Digital Economy: in 10 Years From Now The Term Will Be Completely Obsolete
Digital Economy: in 10 Years From Now The Term Will Be Completely Obsolete
Digital Economy: in 10 Years From Now The Term Will Be Completely Obsolete
on the internet
Definition
What do we understand by business ?
All activities that have to do with buying, selling , providing,
paying, handling, administrating etc. of goods, services or
information.
Other Definitions
Electronic Commerce ( EC )
Narrower than electronic business
Limited to the pure trading activities
Electronic Commerce
A new concept covering buying and selling of products,
services and information via computer networks, including
the internet.
EC applies different technologies, varying from EDI till e-mail.
In fact we can also consider buying food at a POS automate
using a smart card as a form of electronic commerce.
E-Commerce : B2B
B2b or not 2b
Internet changes the
way of doing
business.
4/2/2000
B-2-B
Business
to
Business
Retail trade
Closed
Strategic Networks !
Internet - The textbook model of perfect
Survival Guide
REORGANIZE YOUR
COMPANY CHANGE THE
OLD ENTERPRISE MODEL
March 22 1999
Example: US
Feb 1998
31/1/2000
e-penetration
innovation
10
70
60
7
6
50
40
30
20
2
1
10
Internet hosts
80
Internet growth
Obstacles
privacy
cost
security
wait & see
0
10
15
20
25
EITO 99
30
Obstacles
Essentially Cultural
A generation of managers has to
redo their exams
Connect yourself, boss (BusinessWeek)
The public
High standards of ethical conduct by businesses should be the main method of fostering consumer confidence in the Internet
US Secretary of Commerce Daley Global Business Dialogue On E-Commerce, Sept 13, 1999 Paris
non-transparancy :
not accepted by the consumer
100% data protection : extremely high cost
changing mentality: examples Dell-IBM
citizen follows more open society ?
Privacy.
Should be respected
Transparency.
About real cost
Patents.
Patenting widespread business methods to create a monopoly and inhibit
rivals. The US Patent Office changed its mind.
Monopoly.
The courts have ruled that Microsoft violated the 100-year-old Sherman
Anti-Trust Act. Investors sent Microsoft's stock down.
BUSINESSWEEK : APRIL 17, 2000
Dot.business ?
Most companies must become Internet firms
Merely adding a
website on to an
existing business is not
enough : the whole
business needs to
be redesigned around
the cost-saving,
communication-easing
properties of the net
Portugal
Belgium
Finland
Greece
Switzerland
Spain
Sweden
Netherlands
Ireland
U.S.
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
Online markets
Seller beware
e-Logistics
E-technology transition ...
EDI era
Large companies
Proprietary
Batch
Bilateral
High cost
Internet era
All companies
Public
Online
Networks
Low cost
Zero-Latency
Zero-latency Strategy
A zero-latency strategy requires:
End-user interface tools and other application programs that are capable
of sending and receiving information in a timely fashion
Zero-latency Strategy
Technical boundaries
different operating systems
different DBMSs
different programming languages
Organizational boundaries
inter-department
inter-organizational
Virtual Organization
Virtual companies
Virtual Company
Basic set of ideas
outsourced non-core competencies
focus on core strength or business
little or no physical presence or infrastructure
network of business alliances
heavy reliance on telecommunications.
The combination of independent enterprises
required to fulfill a defined customer need.
Product and
Service Creation
Suppliers
Virtual
Enterprise
3
Internal
Operations
Physical
Enterprise
Sales and
Marketing
Customers
Fulfillment
and Delivery
Virtual
Enterprise 2
Industry
network
Source: GartnerGroup
Competence based
IT-enabled
Examples:
Airbus: Aerospatial, DASA, Aerospace, CASA, SABCA
Virgin
Construction companies
Knowledge Based
Electronic Commerce
Interorganisational Systems
Drivers
reduced cost for routine business transactions (SWIFT)
improved quality of the procedures because of less errors
reduced processing time (Singapore)
lower cost for paper handling
business process easier for the users
Types
EDI, EFT, e-mail
shared databases
Establishing Trust
E-commerce
Buying, selling products, services or information via a computer network
Purchaser
EDI
SWIFT
Tradenet
...
Order
Purchase order
Seller
Electronic
Market
Order reply
Approvals by
Trusted party
EFT
bank Supplier
Electronic Market
24 hours service
Constraints
Insufficient bandwidth
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Electronic checks
Information Services
Content Specialist
Electronic Market
Facilitator
Information Broker
Content Specialist