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Chapter 1
Introduction to e-business
and e-commerce
Page 1 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
and e-commerce
Arry Akhmad Arman
School of Electrical Engineering and Informatics
arry.arman@yahoo.com
Modified from original ppt of “E-Business and E-Commerce Management” book.
• Define the meaning and scope of e-
business and e-commerce and their different
elements
• Summarize the main reasons for
adoption of e-commerce and e-business
and barriers that may restrict adoption
Learning Outcomes
Page 2 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
and barriers that may restrict adoption
• Use resources to define the extent of
adoption of the Internet as a communications
medium for consumers and businesses
• Outline the business challenges of
introducing e-business and e-commerce to
an organization.
Management Issues
• How do we explain the scope
and implications of e-business and
e-commerce to staff?
• What is the full range of
benefits of introducing e-
Page 3 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
benefits of introducing e-
business and what are the risks?
• How great will the impact
of the Internet be on our business?
What are the current and
predicted adoption levels?
Case: Amazon.com
Page 4 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Case: eBay.com
Page 5 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Case: detik.com
Page 6 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Case: kompas.com
Page 7 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Case: Facebook.com
Page 8 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Case: tokobagus.com
Page 9 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Case: App Store
Page 10 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Case: e-book & e-magazine
Page 11 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
E-Business Opportunities
ReachReach
• Over 1 billion users globally
• Connect to millions of products
Page 12 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
E-
Business
E-
Business
RichnessRichnessAffiliationAffiliation
• Detailed product information
on 20 billion + pages indexed
by Google. Blogs, videos, feeds…
• Personalised messages for users
• Partnerships are key
in the networked economy
The impact of the Internet
on business
• Andy Grove, Chairman of Intel, one
of the early adopters of e-
commerce, has made a
meteorological analogy with the
Internet.
Page 13 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Internet.
• He says:
The Internet is a typhoon force, a
ten times force, or is it a bit of wind?
Or is it a force that fundamentally
alters our business? (Grove, 1996)
Andrew Stephen ("Andy")
Grove (born 2 September
1936), is a Hungarian-born
American businessman,
engineer, and author. He is a
science pioneer in the
semiconductor industry. He
escaped from Communist-
controlled Hungary at the age
of 20 and moved to the
United States where he
finished his education. He
later became CEO of Intel
Corporation and helped
transform the company into
the world's largest
manufacturer of
semiconductors.
Image source: wikipedia
E-business Risks
• Making wrong decision about e-
business investments
• Provide poor online customer
experience
Page 14 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
experience
Image source: www.infobarrel.com
Internet risks – what can go wrong
with a transactional site?
• Web sites that fail because of spike
in visitor traffic
• Hacker penetrating the security of
the system
Page 15 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
• A company emails customer
without receiving their permission
• Problems with fulfilment
• E-mail customer-service enquiries
from the web site don’t reach the
right person
Image source: www.infobarrel.com
Different Perspectives of EC
• Communication
• Business Process
• Service
• Online
Page 16 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
• Online
Image source: inkvibe.com
The distinction between Buy-side
and Sell-side e-commerce
Page 17 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Types of sell-side e-commerce
• Transactional e-commerce sites
– www.mph.com.my
• Services-oriented relationship-building web sites
– www.perodua.com.my
Page 18 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
– www.perodua.com.my
• Brand-building sites
– www.nokia.com
• Portal or media sites
– www.yahoo.com
Summary and examples of transaction alternatives
between businesses, consumers and governmental
organizations
Page 19 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Page 20 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Figure 1.3 Dubit C2C site for a youth audience (www.dubit.co.uk)
E-Business
• All electronically mediated information exchanges,
both within an organization and with external
stakeholders supporting the range of business
processes
Page 21 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
processes
• E-business concepts:
– Applied to strategy and operations
– An adjective to describe businesses that mainly operate
online
E-Business vs E-Commerce
• E-commerce: All electronically mediated
information exchanges between an organization
and its external stakeholder
Page 22 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
• Not solely restricted to the actual buying and
selling of products, but also includes pre-sale and
post-sale activities
E-Business vs E-Commerce
• E-commercecovers outward-facing
processes that touch customers, suppliers and
external partners, including sales, marketing, order
taking, delivery, customer service, purchasing of raw
materials and supplies for production and procurement
of indirect operating-expense items, such as office
supplies.
Page 23 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
supplies.
• E-business includes e-commerce but also
covers internal processessuch as production,
inventory management, product development, risk
management, finance, knowledge management and
human resources. E-business strategy is more complex,
more focused on internal processes, and aimed at cost
savings and improvements in efficiency, productivity and
cost savings.
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/53015/The_difference_between_e_business_and_e_commerce?pageNumber=1
E-Government
• The application of e-business technologies
to government and public services for
citizens and businesses
Page 24 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
• Cover services for:
– Citizens
– Suppliers
– Internal communications
Image source: ec.europa.eu
Three definitions of the relationship
between e-commerce and e-business
Page 25 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
UK rate of adoption
of different digital media
Page 26 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Source: MORI Technology Tracker, January 2006. See www.mori.com/technology/techtracker.shtml for latest details
Drivers of Consumer InternetAdoption
ContentContent
CustomizationCustomization
Cost
reduction
Cost
reduction
Page 27 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
CommunityCommunity
ConvenienceConvenience
ChoiceChoice
Barriers of Consumer Internet
Adoption
• No perceived benefit
• Lack of trust
• Security problems
• Lack of skills
Page 28 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
• Lack of skills
• Cost
Image source: www.charlesstone.com
Drivers of Business Adoption
Increase
Revenue
Increase
Revenue
Page 29 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Cost
Reduction
Cost
Reduction
DriversDrivers
Attitudes to business benefits of
OnlineTechnologies
Page 30 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Cost/efficiency and competitiveness
drivers
Cost/efficiency drivers
• Increasing speed with
which supplies can be
obtained
Competitiveness drivers
• Customer demand
• Improving the range and
quality of services offered
Page 31 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
obtained
• Increasing speed with
which goods can be
dispatched
• Reduced sales and
purchasing costs
• Reduced operating
costs
quality of services offered
• Avoid losing market share
to businesses already
using e-commerce.
Tangible and Intangible Benefits
Tangible benefits Intangible benefits
 Increased sales from new sales leads giving rise to
increased revenue from:
– new customers, new markets
– existing customers (repeat-selling)
– existing customers (cross-selling).
 Marketing cost reductions from:
– reduced time in customer service
 Corporate image communication
 Enhancement of brand
 More rapid, more responsive marketing
communications including PR
 Faster product development lifecycle enabling faster
response to market needs
 Improved customer service
Page 32 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
– reduced time in customer service
– online sales
– reduced printing and distribution costs of
marketing communications.
 Supply-chain cost reductions from:
– reduced levels of inventory
– increased competition from suppliers
– shorter cycle time in ordering.
 Administrative cost reductions from more efficient
routine business processes such as recruitment, invoice
payment and holiday authorization.
 Improved customer service
 Learning for the future
 Meeting customer expectations to have a web site
 Identifying new partners, supporting existing
partners better
 Better management of marketing information and
customer information
 Feedback from customers on products
Adoption of Internet and e-business
Services across Europe
Page 33 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Source: Eurostat, Community Survey on ICT usage in enterprises, eEurope (2005) Information Society Benchmarking Report, © European Communities 2005,
http://europa.eu.int/information_society
Page 34 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
KeyCategories of InternetApplications
in Indonesia vs Global
Page 35 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Source: http://www.teknojurnal.com/2011/03/11/perkembangan-internet-di-indonesia-pada-tahun-2010/
Barriers to Development of
OnlineTechnologies
Page 36 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
The McKinsey 7S framework
• The McKinsey 7S Framework
is a management model
developed by well-known
business consultants Robert
H.Waterman, Jr. andTom
Peters (who also developed
the MBWA-- "Management By
Page 37 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
Source: Adapted from Waterman et al. (1980)
the MBWA-- "Management By
Walking Around" motif, and
authored In Search of
Excellence) in the 1980s.
• This was a strategic vision for
groups, to include businesses,
business units, and teams.
The McKinsey 7S framework
• The 7S are structure, strategy, systems,
skills, style, staff and shared values.
• The model is most often used as a tool to
assess and monitor changes in the
internal situation of an organization.
Usage
• Improve the performance of a company
• Examine the likely effects of future changes within
a company
• Align departments and processes during a merger
or acquisition
• Determine how best to implement a proposed
strategy
The Seven Interdependent Elements
Page 38 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
• OBJECTIVE OFTHE MODEL (To analyze
how well an organization is positioned to
achieve its intended objective)
The Seven Interdependent Elements
• The basic premise of the model is that there are
seven internal aspects of an organization that need
to be aligned if it is to be successful
• Hard Elements
– Strategy
– Structure
– Systems
• Soft Elements
– Shared Values
– Skills
– Style
– Staff
Exercise
• Please identify one company for each the types of
e-commerce below:
– Transactional e-commerce sites
– Services-oriented relationship-building web sites
Page 39 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
– Brand-building sites
– Portal or media sites
• Refer to Figure 1.2 and identify a company for each
the category provided.
End of Slides
Page 40 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013

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E-Business: Chapter 1: Intro to E-B

  • 1. Chapter 1 Introduction to e-business and e-commerce Page 1 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 and e-commerce Arry Akhmad Arman School of Electrical Engineering and Informatics arry.arman@yahoo.com Modified from original ppt of “E-Business and E-Commerce Management” book.
  • 2. • Define the meaning and scope of e- business and e-commerce and their different elements • Summarize the main reasons for adoption of e-commerce and e-business and barriers that may restrict adoption Learning Outcomes Page 2 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 and barriers that may restrict adoption • Use resources to define the extent of adoption of the Internet as a communications medium for consumers and businesses • Outline the business challenges of introducing e-business and e-commerce to an organization.
  • 3. Management Issues • How do we explain the scope and implications of e-business and e-commerce to staff? • What is the full range of benefits of introducing e- Page 3 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 benefits of introducing e- business and what are the risks? • How great will the impact of the Internet be on our business? What are the current and predicted adoption levels?
  • 4. Case: Amazon.com Page 4 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 5. Case: eBay.com Page 5 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 6. Case: detik.com Page 6 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 7. Case: kompas.com Page 7 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 8. Case: Facebook.com Page 8 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 9. Case: tokobagus.com Page 9 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 10. Case: App Store Page 10 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 11. Case: e-book & e-magazine Page 11 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 12. E-Business Opportunities ReachReach • Over 1 billion users globally • Connect to millions of products Page 12 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 E- Business E- Business RichnessRichnessAffiliationAffiliation • Detailed product information on 20 billion + pages indexed by Google. Blogs, videos, feeds… • Personalised messages for users • Partnerships are key in the networked economy
  • 13. The impact of the Internet on business • Andy Grove, Chairman of Intel, one of the early adopters of e- commerce, has made a meteorological analogy with the Internet. Page 13 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 Internet. • He says: The Internet is a typhoon force, a ten times force, or is it a bit of wind? Or is it a force that fundamentally alters our business? (Grove, 1996) Andrew Stephen ("Andy") Grove (born 2 September 1936), is a Hungarian-born American businessman, engineer, and author. He is a science pioneer in the semiconductor industry. He escaped from Communist- controlled Hungary at the age of 20 and moved to the United States where he finished his education. He later became CEO of Intel Corporation and helped transform the company into the world's largest manufacturer of semiconductors. Image source: wikipedia
  • 14. E-business Risks • Making wrong decision about e- business investments • Provide poor online customer experience Page 14 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 experience Image source: www.infobarrel.com
  • 15. Internet risks – what can go wrong with a transactional site? • Web sites that fail because of spike in visitor traffic • Hacker penetrating the security of the system Page 15 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 • A company emails customer without receiving their permission • Problems with fulfilment • E-mail customer-service enquiries from the web site don’t reach the right person Image source: www.infobarrel.com
  • 16. Different Perspectives of EC • Communication • Business Process • Service • Online Page 16 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 • Online Image source: inkvibe.com
  • 17. The distinction between Buy-side and Sell-side e-commerce Page 17 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 18. Types of sell-side e-commerce • Transactional e-commerce sites – www.mph.com.my • Services-oriented relationship-building web sites – www.perodua.com.my Page 18 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 – www.perodua.com.my • Brand-building sites – www.nokia.com • Portal or media sites – www.yahoo.com
  • 19. Summary and examples of transaction alternatives between businesses, consumers and governmental organizations Page 19 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 20. Page 20 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 Figure 1.3 Dubit C2C site for a youth audience (www.dubit.co.uk)
  • 21. E-Business • All electronically mediated information exchanges, both within an organization and with external stakeholders supporting the range of business processes Page 21 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 processes • E-business concepts: – Applied to strategy and operations – An adjective to describe businesses that mainly operate online
  • 22. E-Business vs E-Commerce • E-commerce: All electronically mediated information exchanges between an organization and its external stakeholder Page 22 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 • Not solely restricted to the actual buying and selling of products, but also includes pre-sale and post-sale activities
  • 23. E-Business vs E-Commerce • E-commercecovers outward-facing processes that touch customers, suppliers and external partners, including sales, marketing, order taking, delivery, customer service, purchasing of raw materials and supplies for production and procurement of indirect operating-expense items, such as office supplies. Page 23 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 supplies. • E-business includes e-commerce but also covers internal processessuch as production, inventory management, product development, risk management, finance, knowledge management and human resources. E-business strategy is more complex, more focused on internal processes, and aimed at cost savings and improvements in efficiency, productivity and cost savings. http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/53015/The_difference_between_e_business_and_e_commerce?pageNumber=1
  • 24. E-Government • The application of e-business technologies to government and public services for citizens and businesses Page 24 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 • Cover services for: – Citizens – Suppliers – Internal communications Image source: ec.europa.eu
  • 25. Three definitions of the relationship between e-commerce and e-business Page 25 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 26. UK rate of adoption of different digital media Page 26 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 Source: MORI Technology Tracker, January 2006. See www.mori.com/technology/techtracker.shtml for latest details
  • 27. Drivers of Consumer InternetAdoption ContentContent CustomizationCustomization Cost reduction Cost reduction Page 27 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 CommunityCommunity ConvenienceConvenience ChoiceChoice
  • 28. Barriers of Consumer Internet Adoption • No perceived benefit • Lack of trust • Security problems • Lack of skills Page 28 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 • Lack of skills • Cost Image source: www.charlesstone.com
  • 29. Drivers of Business Adoption Increase Revenue Increase Revenue Page 29 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 Cost Reduction Cost Reduction DriversDrivers
  • 30. Attitudes to business benefits of OnlineTechnologies Page 30 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 31. Cost/efficiency and competitiveness drivers Cost/efficiency drivers • Increasing speed with which supplies can be obtained Competitiveness drivers • Customer demand • Improving the range and quality of services offered Page 31 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 obtained • Increasing speed with which goods can be dispatched • Reduced sales and purchasing costs • Reduced operating costs quality of services offered • Avoid losing market share to businesses already using e-commerce.
  • 32. Tangible and Intangible Benefits Tangible benefits Intangible benefits  Increased sales from new sales leads giving rise to increased revenue from: – new customers, new markets – existing customers (repeat-selling) – existing customers (cross-selling).  Marketing cost reductions from: – reduced time in customer service  Corporate image communication  Enhancement of brand  More rapid, more responsive marketing communications including PR  Faster product development lifecycle enabling faster response to market needs  Improved customer service Page 32 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 – reduced time in customer service – online sales – reduced printing and distribution costs of marketing communications.  Supply-chain cost reductions from: – reduced levels of inventory – increased competition from suppliers – shorter cycle time in ordering.  Administrative cost reductions from more efficient routine business processes such as recruitment, invoice payment and holiday authorization.  Improved customer service  Learning for the future  Meeting customer expectations to have a web site  Identifying new partners, supporting existing partners better  Better management of marketing information and customer information  Feedback from customers on products
  • 33. Adoption of Internet and e-business Services across Europe Page 33 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 Source: Eurostat, Community Survey on ICT usage in enterprises, eEurope (2005) Information Society Benchmarking Report, © European Communities 2005, http://europa.eu.int/information_society
  • 34. Page 34 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 35. KeyCategories of InternetApplications in Indonesia vs Global Page 35 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 Source: http://www.teknojurnal.com/2011/03/11/perkembangan-internet-di-indonesia-pada-tahun-2010/
  • 36. Barriers to Development of OnlineTechnologies Page 36 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013
  • 37. The McKinsey 7S framework • The McKinsey 7S Framework is a management model developed by well-known business consultants Robert H.Waterman, Jr. andTom Peters (who also developed the MBWA-- "Management By Page 37 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 Source: Adapted from Waterman et al. (1980) the MBWA-- "Management By Walking Around" motif, and authored In Search of Excellence) in the 1980s. • This was a strategic vision for groups, to include businesses, business units, and teams.
  • 38. The McKinsey 7S framework • The 7S are structure, strategy, systems, skills, style, staff and shared values. • The model is most often used as a tool to assess and monitor changes in the internal situation of an organization. Usage • Improve the performance of a company • Examine the likely effects of future changes within a company • Align departments and processes during a merger or acquisition • Determine how best to implement a proposed strategy The Seven Interdependent Elements Page 38 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 • OBJECTIVE OFTHE MODEL (To analyze how well an organization is positioned to achieve its intended objective) The Seven Interdependent Elements • The basic premise of the model is that there are seven internal aspects of an organization that need to be aligned if it is to be successful • Hard Elements – Strategy – Structure – Systems • Soft Elements – Shared Values – Skills – Style – Staff
  • 39. Exercise • Please identify one company for each the types of e-commerce below: – Transactional e-commerce sites – Services-oriented relationship-building web sites Page 39 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013 – Brand-building sites – Portal or media sites • Refer to Figure 1.2 and identify a company for each the category provided.
  • 40. End of Slides Page 40 | arry.arman@yahoo.com, 2013