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CHAPTER 4

INTERNET TECHNOLOGY AND

THE DIGITAL FIRM.

Reading notes for chapter 4 in the textbook.



Chapter 4 is on the digital firm, electronic commerce and

business. We have to read entire chapter carefully and digest the

material thoroughly. Internet is a widely used technology today and

there is no doubt that Internet and digital organization will shape

every aspect of our lives, personal as well as professional in the years

ahead.

Section 4.1 elaborates on the benefits of Internet technology

to the organizations of any kind. Read section 4.1 carefully and pay

attention to Internet business models and concepts like information

asymmetry, richness, reach, dynamic pricing and portals. Table 4.1 is

a concise summary of Internet business models. Customer-centered

retailing, business-to-business electronic commerce, and electronic

payment systems also deserve a close and critical look. Marshall

Industries is an interesting example of a virtual distribution network

and gives us clues about future business models. Examine figure 4.7

carefully.

Reading notes for chapter 4 in the textbook.



Section 4.3 explores how intranets support electronic business and

services like group collaboration, coordination and supply chain

management that are vital for any organization. Group

collaboration at Internet has new dynamics and implications in

product design and delivery as well as organization’s functional

areas and supply chain management. Finally management

challenges and opportunities deserve careful scrutiny.

Internet technology



•Standardised communication architecture.



•Direct communication between related parties.



•Reduced transaction costs

Airline ticket $8$1

Banking $1.08$0.13



•Infrastructure for electronic business.



•Unbundling the information from the product.

Business model:



An abstraction of what and how the enterprise

delivers a product or service,showing how the

enterprise creates wealth.

Changing Economics Of Information



Information Asymmetry:

Situation in which the relative bargaining power of two parties

in a transaction is determined by one party possessing more

information essential to the transaction than the other party.



Richness:

Measurement of the depth and detail of information that a

business can supply to the customer as well as information the

business collects about the customer.



Reach:

Measurement of how many people a business can connect

with and how many products it can offer those people.

INTERNET BUSINESS MODELS



Category Description Examples

Virtual Store Sells physical goods or services on-line instead of Amazon.com

front through a physical storefront or retail outlet. Wine.com,

Delivery of nondigital goods and services takes Wingspanbank.com

place through traditional means.





Marketplace Concentrates information about products and Shopnow.com

concentrator services from multiple providers at one central Dealernet

point.Purchases can search,comparison-shop,and Industrial mall

sometimes complete the sales transaction. Insure market

On-line Bid-ask system where multiple buyers can Asia capacity

exchange purchase from multiple sellers. Exchange

Covisint

E-steel

Fibermarket

Information broker Provides product, pricing, and Partnet

availability information. Some Travelocity

facilitate transactions, but their main

value is the information they

provide.

Transaction broker Buyers can view rates and terms, but E*TRADE

the primary business activity is to Ameritrade

complete the transaction.

Auction Provides electronic clearinghouse Ebay

for products where price and Ubid

availability are constantly changing, Bigequip.com

sometimes in response to customer

actions

Reverse auction Consumers submit a bid to multiple Priceline.com

sellers to buy goods or services at a Importquote.com

buyer specified price.



Aggregator Groups of people who want to Mobshop.com

purchase a particular product sign up

and then seek a volume discount from

vendors.

Digital product Sells and delivers software, multimedia, and other Regards.com

delivery digital products over internet. Photodisc





Content provider Creates revenue by providing content. The customer Salon.com

may pay to access the content, or revenue may be Thestreet.com

generated by selling advertising space or by having

advertisers placement in an organized listing in a

searchable database.

On-line service Provides service and support for hardware and Pcsupport.com

provider software users. @backup

Xdrive.com

Virtual Provides on-line meeting place where people with Geocities

community similar interests can communicate and find useful Fortunecity

information. Tripod

Portal Provides initial point of entry to the web along with Yahoo

specialized content and other services. Barrabas





Syndicator Aggregates content or applications from multiple Thinq

sources and resells them to other companies. Screaming

Internet Business Models

Dynamic pricing

Pricing of items based on real time interactions between buyers and sellers that

determine what an item is worth at any particular moment.

Portal

Web site or other service that provides an initial point of entry to the web or to

internal company data.

Banner ad

Graphic display on a web page used for advertising. The banner is linked to the

advertiser’s web site so that a person clicking on it will be transported to the

advertiser’s web site.

Syndicator

Business aggregating content or applications from multiple sources,packaging them

for distribution,and reselling them to third-party web sites.

Pure-play

Business model based solely on the internet.

Clicks-and-mortar

Business model where the web site is an extension of a traditional bricks-and-mortar

businesses.

Electronic Commerce

Business-to-Consumer(B2C)electronic commerce

Electronic retailing of products and services directly to individual

consumers.



Business-to-business(B2B)electronic commerce

Electronic sales of goods and services among businesses.



Consumer-to-consumer(C2C)electronic commerce

Consumers selling goods and services electronically to other

consumers.



Mobile commerce (m-commerce)

The use of wireless devices, such as cell phones or handheld digital

information appliances, to conduct e-commerce transactions over the

internet.

Customer-Centered Retailing



•Direct sales over web



•Interactive marketing and personalization.



•M-Commerce and next generation marketing



•Custom self-service

Manufacturer Distributor Retailer Customer









Manufacturer Retailer Customer









Manufacturer Customer

Disintermediation



The elimination of organizations or business process layers responsible

for certain intermediary steps in a value chain.







Reintermediation



The shifting of the intermediary role in a value chain to a new source.

Web Personalization



User Web

site







Based on your portfolio and recent market trends, here are some

recommendations.







Welcome back, Steve P.Munson. Check out these recommended titles:

One Minute Manager leading change results-based leadership.







Sarah,

Here are the items you want to bid on: Iron scroll lamp sparkle beach

barbie beatles silk tie.

Business-to-Business electronic commerce.

Exchange

Type of on-line marketplace where multiple buyers can purchase from multiple sellers

using a bid-ask system.





Sellers Buyers



S1 B1



B2

S2



B3

S3 Exchange



•Catalogs B4

S4

•Sourcing

•Automated purchasing B5

S5 •Processing and fulfillment

BEFORE

Phone or Arrange Negotiate Schedule Fill out bills

fax mill Carrier price shipments of lading

S

h

I

p Bill

m

FIBERMARKET EXCHANGE e

Customer

n

t



Reconcile received

goods against

receiving report

AFTER



Recovered

Fibermarket Paper

paper

exchange mill

supplier

Marshall Industries Virtual

Distribution System

CUSTOMER

UPS









SUPPLIES EXTRANET MODEM INTRANET









CUSTOMER

Digital wallet

Software that stores credit card, electronic cash, owner identification,and

address information and provides these data automatically during

electronic commerce purchase transactions.



Micropayment

payment for a very small sum of money, often $1.00 or less.



Electronic cash (e-cash)

Currency represented in electronic form that can be exchanged with

another e-cash user or retailer over the internet.



Smart card

A credit card-size plastic card that stores digital information and that

can be used for electronic payments in place of cash.



Person-to-person payment system

Electronic payment system for people who want to send money to

vendors or individuals who are not set up to accept credit card payments.

Examples of electronic payment systems for E-commerce





Payment Description Commercial

system example

Credit cards Secure services for credit card payments on PC Authorize

the internet that protect information Web authorize

transmitted among users, merchant sites, and IC Verify

processing banks



Electronic Digital currency that can be used for Flooz.com

cash(e-cash) micropayments e-Coin







Person-to- Send money via the web to individuals who Paypal

person payment are not set up to accept credit card payments Billpoint

systems. Yahoo payDirect

Payment System Description Commercial

Example



Electronic check Check with secure digital signature. Netchex









Smart card Microchip that stores electronic cash Mondex

to use for on-line and off-line

micropayments





Electronic bill Supports electronic payment for on- Checkfree

payment line and physical store purchases of Billserve.com

goods or services after the purchase

has taken place

Electronic Commerce Information Flow

Business-to-consumer Business-to-Business







Retailer Manufacturers,suppliers,

•Information and Distributors

Buyer •Orders •Purchases

•Service and support •Bids









Banks

•Credit checks

•payment authorization

•Electronic payments transfer

ORGANIZATION BENEFITS OF INTRANETS



•Connectivity: accessible from most computing platforms



•Can be tied to internal corporate systems



•Can create interactive applications with text,audio,and video



•Scalable to larger or smaller computing platforms as requirements change



•Easy to use,universal web interface



•Low start-up costs



Richer,more responsive information environment



Reduced information distribution costs

Human Resources

Finance and Accounting •Corporate policies

•General ledger reporting •Employee Savings plans

•Project costing •Benefits enrollment

•Annual reports •On-line training

•Budgeting •job postings





Corporate

Intranet







Manufacturing and production Sales and Marketing

•Quality measurements •Competitor analysis

•Maintenance schedules •Price updates

•Design specifications •promotional campaigns

•Machine output •Sales presentations

•Order tracking •Sales contacts

Intranets and Supply

Customers Chain Management Suppliers







Planning &

forecasting









Order processing Procurement

Intranet

Production

Accounting





Shipping Inventory





Logistics services Distributors

MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES AND

OPPORTUNITIES



•Unproven Business models





•Business Process change Requirements





•Channel Conflicts





•Legal Issues





•Security and Privacy



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