
demand
relationships at
any given time
49
Auctions as EC Market
Mechanisms (cont.)
Four major categories of dynamic
pricing
1. One buyer, one seller
2. One seller, many potential buyers
3. One buyer, many potential sellers
4. Many sellers, many buyers
50
Auctions as EC Market
Mechanisms (cont.)
1. One buyer, one seller
Forward auction: An auction in which a
seller entertains bids from buyers
One seller, many potential buyers
Forward auctions used for fast liquidation
and as a selling channel. Price is increasing;
the highest bidder wins
51
Auctions as EC Market
Mechanisms (cont.)
2. One buyer, many potential suppliers
Reverse auction (bidding or tendering
system):
Auction in which the buyer places an item
for bid (tender) on a request for quote
(RFQ) system, potential suppliers bid on the
job, with price reducing sequentially, and
the lowest bid wins; primarily a B2B or G2B
mechanism
52
Auctions as EC Market
Mechanisms (cont.)
3. One buyer, many potential sellers
(special model)
“name-your-own-price” model:
Auction model in which a would-be buyer
specifies the price (and other terms) they are
willing to pay to any willing and able seller. It
is a C2B model, pioneered by Priceline.com
53
Auctions as EC Market
Mechanisms (cont.)
4. Many sellers, many buyers
Double auction:
Auctions in which multiple buyers and their
bidding prices are matched with multiple
sellers and their asking prices, considering
the quantities on both sides
54
Exhibit 2.5 The Reverse
Auction Process
55
Benefits of E-Auctions
56
Limitations of E-Auctions
(cont.)
Limitations of e-auctions
Lack of security
Possibility of fraud
Limited participation
Impacts of auctions
Auctions as a coordination mechanism
Auctions as a highly visible distribution
mechanism.
Auctions as a component in e-commerce
57
Reverse Mortgage
Auctions in Singapore
Homebuyers in Singapore, find the
lowest mortgage rates at Dollardex
(dollarDEX.com)
Reverse auctions are combined with
“group purchasing” saving:
$20,000 over the life of a mortgage for each
homeowner
$1,200 in waived legal fees
58
Reverse Mortgage
Auctions in Singapore (cont.)
Dollardex’s first project:
The site invited potential buyers in three
residential properties in Singapore to join
the service
Applications, including financial credentials,
were made on a secure Web site
Seven lending banks were invited to bid on
the loans
59
Reverse Mortgage
Auctions in Singapore (cont.)
In a secure “electronic room,” borrowers and
lenders negotiated final terms
After 2 days of negotiations of interest rates
and special conditions, the borrowers voted
on one bank
18 borrowers on the United Overseas Bank
(UOB), paying about 0.5 percent less than
the regular mortgage interest rate as well as
the waiver of the legal fees
60
Reverse Mortgage
Auctions in Singapore (cont.)
UOB generated $10 million of business
Dollardex allows customers to participate in
an individual reverse auction if they do not
want to join a group
Flexibility is high; in addition to interest
rates, banks are willing to negotiate down
payment size and the option of switching
from a fixed-rate to variable-rate loan
61
Reverse Mortgage
Auctions in Singapore (cont.)
On average, there are 2.6 bank bids
per customer
As of summer 2003 Dollardex.com also
offers car loans, insurance policies,
and travel services
Allows comparisons of mutual funds
that have agreed to give lower front-
end fees
62
Reverse Mortgage
Auctions in Singapore (cont.)
Provides unit trusts in which you want
to invest
Sets up a gift registry page for your
wedding and invite your givers to
place funds in them
Reports and advice are also available
online as well as face-to-face
63
Bartering Online
Bartering:
An exchange of goods and services
e-bartering:
Bartering conducted online, usually by a
bartering exchange
Bartering exchange:
A marketplace in which an intermediary
arranges barter transactions
64
Negotiating Online
Negotiated pricing used for expensive
or specialized products
Negotiated prices are popular when
large quantities are purchased
Result from interactions and
bargaining among sellers and buyers
65
Negotiating Online (cont.)
Deals with nonpricing terms, such as
payment method and credit
Digital products and services can be
personalized and “bundled” at a
negotiated standard price
66
E-Commerce in the Wireless
Environment: M-Commerce
Mobile computing:
Permits real-time access to information, applications,
and tools that, until recently, were accessible only
from a desktop computer
Mobile commerce (m-commerce):
E-commerce conducted via wireless devices
m-business:
The broadest definition of m-commerce, in which e-
business is conducted in a wireless environment
67
E-Commerce in the Wireless
Environment: M-Commerce (cont.)
Promise of m-commerce
Mobility significantly changes the manner in
which people and trading partners interact,
communicate, and collaborate
Mobile applications are expected to change the
way we live, play, and do business
Much of the Internet culture may change to one
based on mobile devices
M-commerce creates new business models for
EC, notably location-based applications
68
E-Commerce in the Wireless
Environment: M-Commerce (cont.)
DoCoMo’s
(nttdocomo.com) i-
Mode—pioneering
wireless service—
with a few clicks on
a handset, i-Mode
users can conduct a
large variety of m-
commerce activities
Shopping guides
Maps and transportation
Ticketing
News and reports
Personalized movie
service
Entertainment
Dining and reservations
Additional services
69
Issues in E-Markets: Liquidity,
Quality, and Success Factors
Early liquidity:
Achieving a critical mass of buyers and sellers as fast
as possible, before a start-up company’s cash
disappears
Quality uncertainty:
The uncertainty of online buyers about the quality of
non-commodity type products that they have never
seen, especially from an unknown vendor
Microproduct:
A small digital product costing a few cents
70
E-Market Success Factors
Product Characteristics
Digitizable products can be electronically
distributed to customers, resulting in very
low distribution costs, allowing order-
fulfillment cycle time “to be minimal”
Industry Characteristics
Electronic markets are most useful when
they are able to directly match buyers
and sellers
71
E-Market Success Factors
(cont.)
Seller Characteristics
Electronic markets reduce search costs,
allowing consumers to find sellers offering
lower prices
Consumer Characteristics
e-markets require a certain degree of effort
on the part of the consumer, e-markets are
more conducive to consumers who do some
comparison and analysis before buying
72
Economics of
E-Marketplaces
73
Economics of
E-Marketplaces (cont.)
74
Economics of
E-Marketplaces (cont.)
75
Competition in the Digital
Economy
Internet ecosystem:
The business model of the Internet economy
Competitive factors
Lower search costs for buyers
Speedy comparisons
Differentiation and personalization
Differentiation: Providing a product or service that is
unique
Personalization: The ability to tailor a product, service,
or Web content to specific user preferences
Lower prices
Customer service
76
Competition in the
Digital Economy (cont.)
Characteristics necessary for perfect
competition are the following:
Many buyers and sellers must be able to enter the
market at little or no entry cost
Large buyers or sellers are not able to individually
influence the market
Products must be homogeneous (no product
differentiation)
Buyers and sellers must have comprehensive
information about the products and about the
market participants’ demands, supplies, and
conditions
77
Competition in the
Digital Economy (cont.)
Porter’s competitive forces model:
The model that says that five major
forces of competition determine industry
structure and how economic value is
divided among the industry players in the
industry; analysis of these forces helps
companies develop their competitive
strategy
78
Exhibit 2.9 Porter’s Competitive
Forces Model: How the Internet
Influences Industry Structure
79
Impacts of E-Markets on Business
Processes and Organizations
Improving direct marketing
Product promotion
New sales channel
Direct savings
Reduced cycle time
Improved customer service
Brand or corporate image
Customization
Advertising
Ordering systems
Market operations
80
Exhibit 2.10:
The Analysis-of-Impacts Framework
81
Exhibit 2.11: The Changing
Face of Marketing
82
Transforming Organizations
Technology and organizational
learning—the changing nature of work
Redefining organizations
New and improved product capabilities
New business models
Improving the supply chain
Impacts on manufacturing
Build-to-order: Production system in which
manufacturing or assembly will start only after
an order is received
83
Exhibit 2.12: How Customization
is Done Online (Nike Shoes)
84
Exhibit 2.13: Changes in the
Supply Chain
85
Exhibit 2.13: Changes in the
Supply Chain (cont.)
86
Transforming Organizations (cont.)
Impacts on finance and accounting
Executing an electronic order triggers an action
in what is called the back office that include:
buyers’ credit checks
product availability checks
order confirmation
changes in accounts payable, receivables,
billing, and much more
These activities must be efficient, synchronized,
and fast so that the electronic trade will not be
slowed down
87
Transforming Organizations (cont.)
Impacts on human resource
management
EC is changing how people are recruited
evaluated, promoted, and developed
EC also is changing the way training and
education are offered to employees
Companies cut training costs by 50 percent or
more
New e-learning systems offer two-way video, on-
the-fly interaction, and application sharing
88
Managerial Issues
1. How do we compete in the digital
economy?
2. What about intermediaries?
3. What organizational changes will be
needed?
89
Managerial Issues (cont.)
4. Should we auction?
5. Should we barter?
6. What m-commerce opportunities are
available?
90
Summary
1. E-marketplaces and their
components.
2. The major types of e-markets.
3. The role of intermediaries.
4. Electronic catalogs, search engines,
and shopping carts.
91
Summary (cont.)
5. Types of auctions and their
characteristics.
6. The benefits and limitations of
auctions.
7. Bartering and negotiating.
8. The role of m-commerce.
92
Summary (cont.)
9. Liquidity, quality, and success factors
in e-markets.
10.Economic impact of EC.
11.Competition in the digital economy.
12.The impact of e-markets on
organizations.

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2 e marketplaces

  • 1. 1 Naveed Siddiqui PhD. M.B.E. PgDip Information Technology Founder & CEO – Naveed Media Academy www.facebook.com/NaveedAhmedSiddiqui33 www.linkedin.com/in/dr-naveed-siddiqui-191a4b2b www.youtube.com/user/nvd30 www.youtube.com/user/NaveedAhmedSiddiqui3 nasiddiqui333@gmail.com 0092 337 0492400 Electronic Commerce
  • 3. 3 Learning Objectives 1. Define e-marketplaces and list their components. 2. List the major types of electronic markets and describe their features. 3. Describe the types of intermediaries in EC and their roles. 4. Describe electronic catalogs, shopping carts, and search engines.
  • 4. 4 Learning Objectives 5. Describe the various types of auctions and list their characteristics. 6. Discuss the benefits, limitations, and impacts of auctions. 7. Describe bartering and negotiating online. 8. Define m-commerce and explain its role as a market mechanism.
  • 5. 5 Learning Objectives (cont.) 9. Discuss liquidity, quality, and success factors in e-marketplaces. 10. Describe the economic impact of EC. 11. Discuss competition in the digital economy. 12. Describe the impact of e-marketplaces on organizations.
  • 6. 6 How Raffles Hotel Is Conducting EC The Problem Very competitive industry Owns and manages luxury and business hotels worldwide Spends lavishly on every facet of its operation Success depends on the company’s ability to lure customers to its hotels and facilities and on its ability to contain costs
  • 7. 7 How Raffles Hotel Is Conducting EC (cont.) The Solution Address two types of issues Business-to-consumer maintains a diversified corporate portal (raffles.com), open to the public introduces customers to the company and its services information on the hotels a reservation system links to travelers’ resources CRM program an online store for Raffles products
  • 8. 8 How Raffles Hotel Is Conducting EC (cont.) The Results Corporate portal helps in customer acquisition Promotions and direct sales enable the hotel to maintain a relatively high occupancy Private marketplace forces suppliers to disclose their prices and increases competition among suppliers Company is saving about $1 million a year on procurement Company is expanding aggressively in the Asian markets
  • 9. 9 How Raffles Hotel Is Conducting EC (cont.) What we can learn… Old-economy hotel transformed itself into a click-and-mortar business by creating two separate electronic markets:
  • 10. 10 How Raffles Hotel Is Conducting EC (cont.) B2C market—selling its services to consumers B2B private market—to buy from its suppliers and to sell products to other hotels Used several e-commerce mechanisms: corporate portal electronic catalogs e-procurement using reverse auctions
  • 11. 11 Electronic Marketplaces Markets play a central role in the economy facilitating the exchange of: information goods services payments Markets create economic value for: buyers sellers market intermediaries society at large
  • 12. 12 Electronic Marketplaces (cont.) Three main functions of markets 1. matching buyers and sellers 2. facilitating the exchange of information, goods, services, and payments associated with market transactions 3. providing an institutional infrastructure, such as a legal and regulatory framework, that enables the efficient functioning of the market
  • 13. 13 Electronic Marketplaces (cont.) In recent years markets have seen a dramatic increase in the use of IT—EC has: increased market efficiencies by expediting or improving functions been able to significantly decrease the cost of executing these functions
  • 14. 14 Marketspace Marketspace: A marketplace in which sellers and buyers exchange goods and services for money (or for other goods and services), but do so electronically
  • 15. 15 Marketspace Components Customers Sellers Products Infrastructure Front end Back end Intermediaries Other business partners Support services
  • 16. 16 Marketspace Components (cont.) Digital products: Goods that can be transformed to digital format and delivered over the Internet Front end: The portion of an e-seller’s business processes through which customers interact, including the seller’s portal, electronic catalogs, a shopping cart, a search engine, and a payment gateway
  • 17. 17 Marketspace Components (cont.) Back end: The activities that support online order-taking. It includes fulfillment, inventory management, purchasing from suppliers, payment processing, packaging, and delivery Intermediary: A third party that operates between sellers and buyers
  • 18. 18 Types of Electronic Markets Electronic storefront: A single or company Web site where products and services are sold Mechanisms necessary for conducting the sale: electronic catalogs search engine e-auction facilities payment gateway shipment court customer services
  • 19. 19 Types of Electronic Markets (cont.) e-mall (online mall): An online shopping center where many stores are located some are merely directories some provide shared services (e.g., choicemall.com). some are actually large click-and-mortar retailers some are virtual retailers (e.g., buy.com)
  • 20. 20 Types of Electronic Markets (cont.) Types of stores and malls General stores/malls Specialized stores/malls Regional versus global stores Pure online organizations versus click- and-mortar stores
  • 21. 21 Types of Electronic Markets (cont.) e-marketplace: An online market, usually B2B, in which buyers and sellers exchange goods or services; the three types of e-marketplaces are private, public, and consortia Private e-marketplaces: Online markets owned by a single company; can be either sell-side or buyside marketplaces Sell-side e-marketplace: A private e-market in which a company sells either standard or customized products to qualified companies
  • 22. 22 Types of Electronic Markets (cont.) Buy-side e-marketplace: A private e-market in which a company makes purchases from invited suppliers Public e-marketplaces: B2B markets, usually owned and/or managed by an independent third party, that include many sellers and many buyers; also known as exchanges Consortia: E-marketplaces owned by a small group of large vendors, usually in a single industry
  • 23. 23 Information Portals Information portal: a single point of access through a Web browser to business information inside and/or outside an organization
  • 24. 24 Information Portals (cont.) Six types of portals 1. Commercial (public) portals 2. Corporate portals 3. Publishing portals 4. Personal portals 5. Mobile portals: a portal accessible via a mobile device 6. Voice portals: a portal accessed by telephone or cell phone
  • 25. 25 Intermediation and Syndication in E-Commerce Intermediaries (brokers) provide value- added activities and services to buyers and sellers Intermediaries in the physical world are wholesalers and retailers Infomediaries: electronic intermediaries that control information flow in cyberspace, often aggregating information and selling it to others
  • 26. 26 Exhibit 2.2 Infomediaries and Information Flow Model
  • 27. 27 Intermediation and Syndication in E-Commerce (cont.) Roles and value of intermediaries in e-markets Search costs Lack of privacy Incomplete information Contract risk Pricing inefficiencies
  • 28. 28 Intermediation and Syndication in E-Commerce (cont.) E-distributors in B2B e-distributor: An e-commerce intermediary that connects manufacturers (suppliers) with buyers by aggregating the catalogs of many suppliers in one place—the intermediary’s Web site Maintenance, repair, and operation items (MROs): Routine items that are usually not under regular contract with suppliers
  • 29. 29 Intermediation and Syndication in E-Commerce (cont.) Disintermediation and reintermediation Disintermediation: Elimination of intermediaries between sellers and buyers Reintermediation: Establishment of new intermediary roles for traditional intermediaries that were disintermediated
  • 30. 30 Intermediation and Syndication in E-Commerce (cont.) Syndication as an EC mechanism Syndication: The sale of the same good (e.g., digital content) to many customers, who then integrate it with other offerings and resell it or give it away free
  • 31. 31 Diamonds Forever—Online The age-old business of gem buying is very inefficient: Several layers of intermediaries can jack up the price of a gem 1,000% between wholesale and final retail prices
  • 32. 32 Diamonds Forever—Online (cont.) American Don Kogen made his fortune in Chanthaburi (Thailand)—one of the world’s leading centers for processing gems He started by purchasing low-grade gems from sellers that arrived early in the morning and then selling them for a small profit to dealers who arrived late in the day This quick turnover of inventory helped him build up his capital resources He reached the U.S. gem market using advertising
  • 33. 33 Diamonds Forever—Online (cont.) Using faxes, he shortened the order time In 1998, Kogen decided to use the Internet— establishing thaigem.com and sold his first gem online By 2001, the revenue from his online business reached $4.3 million, and it more than doubled (to $9.8 million) in 2002 Online sales account for 85 percent of the revenue The buyers are mostly dealers or retailers such as Wal-Mart or QVC
  • 34. 34 Diamonds Forever—Online (cont.) He buys raw or refined gems from all over the world, some online, catering to the demand of his customers Thaigem’s competitive edge is low prices The proximity to gem processing factories and the low labor cost enable prices significantly lower than his online competitors
  • 35. 35 Diamonds Forever—Online (cont.) Unsatisfied customers can return merchandise within 30 days, no questions asked Delivery to any place in the world is made via Federal Express, at about $15 per shipment
  • 36. 36 Electronic Catalogs Electronic catalogs: The presentation of product information in an electronic form; the backbone of most e-selling sites Electronic catalogs can be classified by the following dimensions: 1. The dynamics of the information presentation 2. The degree of customization 3. Integration with business processes
  • 37. 37 Exhibit 2.4 Comparison of Online Catalogs with Paper Catalogs
  • 38. 38 Electronic Catalogs (cont.) Customized catalogs A catalog assembled specifically for a company, usually a customer of the catalog owner
  • 39. 39 Electronic Catalogs (cont.) Two approaches to customized catalogs Let the customers identify the interesting parts out of the total catalog Let the system automatically identify the characteristics of customers based on their transaction records
  • 40. 40 Electronic Catalogs (cont.) Search engine A computer program that can access a database of Internet resources, search for specific information or keywords, and report the results Software (intelligent) agent: Software that can perform routine tasks that require intelligence Electronic shopping cart: An order-processing technology that allows customers to accumulate items they wish to buy while they continue to shop
  • 41. 41 Electronic Catalogs at Boise Cascade Boise Cascade Office Products $4-billion office products wholesaler customer base includes over 100,000 large corporate customers and 1 million small ones 900-page paper catalog used to be mailed to customers once each year Boise also sent mini-catalogs tailored to customers’ individual needs based on past buying habits and purchase patterns
  • 42. 42 Electronic Catalogs at Boise Cascade (cont.) In 1996, the company placed its catalogs online Customers view the catalog at boiseoffice.com and can order straight from the site or submit orders by e-mail The orders are shipped the next day Customers are then billed In 1997, the company generated 20 percent of its sales through the Web site
  • 43. 43 Electronic Catalogs at Boise Cascade (cont.) Boise expects the Internet business to generate 80 percent of its total sales by 2004 Boise prepares thousands of individualized catalogs for its customers paper customer catalog, primarily because As of 2002, the company has been sending paper catalogs only when specifically requested It used to take about 6 weeks to produce a single of the time involved in pulling together all the data
  • 44. 44 Electronic Catalogs at Boise Cascade (cont.) Now the process of producing a Web catalog that is searchable, rich in content, and available in a variety of formats takes only 1 week One major advantage of customized catalogs is pricing Boise estimates that electronic orders cost approximately 55 percent less to process than paper-based orders
  • 46. 46 Auctions as EC Market Mechanisms Auction: A market mechanism by which a seller places an offer to sell a product and buyers make bids sequentially and competitively until a final price is reached Auctions can be done: online off-line at public sites (eBay) at private sites (by invitation)
  • 47. 47 Auctions as EC Market Mechanisms (cont.) Electronic auctions (e-auctions): Auctions conducted online Host sites on the Internet serve as brokers, offering services for sellers to post their goods for sale and allowing buyers to bid on those items Conventional business practices that traditionally have relied on contracts and fixed prices are increasingly being converted into auctions with bidding for online procurements
  • 48. 48 Auctions as EC Market Mechanisms (cont.) Dynamic pricing: Prices that change based on supply and demand relationships at any given time
  • 49. 49 Auctions as EC Market Mechanisms (cont.) Four major categories of dynamic pricing 1. One buyer, one seller 2. One seller, many potential buyers 3. One buyer, many potential sellers 4. Many sellers, many buyers
  • 50. 50 Auctions as EC Market Mechanisms (cont.) 1. One buyer, one seller Forward auction: An auction in which a seller entertains bids from buyers One seller, many potential buyers Forward auctions used for fast liquidation and as a selling channel. Price is increasing; the highest bidder wins
  • 51. 51 Auctions as EC Market Mechanisms (cont.) 2. One buyer, many potential suppliers Reverse auction (bidding or tendering system): Auction in which the buyer places an item for bid (tender) on a request for quote (RFQ) system, potential suppliers bid on the job, with price reducing sequentially, and the lowest bid wins; primarily a B2B or G2B mechanism
  • 52. 52 Auctions as EC Market Mechanisms (cont.) 3. One buyer, many potential sellers (special model) “name-your-own-price” model: Auction model in which a would-be buyer specifies the price (and other terms) they are willing to pay to any willing and able seller. It is a C2B model, pioneered by Priceline.com
  • 53. 53 Auctions as EC Market Mechanisms (cont.) 4. Many sellers, many buyers Double auction: Auctions in which multiple buyers and their bidding prices are matched with multiple sellers and their asking prices, considering the quantities on both sides
  • 54. 54 Exhibit 2.5 The Reverse Auction Process
  • 56. 56 Limitations of E-Auctions (cont.) Limitations of e-auctions Lack of security Possibility of fraud Limited participation Impacts of auctions Auctions as a coordination mechanism Auctions as a highly visible distribution mechanism. Auctions as a component in e-commerce
  • 57. 57 Reverse Mortgage Auctions in Singapore Homebuyers in Singapore, find the lowest mortgage rates at Dollardex (dollarDEX.com) Reverse auctions are combined with “group purchasing” saving: $20,000 over the life of a mortgage for each homeowner $1,200 in waived legal fees
  • 58. 58 Reverse Mortgage Auctions in Singapore (cont.) Dollardex’s first project: The site invited potential buyers in three residential properties in Singapore to join the service Applications, including financial credentials, were made on a secure Web site Seven lending banks were invited to bid on the loans
  • 59. 59 Reverse Mortgage Auctions in Singapore (cont.) In a secure “electronic room,” borrowers and lenders negotiated final terms After 2 days of negotiations of interest rates and special conditions, the borrowers voted on one bank 18 borrowers on the United Overseas Bank (UOB), paying about 0.5 percent less than the regular mortgage interest rate as well as the waiver of the legal fees
  • 60. 60 Reverse Mortgage Auctions in Singapore (cont.) UOB generated $10 million of business Dollardex allows customers to participate in an individual reverse auction if they do not want to join a group Flexibility is high; in addition to interest rates, banks are willing to negotiate down payment size and the option of switching from a fixed-rate to variable-rate loan
  • 61. 61 Reverse Mortgage Auctions in Singapore (cont.) On average, there are 2.6 bank bids per customer As of summer 2003 Dollardex.com also offers car loans, insurance policies, and travel services Allows comparisons of mutual funds that have agreed to give lower front- end fees
  • 62. 62 Reverse Mortgage Auctions in Singapore (cont.) Provides unit trusts in which you want to invest Sets up a gift registry page for your wedding and invite your givers to place funds in them Reports and advice are also available online as well as face-to-face
  • 63. 63 Bartering Online Bartering: An exchange of goods and services e-bartering: Bartering conducted online, usually by a bartering exchange Bartering exchange: A marketplace in which an intermediary arranges barter transactions
  • 64. 64 Negotiating Online Negotiated pricing used for expensive or specialized products Negotiated prices are popular when large quantities are purchased Result from interactions and bargaining among sellers and buyers
  • 65. 65 Negotiating Online (cont.) Deals with nonpricing terms, such as payment method and credit Digital products and services can be personalized and “bundled” at a negotiated standard price
  • 66. 66 E-Commerce in the Wireless Environment: M-Commerce Mobile computing: Permits real-time access to information, applications, and tools that, until recently, were accessible only from a desktop computer Mobile commerce (m-commerce): E-commerce conducted via wireless devices m-business: The broadest definition of m-commerce, in which e- business is conducted in a wireless environment
  • 67. 67 E-Commerce in the Wireless Environment: M-Commerce (cont.) Promise of m-commerce Mobility significantly changes the manner in which people and trading partners interact, communicate, and collaborate Mobile applications are expected to change the way we live, play, and do business Much of the Internet culture may change to one based on mobile devices M-commerce creates new business models for EC, notably location-based applications
  • 68. 68 E-Commerce in the Wireless Environment: M-Commerce (cont.) DoCoMo’s (nttdocomo.com) i- Mode—pioneering wireless service— with a few clicks on a handset, i-Mode users can conduct a large variety of m- commerce activities Shopping guides Maps and transportation Ticketing News and reports Personalized movie service Entertainment Dining and reservations Additional services
  • 69. 69 Issues in E-Markets: Liquidity, Quality, and Success Factors Early liquidity: Achieving a critical mass of buyers and sellers as fast as possible, before a start-up company’s cash disappears Quality uncertainty: The uncertainty of online buyers about the quality of non-commodity type products that they have never seen, especially from an unknown vendor Microproduct: A small digital product costing a few cents
  • 70. 70 E-Market Success Factors Product Characteristics Digitizable products can be electronically distributed to customers, resulting in very low distribution costs, allowing order- fulfillment cycle time “to be minimal” Industry Characteristics Electronic markets are most useful when they are able to directly match buyers and sellers
  • 71. 71 E-Market Success Factors (cont.) Seller Characteristics Electronic markets reduce search costs, allowing consumers to find sellers offering lower prices Consumer Characteristics e-markets require a certain degree of effort on the part of the consumer, e-markets are more conducive to consumers who do some comparison and analysis before buying
  • 75. 75 Competition in the Digital Economy Internet ecosystem: The business model of the Internet economy Competitive factors Lower search costs for buyers Speedy comparisons Differentiation and personalization Differentiation: Providing a product or service that is unique Personalization: The ability to tailor a product, service, or Web content to specific user preferences Lower prices Customer service
  • 76. 76 Competition in the Digital Economy (cont.) Characteristics necessary for perfect competition are the following: Many buyers and sellers must be able to enter the market at little or no entry cost Large buyers or sellers are not able to individually influence the market Products must be homogeneous (no product differentiation) Buyers and sellers must have comprehensive information about the products and about the market participants’ demands, supplies, and conditions
  • 77. 77 Competition in the Digital Economy (cont.) Porter’s competitive forces model: The model that says that five major forces of competition determine industry structure and how economic value is divided among the industry players in the industry; analysis of these forces helps companies develop their competitive strategy
  • 78. 78 Exhibit 2.9 Porter’s Competitive Forces Model: How the Internet Influences Industry Structure
  • 79. 79 Impacts of E-Markets on Business Processes and Organizations Improving direct marketing Product promotion New sales channel Direct savings Reduced cycle time Improved customer service Brand or corporate image Customization Advertising Ordering systems Market operations
  • 81. 81 Exhibit 2.11: The Changing Face of Marketing
  • 82. 82 Transforming Organizations Technology and organizational learning—the changing nature of work Redefining organizations New and improved product capabilities New business models Improving the supply chain Impacts on manufacturing Build-to-order: Production system in which manufacturing or assembly will start only after an order is received
  • 83. 83 Exhibit 2.12: How Customization is Done Online (Nike Shoes)
  • 84. 84 Exhibit 2.13: Changes in the Supply Chain
  • 85. 85 Exhibit 2.13: Changes in the Supply Chain (cont.)
  • 86. 86 Transforming Organizations (cont.) Impacts on finance and accounting Executing an electronic order triggers an action in what is called the back office that include: buyers’ credit checks product availability checks order confirmation changes in accounts payable, receivables, billing, and much more These activities must be efficient, synchronized, and fast so that the electronic trade will not be slowed down
  • 87. 87 Transforming Organizations (cont.) Impacts on human resource management EC is changing how people are recruited evaluated, promoted, and developed EC also is changing the way training and education are offered to employees Companies cut training costs by 50 percent or more New e-learning systems offer two-way video, on- the-fly interaction, and application sharing
  • 88. 88 Managerial Issues 1. How do we compete in the digital economy? 2. What about intermediaries? 3. What organizational changes will be needed?
  • 89. 89 Managerial Issues (cont.) 4. Should we auction? 5. Should we barter? 6. What m-commerce opportunities are available?
  • 90. 90 Summary 1. E-marketplaces and their components. 2. The major types of e-markets. 3. The role of intermediaries. 4. Electronic catalogs, search engines, and shopping carts.
  • 91. 91 Summary (cont.) 5. Types of auctions and their characteristics. 6. The benefits and limitations of auctions. 7. Bartering and negotiating. 8. The role of m-commerce.
  • 92. 92 Summary (cont.) 9. Liquidity, quality, and success factors in e-markets. 10.Economic impact of EC. 11.Competition in the digital economy. 12.The impact of e-markets on organizations.