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E CommerceF22

The document provides an overview of e-commerce, including its history, characteristics, current trends, and business models. It began in 1995 and grew exponentially. Key characteristics include ubiquity, information intensity, and digital goods. Current trends include the shift to mobile and social commerce as well as environmental impacts. E-commerce is categorized by participants (B2C, B2B, C2C) and platforms (traditional vs mobile). Eight elements of a business model are defined including value proposition, revenue model, market opportunity, and management team. Various B2C and B2B business models are described such as e-tailers, content providers, and transaction brokers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
60 views12 pages

E CommerceF22

The document provides an overview of e-commerce, including its history, characteristics, current trends, and business models. It began in 1995 and grew exponentially. Key characteristics include ubiquity, information intensity, and digital goods. Current trends include the shift to mobile and social commerce as well as environmental impacts. E-commerce is categorized by participants (B2C, B2B, C2C) and platforms (traditional vs mobile). Eight elements of a business model are defined including value proposition, revenue model, market opportunity, and management team. Various B2C and B2B business models are described such as e-tailers, content providers, and transaction brokers.

Uploaded by

ashwanth.mav
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 12

8/9/2022

e-Commerce
Amit Das ( [email protected] )
IFMR GSB
Krea University

History of e-Commerce

Definition: Use of the Internet and Web to transact business


• Began in 1995 and grew exponentially; still stable even in a recession

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Characteristics of e-Commerce
• Ubiquity
• Anytime, Anywhere
• Anyone (sellers)
• Lower entry costs, Global reach
• Information intensity
• Richness: Supports video, audio, and text messages
• Interactivity
• Information asymmetry
• Reduced: Cost transparency, comparison shopping
• Increased: Customization / personalization, price discrimination (dynamic pricing)
• Digital goods: books, music, movies, software, …
• Delivered online
• High fixed costs, low variable costs – implications for pricing

Current trends in e-Commerce


• The new e-Commerce: mobile, social, local
• From the desktop computer to the cellphone
• Screen size, processing power
• User identity, location (where friends are, which shops are nearby, house prices in an area)
• Social network integration
• User-generated content (e.g. reviews)
• Recommender systems
• “Social shopping”
• Environmental impact of e-Commerce
• packaging
• “free” shipping
• Preference for local products

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Categorizing e-Commerce
• By participants
• Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
• Business-to-Business (B2B)
• Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C), e.g. eBay, peer-to-peer platforms
• By platform
• Traditional e-Commerce vs. mobile or m-Commerce
• By business model
• How an organization creates, delivers, and captures value
• Applies to B2C as well as B2B e-Commerce

Eight 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

2. Revenue Model
• “How will you earn money?”
• Major types of revenue models:
• Advertising revenue model
• Subscription revenue model
▪ Freemium strategy
• Transaction fee revenue model
• Sales revenue model
• Affiliate revenue model

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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 market niche in which company hopes to
compete
• Market opportunity typically divided into smaller niches

4. Competitive Environment
• “Who else occupies your intended marketspace?”
• Other companies selling similar products in the same
marketspace
• Includes both direct and indirect competitors
• Influenced by:
• Number and size of active competitors
• Each competitor’s market share
• Competitors’ profitability
• Competitors’ pricing

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5. Competitive Advantage
• “What special advantages does your firm bring to the
marketspace?”
• Is your product superior to or cheaper to produce than
your competitors’?
• Important concepts:
• Asymmetries
• First-mover advantage, complementary resources
• Unfair competitive advantage
• Leverage
• Perfect markets

6. Market Strategy
• “How do you plan to promote your products or services to
attract your target audience?”
• Details how a company intends to enter market and attract
customers
• Best business concepts will fail if not properly marketed to
potential customers

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7. Organizational Development
• “What types of organizational structures within the firm are
necessary to carry out the business plan?”
• Describes how firm will organize work
• Typically, divided into functional departments
• As company grows, hiring moves from generalists to
specialists

8. Management Team
• “What kind of backgrounds should the company’s leaders
have?”
• A strong management team:
• Can make the business model work
• Can give credibility to outside investors
• Has market-specific knowledge
• Has experience in implementing business plans

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B2C Business Models


• E-tailer
• Community provider (social network)
• Content provider
• Portal
• Transaction broker
• Market creator
• Service provider

B2C Business 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 Manufacturer-direct: Disintermediation

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B2C Business Models: Community Provider


• Provide online environment (social network) where people
with similar interests can transact, share content, and
communicate
• Examples: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Pinterest
• Revenue models:
• Typically hybrid, combining advertising, subscriptions,
sales, transaction fees, and so on

B2C Business Models: Content Provider


• Digital content on the Web:
• News, music, video, text, artwork
• Revenue models:
• Use variety of models, including advertising, subscription;
sales of digital goods
• Key to success is typically owning the content
• Variations:
• Syndication
• Aggregators

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B2C Business Models: Portal


• Search plus an integrated package of content and services
• Revenue models:
• Advertising, referral fees, transaction fees, subscriptions for
premium services
• Variations:
• Horizontal/general (examples: Yahoo, AOL, MSN)
• Vertical/specialized (vortal) (example: Sailnet)
• Search (examples: Google, Bing)

B2C Business Models: Transaction Broker


• Process online transactions for consumers
• Primary value proposition-saving time and money
• Revenue model:
• Transaction fees
• Industries using this model:
• Financial services
• Travel services
• Job placement services

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B2C Business Models: Market Creator


• Create digital environment where buyers and sellers can meet
and transact
• Examples: Priceline, eBay
• Revenue model: Transaction fees, fees to merchants for
access
• On-demand service companies (sharing economy): platforms
that allow people to sell services
• Examples: Uber, Airbnb

B2C Business Models: Service Provider


• Online services
• Examples: Google
▪ Google Maps, Gmail, and so on
• 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

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B2B Business Models: Net Marketplace


Net marketplaces (e-hubs)
• Single digital marketplace for
many buyers and sellers
• May focus on direct or indirect
goods
• May be vertical or horizontal
marketplaces

B2B Business Models: Private Industrial Network


• Large firm using a secure website to link to suppliers and partners

Next-generation EDI (Electronic Data Interchange)

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