ELC 200 Introduction to E-commerce

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ELC 200 Introduction to E-commerce DAY 26 Copyright © 2018, 2017, 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Day 26 Overview Questions? Assignment 7 Due Social Networks, Auctions, and Portals

Final Countdown Dec 4 Dec 7 Dec 14 @ 1Pm Social Networks, Auctions and Portals Assignment 7 Due Dec 7 B2b E-commerce: Supply Chain management and Collaborative Commerce Dec 14 @ 1Pm Quiz 4 and Final Presentations and papers Due

E-commerce 2017 business. technology. society. 13th edition Accessibility standards-compliant Copyright © 2018, 2017, 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved

E-commerce 2017 business. technology. society. 13th edition Chapter 11 Social Networks, Auctions, and Portals

Learning Objectives 11.1 Describe the different types of social networks and online communities and their business models. 11.2 Describe the major types of auctions, their benefits and costs, how they operate, when to use them, and the potential for auction abuse and fraud. 11.3 Describe the major types of Internet portals and their business models. Slide 3 is a list of textbook LO numbers and statements.

Social Network Fever Spreads to the Professions Class Discussion How has the growth of social networks enabled the creation of more specific niche sites? What are some examples of social network sites with a financial or business focus? Describe some common features and activities on these social network sites. What features of social networks best explain their popularity?

Social Networks and Online Communities Internet began as communications medium for scientists Early communities were bulletin boards, newsgroups (e.g., the Well) Today social networks, photo/video sharing, blogs have created new era of online socializing Social networks now one of most common Internet activities

What Is an Online Social Network? Working definition of social network Group of people Shared social interaction Common ties Sharing an area for period of time Online social network Internet removes geographic and time limitations of offline social networks

The Growth of Social Networks and Online Communities Top social networks: over 90% of social networking activity Facebook users: More than 35% are 44+ Growth of new social networks like Pinterest, Instagram, Snapchat Social networks not as lucrative as search engines U.S. social network sites: $15.4 billion Top three search engines: $30 billion

Figure 11.1: Top U.S. Social Networks 2016 Figure 11.1, Page 721. Facebook is far and away the dominant social network in the United States in terms of monthly unique visitors. SOURCES: Based on data from comScore, 2016a; Instagram, 2016.

Turning Social Networks into Businesses Most social networks monetize audiences through advertising LinkedIn – fees for premium services Twitter – struggling to make profits For sale Business use of social networks Marketing and branding Reaching younger audience Listening tool, monitoring online reputation Collaboration tool

Figure 11.2: U.S. Ad Spending on Social Networks, 2016 Figure 11.2, Page 725. SOURCE: Based on data from eMarketer, 2016f.

Insight on Society: The Dark Side of Social Networks Class discussion: How can businesses accurately judge whether negative comments are trolling or have merit and should be responded to? Have you ever left a negative comment about a product or business? Have others’ negative comments influenced a purchase? Should a business have any say in how an employee uses social networks outside of the office?

Types of Social Networks and Their Business Models (1 of 2) General communities: Offer opportunities to interact with general audience organized into general topics Advertising supported by selling ad space on pages and videos Practice networks: Offer focused discussion groups, help, and knowledge related to area of shared practice May be profit or nonprofit; rely on advertising or user donations

Types of Social Networks and Their Business Models (2 of 2) Interest-based social networks: Offer focused discussion groups based on shared interest in some specific subject Usually advertising supported Affinity communities: Offer-focused discussion and interaction with other people who share same affinity (self or group identification) Advertising and revenues from sales of products Sponsored communities: Created by government, nonprofit, or for-profit organizations for purpose of pursuing organizational goals

Social Network Features and Technologies Algorithms, computer algorithms Produce relationship-based content Affinity groups Profiles, Newsfeed, Timeline, Favorites (Like) Friends networks, Groups, Network discovery Games and apps Instant messaging, Message boards Storage See table 11.4 page 732

Insight on Technology: Trapped Inside the Facebook Bubble Class Discussion How does Facebook’s Trending Topics work? How does the News Feed algorithm work? Facebook has been described as an echo chamber. What is this, and is this a feature of other social networks? Should Facebook be held responsible for presenting an equal number of both liberal and conservative opinions? Should algorithms for presenting news to readers be monitored and adjusted by human editors? Why or why not? https://www.cnet.com/news/facebook-twitter-social-media-russian- troll-politics-chaos/ https://www.ft.com/content/c63d76d4-bd1e-11e7-b8a3- 38a6e068f464

Online Auctions C2C auctions, e.g. eBay B2C auctions Several hundred different auction sites in United States alone Online retail sites are adding auctions Sam Clubs Can be used to Sell goods and services Allocate resources Allocate and bundle resources

Benefits of Auctions Liquidity Price discovery Price transparency Market efficiency Lower transaction costs Consumer aggregation Network effects

Risks and Costs of Auctions Delayed consumption costs Monitoring costs Possible solutions include fixed pricing Equipment costs Trust risks Possible solution—rating systems Fulfillment costs Merchants also face risks; e.g. nonpayment, false bidding, bid rigging, and so on

Auctions as an E-commerce Business Model No inventory No fulfillment activities No warehouses, shipping, or logistical facilities eBay makes money from every stage in auction cycle Transaction fees, listing fees, financial services fees, advertising or placement fees Difficulty in establishing audience eBay dominates online auction market

Types of Auctions (1 of 2) English auction: Dutch Internet auction: Single item up for sale to single seller Highest bidder wins Dutch Internet auction: Public ascending price, multiple units Final price is lowest successful bid, which sets price for all higher bidders Penny (bidding fee) auction Must purchase bids ahead of time Items owned by the site Timed auction; last and highest bidder wins

Types of Auctions (2 of 2) Name Your Own Price Auction Users specify what they are willing to pay for goods or services and multiple providers bid for their business Prices do not descend and are fixed Consumer offer is commitment to buy at that price Enables sellers to unload unsold excess capacity Example: Priceline

Table 11.6: Factors to Consider When Choosing Auctions Considerations Description Type of product Rare, unique, commodity, perishable Stage of product life cycle Early, mature, late Channel-management issues Conflict with retail distributors; differentiation Type of auction Seller vs. buyer bias Initial pricing Low vs. high Bid increment amounts Auction length Short vs. long Number of items Single vs. multiple Price-allocation rule Uniform vs. discriminatory Information sharing Closed vs. open bidding

© 2017 Cengage Learning®. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.

© 2017 Cengage Learning®. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning management system for classroom use.

Auction Prices: Are They the Lowest? Auction prices not necessarily the lowest Auctions are social events Herd behavior Unintended results: Winner’s regret Seller’s lament Loser’s lament Consumer trust an important motivating factor in auctions

Fraud and Abuse in Auctions Fraud produces information asymmetries between buyers and sellers, causing auctions to fail Types include: Bid rigging, price matching, shill feedback, feedback extortion, shill bidding, bid siphoning Fraud prevention solutions include: Rating systems, watch lists, proxy bidding Investigation units

E-commerce Portals Most frequently visited sites on Web Original portals were search engines As search sites, attracted huge audiences Today provide: Navigation of the Web Commerce Content (owned and others’) Goal is to keep visitors present and viewing ads Enterprise portals Help employees find important organizational content

Figure 11.4: The Top Five U.S. Portal/Search Engines, 2016 Figure 11.4, Page 746. SOURCE: Based on data from Compete.com, 2016.

Types of Portals General purpose portals: Vertical market portals: Attempt to attract very large general audience Retain audience by providing in-depth vertical content channels Example: Yahoo Vertical market portals: Attempt to attract highly-focused, loyal audiences with specific interest in: Community Specialized content

Figure 11.5: Two General Types of Portals: General Purpose and Vertical Market Portals Figure 11.5, Page 749. There are two general types of portals: general-purpose and vertical market. Vertical market portals may be based on affinity groups or on focused content.

Portal Business Models General advertising revenue Tenancy deals Fixed charge for number of impressions, exclusive partnerships, “sole providers” Commissions on sales Subscription fees Charging for premium content Applications and games