E Commerce Ch02
E Commerce Ch02
E Commerce Ch02
Kenneth C. Laudon
Carol Guercio Traver
What characteristics or benchmarks can be used to
assess the business value of a company such as
Twitter that does have revenue?
Have you used Twitter to communicate with friends
or family? What are your thoughts on this service?
What are Twitter’s most important assets?
Which of the possible methods described for
monetizing Twitter’s assets do you feel might be
most successful?
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 2-3
E-commerce Business Models
Business model
Set of planned activities designed to result in a
profit in a marketplace
Business plan
Describes a firm’s business model
E‐commerce business model
Uses/leverages unique qualities of Internet and
Web
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8 Key Elements of a Business Model
1. Value proposition
2. Revenue model
3. Market opportunity
4. Competitive environment
5. Competitive advantage
6. Market strategy
7. Organizational development
8. Management team
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1. Value Proposition
Why should the customer buy from you?
Successful e‐commerce value
propositions:
Personalization/customization
Reduction of product search, price discovery costs
Facilitation of transactions by managing product delivery
Subscription revenue model
Transaction fee revenue model
Sales revenue model
Affiliate revenue model
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 2-7
3. Market Opportunity
What marketspace do you intend to
serve and what is its size?
Marketspace: Area of actual or potential commercial value
in which company intends to operate
Realistic market opportunity: Defined by revenue
potential in each of market niches in which company
hopes to compete
Market opportunity typically divided into
smaller niches
Influenced by:
Number and size of active competitors
Each competitor’s market share
Competitors’ profitability
Competitors’ pricing
Hiring moves from generalists to specialists as company
grows
Why do you think Webvan failed?
Why are more traditional grocery chains succeeding online
today?
Why would an online customer pay the same price as in the
store plus a delivery charge? What’s the benefit to the
customer?
What are the important success factors for FreshDirect?
Do you think FreshDirect would work in your town?
Similar business models appear in more than
one sector
Some companies use multiple business
models; e.g., eBay
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B2C Business Models: Portal
Search plus an integrated package of content
and services
Revenue models:
Advertising, subscription fees, transaction fees
Variations:
Horizontal/General
Vertical/Specialized (Vortal)
Pure Search
How many of you use Google, Yahoo, or Microsoft’s
Bing? Does the class differ from the overall Web
population?
Why do you use a particular search engine?
Why is Google moving beyond search and
advertising into applications?
How is Bing trying to distinguish itself from Google?
Do you think this strategy will work?
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 2-17
B2C Models: E-tailer
Online version of traditional retailer
Revenue model: Sales
Variations:
Virtual merchant
Bricks‐and‐clicks
Catalog merchant
Manufacturer‐direct
Low barriers to entry
Revenue models:
Subscription; pay per download (micropayment);
advertising; affiliate referral fees
Variations:
Content owners
Syndication
Web aggregators
Revenue model:
Transaction fees
Industries using this model:
Financial services
Travel services
Job placement services
Revenue model: Transaction fees
Value proposition
Valuable, convenient, time‐saving, low‐cost alternatives to
traditional service providers
Revenue models:
Sales of services, subscription fees, advertising, sales of
marketing data
Provides online environment (social
network) where people with similar
interests can transact, share content, and
communicate
E.g., Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn
Revenue models:
Advertising fees, subscription fees, sales
revenues, transaction fees, affiliate fees
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B2B Business Models
Net marketplaces
E‐distributor
E‐procurement
Exchange
Industry consortium
Private industrial network
Single firm
Industry‐wide
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B2B Models: E-distributor
Supplies products and services directly to
individual businesses
Owned by one company seeking to serve
many customers
Revenue model: Sales of goods
Example: Grainger.com
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B2B Models: E-procurement
Creates and sells access to digital
electronic markets
Includes B2B service providers, application service
providers (ASPs)
Revenue model:
Transaction fees, usage fees, annual licensing fees
Example: Ariba
Revenue model: Transaction, commission fees
Create powerful competition between
suppliers
Number has dropped dramatically
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B2B Models: Industry Consortia
Industry‐owned vertical marketplaces that
serve specific industries (e.g., automobile,
chemical)
More successful than exchanges
Sponsored by powerful industry players
Strengthen traditional purchasing behavior
Example: Exostar
Single firm networks
Most common form
Example: Wal‐Mart’s network for suppliers
Industry‐wide networks
Often evolve out of industry associations
Example: Agentrics
Peer‐to‐peer (P2P)
Examples: The Pirate Bay, Cloudmark
M‐commerce:
E‐commerce models using wireless technologies
Technology platform continues to evolve
In the United States, demand still highest for digital
content like ring tones
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Insight on Society
Where R U?
Class Discussion
Why should you care if companies track your
location via cell phone?
What is the “opt‐in” principle and how does it
protect privacy?
Should business firms be allowed to call cell
phones with advertising messages based on
location?
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E-commerce Enablers: The Gold
Rush Model
E‐commerce infrastructure companies:
Hardware, software, networking, security
E‐commerce software systems, payment systems
Media solutions, performance enhancement
CRM software
Databases
Hosting services, etc.
Effect of Internet:
Increases operational efficiency
Enables product differentiation
Enables precise coordination of steps in chain
Within a group of firms
Coordinates a firm’s suppliers with its own
production needs using an Internet‐based
supply chain management system
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Internet-Enabled Value Web
Figure 2.7, Page 105