B2B Electronic Procurement Of: E-Business Report
B2B Electronic Procurement Of: E-Business Report
B2B Electronic Procurement Of: E-Business Report
E-BUSINESS REPORT
ON
B2B ELECTRONIC PROCUREMENT OF
PREPARED BY
AUGUSTINE PETER
REG. NO: MGT0905256
IBM is the world’s 4th largest technology company and the second most valuable global
brand (after Coca-Cola).
IBM is one of the few IT companies with a continuous history dating back to the 19th
century.
IBM manufactures and sells computer hardware and software (with a focus on the
latter), and offers infrastructure services, hosting services, and consulting services in
areas ranging from mainframe computers to nanotechnology.
At the end of May 2010, IBM bought the Sterling Commerce Unit from AT&T for about
$1.4 billion. This is the second largest acquisition by IBM.
IBM has been well known through most of its recent history as the world's largest
computer company and system integrator.
With almost 400,000 employees worldwide, IBM is second largest (by market
capitalization) and the second most profitable information technology and
services employer in the world according to the Forbes 2000 list with sales of
greater than 100 billion US dollars.
IBM holds more patents than any other U.S. based technology company and
has eight research laboratories worldwide.
IBM employees have earned five Nobel Prizes, four Turning Awards, nine
National Medals of Technology, and five National Medals of Science.
As a chip maker, IBM has been among the Worldwide Top 20 Semiconductor
Sales Leader in past years.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
E-COMMERCE: THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVE
ELECTRONIC PROCUREMENT IN THE
INDUSTRY
IBM’S B2B E- PROCUREMENT
FINDINGS, SUGGESTIONS AND CONCLUSION
INTRODUCTION 1
E-commerce is the use of the internet and the web to transact business. More formally,
digitally enabled commercial transactions between and among organizations and individuals.
TYPES OF E-COMMERCE
Business-to-Consumer (B2C) E-commerce
Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C) E-commerce
Government-to-Consumer (G2C) E-commerce
Business-to-Government (B2G) E-commerce
Peer-to-Peer (P2P) E-commerce
Mobile commerce (m-commerce)
Business-to-Business (B2B) E-commerce
It is the largest form of e-commerce in which business focus on selling to other businesses.
Example:
A wholesaler places an order through places and order through the company’s website for fresh stock
and receives process to order in the form of shipped supplies. The wholesaler then sells supplies to the
final consumer.
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simple model:
BUSINESS
BUSINESS BUSINESS
BUSINESS
ORGANIZATION
ORGANIZATION ORGANIZATION
ORGANIZATION
B2B E-COMMERCE IN THE INDUSTRY 3
The trade between business firms represents a huge marketplace; in 2001, B2B trade amounted to about
$12 trillion in the United States, and by 2006, it exceed $16 trillion. Some firms estimate that the
average cost of each corporate purchase order for support products costs them $100 in administrative
overhead. The challenge of B2B e-commerce is changing existing patterns and systems of procurement,
and designing and implementing new internet-based B2B solutions.
THE EVOLUTION OF B2B E-COMMERCE
B2B commerce has evolved over a 35-year period through several technologies driven stages
AUTOMATED ORDER ENTRY SYSTEM- mid 1970s involved the use of telephone modems to send
digital orders
ELECTRONIC DATA INTERCHANGE- late 1970s- sharing business documents and settlement
information among a small number of firms.
B2B ELECTRONIC STOREFRONTS- mid 1990s along with commercialization of internet
NET MARKETPLACE- the late 1990s as a natural extension and scaling-up of the electronic
storefronts.
PRIVATE INDUSTRIAL NETWORKS- late 1990s as natural extension of EDI systems and the
existing close relationships that developed between large industrial firms and their suppliers
SOURCING
ORDER
MANAGEMENT
CONTRACT
MANAGEMENT
ORDER
ARIBA’s FULFILLMENT
REQUISITION
COMMERCE
BUYER
SERVICES SUPPLIER
NETWORK
PURCHASE
ORDER INVOICING
INTERACT AND
RECEIVE SETTLEMENT
INVOICE CONTENT
MANAGEMENT
IBM’S E-PROCUREMENT MODEL
PAYMENT
IBM’S GLOBAL PROCUREMENT
IBM’s global procurement is guided by its core values, principles and practices.
CONVENTIONAL E-ORDERING
SUGGESTIONS
The organization should try to reveal its supplier and buyer details to make them aware to the external
parties.
IBM should give freedom to their suppliers in making their own views in the process of e-procurement.
The websites of IBM should provide more detail of their online trading process.
CONCLUSION
More and more IBM clients are making advantage of IBM’s ability to integrate with their e-procurement
system. When a client adds IBM as an IT supplier in their system, they can extend all the benefits of
your e-procurement efforts to the information technology category:
By establishing a B2B e-procurement connection with IBM, customers can research products and
services, view entitled pricing and make purchases through a secure web connection.IBM is compatible
with leading E-procurement solutions and supplier networks such as Ariba, SAP, and Orack, or its
specialists help create customized solutions as per the clients needs.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
KENNETH C. LAUDON
CAROL GUERCIO TRAVER : E-COMMERCE
BUSINESS. TECHNOLOGY. SOCIETY.
4TH IMPRESSION
WEBSITES:
www.ibm.com
[email protected]
THANK YOU
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