ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

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ELC 200 Introduction to E- Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002

Transcript of ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

Page 1: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

ELC 200

Introduction to E-Commerce

Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002

Page 2: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

Introduction

• Class roll call• Instructor Introduction• Instructor’s Educational Philosophy• Syllabus review• General Information about class• WebCT accounts• Some Group Work• Intro to eCommerce

Page 3: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

Instructor

• Tony Gauvin– Assistant Professor Of E-Commerce– 216 Nadeau Hall– (207) 834-7519 or Extension 7519– [email protected]– WebCT

Page 4: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

Instructional Philosophy

• Out-Come based education

• Would rather discuss than lecture– Requires student preparation

• Hate grading assignments– Especially LATE assignments

• Use class interaction, assignments, quizzes and projects to determine if outcomes are met.

Page 5: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

ELC 200 Survival Primer

• Read Material BEFORE the class discussion– Summary & Key Terms at EOC– Review and Discussion Questions in EOC– Web Exercises

• Check WebCT Often• Use the additional resources identified in syllabus• ASK questions about what you didn’t understand in readings• DON’T do homework at last minute.• REVEIW lectures and notes• Seek HELP if you are having difficulties• OFFER feedback and suggestions to the instructor in a constructive

manner• Student Study Groups are STONGLY Encouraged

Page 6: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

ELC 200 Specifics

• WebCT used to augment course• Two Desired outcomes

– The E-Commerce Life Cycle• Students will understand how a E-Commerce initiative is taken from

vision to Fulfillment– Entrepreneurship

• Students have the ability to create the framework for a viable e-commerce initiative

• Managerial Perspectives instead of technical– Technical Portions will be covered in COS XXX classes– Understanding “Why” instead of “How”

Page 7: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

Group Work

• Define E-Commerce– Don’t use the book!

• Identify 3 Technical Drivers of E-Commerce

• Identify 3 benefits of E-Commerce

• Identify 3 detractors of E-Commerce

• Identify an E-Commerce Success

• Identify an E-Commerce DUD

Page 8: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

UMFK’s Definition of E-Commerce

• An attempt to achieve transactional efficiency in all aspects of the design, production, marketing and sales of products or services for existing and developing marketplaces through the utilization of current and emerging electronic technologies

• E-Commerce IS NOT– E-Business– DOT-COMS (or Dot-Bombs)– E-Marketing – Easy or Cheap– NEW

• There are other definitions..The text book’s author has another less inclusive definition

Page 9: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

E-Commerce Degree Program

• Combination of Technical Skills and Management know-how

• Prepares students for Leadership Roles– Cadre (team) building– Broad-based technical underpinnings with one or

two specialist areas– Understanding of implications of E-Commerce

within an organizational context and within broader social issues

Page 10: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

Management Capabilities

• Financial

• Ethical

• Marketing

• Human Resources

• Leadership

• Project planning and management

• Operations management

Page 11: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

Technical Skills

• Programming– Procedural & Scripting

– Object Oriented

– Markup Languages

• System analysis– Needs assessment

– System design and Specification

– Project Management

• Networks– Design

– Administration

– Security

• Databases– Design

– Transaction programming

– Administration

Page 12: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

In the Beginning

Chapter 1

WWWWWW

Page 13: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

OBJECTIVES

• What is E-Commerce?

• Advantages and Limitations of E-Commerce

• Strategy in E-Commerce

• Value Chains in E-Commerce

• E-Commerce Integration

Page 14: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

What is e-commerce?

• Electronic Commerce (e-commerce) can be viewed from several perspectives. – From a communications perspective, e-commerce is the delivery of information,

products and services, and payments through telephone lines, computer networks, etc.

– From an interface perspective, e-commerce involves various information and transformation exchanges: B2B, B2C, C2C, B2G, G2C

– From a business process perspective, e-commerce is the applications of technology toward the automation of business transactions and workflows.

– From a service perspective, e-commerce is a tool that allows firms, consumers and management the ability to cut service costs, while improving the quality of goods and increasing the speed of delivery of service.

– As a market, eCommerce is a world-wide network. A local store can open a web store front and find the world at its doorstep/

– From a online perspective, e-commerce provides the capability of buying and selling products and information on the Internet.

– From a structural perspective, e-commerce involves various media: data, text, web pages, Internet telephony, and Internet Desktop video.

Page 15: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

WHAT IS E-COMMERCE?

• Electronic Presentation of Goods and Services

• Automated Customer Account Inquiries

• Online Order Taking and Payments

• Online Transaction Handling

• Automated Supply Chain Management Solutions

Page 16: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

WHY E-COMMERCE?

• Digital Convergence• Anytime, Anywhere, Anyone• Changes in Organization’s Make-up• Widespread Access to IT• Increasing Pressure on Operating Costs and Profit

Margins• Demand for Customized Products and Services• Speed or Time Reduction

Page 17: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

Agenda

• Questions?

• Finish up on introduction to eCommerce

• Assignment 1

Page 18: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

E-COMMERCE MYTHS

• Setting up a Web site is easy

• E-commerce is cheap when compared to purchasing a mainframe

• E-commerce means end of mass marketing

• Everyone is doing it

• E-commerce is lucrative

• E-commerce is revolutionary

• The Internet is a commercial fad that crashed in 2000

Page 19: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

E-COMMERCE MYTHS (Cont’d)

• B2C eCommerce is dead– http://retailindustry.about.com/library/holiday/03/blh_em100803.htm

• Online retailing is always the low-cost channel• All products can be sold online using identical

business models• Customers can be bought• Online firms face less pressure to grow and achieve

economies of scale• Size is not important for online firms• The middleman is out

Page 20: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

Quote from text

• “Ecommerce is everywhere. After boom and bust, it is not new or unique anymore. The advantage is that the focus now is on basic business principles such as return on investment, building trust, and telling the customer what is available in stock. Ecommerce has become just plain commerce. It is just another channel to reach customers, vendors and suppliers.”

Page 21: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

ADVANTAGES OF E-COMMERCE

• Lower Transactional Costs

• Economical

• Higher Margins

• Better and Quicker Customer Service

• Comparison Shopping

• Productivity Gains

Page 22: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

ADVANTAGES OF E-COMMERCE (Cont’d)

• Helps People Work Together

• Creates Knowledge Markets

• Promotes Information Sharing, Convenience and New Customer Control

• Swapping Goods and Services

• Allows High Product Customization

Page 23: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

LIMITATIONS OF E-COMMERCE

• Security

• System and Data Integrity

• System Scalability

• Not Free-for-All

• Consumer Search

Page 24: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

LIMITATIONS OF E-COMMERCE (Cont’d)

• Fulfillment

• Customer Relations

• Types of Products

• Corporate Vulnerability

• Blueprint Development

• Risk

Page 25: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

STRATEGY IN E-COMMERCE

• Critical Success Factors for E-Commerce– Sound Strategy that has the support of top

management– Clear Aim (long-term)– Promotion of Sell Cycle– Full Technology Utilization– Scalable and Integrated Business Process

Page 26: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

SELL CYCLE IN E-COMMERCE

Selling Process Phase What You Want to Do

Attraction Advertising, Promotions

Conversion Ease of Use, Effective Presentation

Service and Support Product Info/Status, Fulfillment

Personalization Site Customization, Support

Security Transaction, Authentication

Infrastructure Scalability, Availability, Hosting

Page 27: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

Value Chains

• Defined by Michael Porter in his 1985 book “Competitive Advantage”

• A way for organizing the activities of a business so that each activity adds value (value-added activity) or productivity to the total operations of the business.

• Each activity is said to have a value proposition• Firms that have identified and optimized their

value chains will have Competitive advantage over those that have not.

Page 28: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

VALUE CHAIN IN E-COMMERCE

Corporate Infrastructure

HR Management

Technology Development

Procurement

Inbound Logistics

Operations Outbound Logistics

Marketing & Sales

Service

Primary Activities

Support Activities

Page 29: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

PRIMARY ACTIVITIES

• Inbound Logistics – Supply line of business

• Operations – Conversion of raw materials into finished products

– Center of value chain where value-added occurs

• Outbound Logistics– Storing, distribution and shipping of final product

Page 30: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

PRIMARY ACTIVITIES (Cont’d)

• Marketing and Sales– Deals with ultimate customer

• Service– After-sale service to customer

Page 31: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

SUPPORT ACTIVITIES

• Corporate Infrastructure– Backbone of business unit

• Human Resources– Matching the right people to the right job

• Technology Development– Product and business processes improvement

• Procurement– Prerequisite for production

Page 32: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

E-COMMERCE INTEGRATION

Element INTERNET EXTRANET INTRANET

E-Commerce Type

Business-to-Consumer

Business-to-Business

Business within Business

Access Unrestricted Restricted Restricted

Security Minimal Firewalls & Restricted Access

Firewalls & Restricted Access

Payment Method

Credit Card Predefined Credit Agreement

Within Business Charges

Page 33: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

The Growth in B2BINDUSTRY 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 % of

Total

Computing & Electronics $230.2 $343.3 $427.3 $506.2 $592.9 40%

Motor Vehicles 35.1 90.0 190.2 311.5 411.5 26%

Petrochemicals 27.0 53.9 103.2 184.5 299.2 17%

Utilities 29.9 56.5 101.3 170.1 266.4 17%

Paper & Office Products 14.4 33.7 73.9 143.5 235.3 24%

Consumer Goods 13.2 28.1 58.5 116.5 216.5 13%

Food 22.5 41.2 73.9 128.1 211.1 12%

Construction 6.3 15.1 34.6 74.2 141.0 10%

Pharmaceutical & Med Products 4.3 10.7 26.2 60.2 124.0 14%

Industrial Equipment / Supplies 7.0 13.1 23.8 41.9 70.3 7%

Shipping & Warehousing 4.6 10.5 22.4 42.5 68.1 20%

Aerospace & Defense 9.1 15.8 23.1 29.0 32.9 15%

Heavy Industry 2.6 4.8 8.6 15.3 26.5 3%

TOTAL 406.2 716.6 1,166.9 1,823.4 2,695.5 17%

Source: Forrester Research, Reported in Blackmon, Douglas, “Where the Money Is,” WSJ, April 17, 2000, p. R30.

Page 34: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT

• Reduces Cycle Times

• Raise Order Fulfillment

• Minimize Excess Inventory

• Improve Customer Service

Page 35: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

INTRANET

• Low Development and Maintenance Costs

• Friendly Environment

• High Information Availability and Shareability

• Timely Information

• Easy Dissemination of Information

Page 36: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

Other eCommerce types

• Business-to-Government B2G– Procurement GSA office– OMB contract– IRS

• Mobile Commerce– Wireless technologies

Page 37: ELC 200 Introduction to E-Commerce Copyright, Tony Gauvin, UMFK, 2002.

WWWWWW Awad –Electronic Commerce 2/e© 2004 Pearson Prentice Hall

For next week

• Read Chap Two– The Internet and the World Wide Web

• Assignment 1– Answer Test Your Understanding questions on

Page 31 of the text.– Turn in a well formatted typed response sheet– Due Tuesday January 10 at start of class