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September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Key questions answered in this chapter: What are the four stages to the evolution of B2B capabilities? What are.

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Presentation on theme: "September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Key questions answered in this chapter: What are the four stages to the evolution of B2B capabilities? What are."— Presentation transcript:

1 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Key questions answered in this chapter: What are the four stages to the evolution of B2B capabilities? What are the three categories of B2B? Describe the four major steps of the B2B sell-side evolution. Describe the major challenges to implementing systems for indirect e-procurement. Describe the major challenges to implementing systems for Net marketplaces or Net exchanges.

2 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up The Four Stages to the Evolution of B2B Capabilities 1. Broadcast- A business creates a Web page to provide fundamental information to the customer (how to contact the company, company financial information, and product and services offered by the company) 2. Interact- The company enables information to flow in both directions (from the organization to the customer and back), Examples: Having the technology to allow a customer to email the company, establishing a web-based customer service system

3 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up The Four Stages to the Evolution of B2B Capabilities (cont’d) 3. Transact- Take, manage, and support commerce transactions with customers using the Internet 4. Collaborate- The Web-based gathering of information to generate forecasts to be utilized by the company and its trading partners

4 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Three Categories of B2B 1. B2B Sell-side Solution- Selling products to other businesses via the Internet 2.Indirect E-Procurement- The Web-based purchase of non-strategic products and services 3.Net Marketplaces and Net Exchanges- Created to provide Web-based capabilities that facilitate the interaction and exchange of commerce transactions between buyers, sellers, and other trading partners

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8 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Technology Components of B2B Sell-Side Content Management- Allows the organization to create, aggregate, store, maintain, and present the content contained and presented on its website (text, pictures, graphics, and sound) Catalog Management- Enables an organization to load and manage a Web-based catalog Order Processing and Fulfillment- Allows users to place online orders and the capability for the company to accurately provide the product/service Customer Relationship Management- Support online customers

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10 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Challenges of B2B Sell-Side Content Ownership- Identifying the source of different content and creating a single point of contact and responsibility for the site content Customer Data Access and Visibility- Utilizing internal applications to present accurate information to support the Web-based interface Channel Integration- Organizations must integrate the sales channel with other channels in order to provide adequate customer service Systems Integration- Integrate the Web-based system with the back-office systems in real time

11 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Technology Components of Indirect E-Procurement Requisitioning - Allows a buyer to create a purchase request for products/services Control and Approval - After the purchase, the system allows the organization to define and configure spending limits for individual buyers or companies and approve purchases based on those pre-determined monetary parameters Transaction Processing - Creates purchase orders to be sent to the suppliers

12 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Technology Components of Indirect E-Procurement (cont’d) Receiving and Exception Processing- Allows the buying organization to record receipt of goods/services Financial and Payment Processing- Applications that facilitate the payment process, allow the buyer to purchase merchandise using a credit card or corporate purchasing card

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14 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Challenges of E-Procurement Strategic Sourcing- Determining where e-procurement is most needed within an organization, in order to maximize the initial benefits of the implementation (prioritize) Adoption and Compliance- Ensuring that purchasing agents and employees are utilizing the new technology Catalog Content Management- The process of making sure that the catalog is properly maintained in a timely manner

15 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Challenges of E-Procurement (cont’d) Supplier Integration- The buying organization and supplier must determine the business process for business document exchange (purchase orders, advanced shipping notices, and invoices) Back-Office Integration- The E-procurement system needs to integrate with purchasing, inventory and warehousing, invoicing, and the planning requirements departments

16 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Net Marketplaces and Net Exchanges Organizations realized point-to-point interaction with trading partners was not cost effective in all relationships, such as non-strategic partnering E-procurement vendors created an online marketplace where existing buyers and suppliers could exchange catalog information and transact commerce without the time, effort, and money required in point-to-point interaction Net marketplaces and Net exchanges enabled a many-to- many (buyers-to-suppliers) model

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18 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Three Capabilities of Net Marketplaces 1.Commerce Capabilities- Provide the ability for products and services to be purchased and sold in the Net marketplace Catalog Management- Allows the operator to define, populate, and maintain a marketplace catalog with all the products and services available Price Discovery- Determine the buying or selling price of a product/service. There are two categories of price discovery:

19 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Three Capabilities of Net Marketplaces (cont’d) –Fixed: Allows the supplier to assign a set price for a particular item –Dynamic: The buyer and supplier negotiate a price where a fixed price may not exist, Examples: negotiated exchanges, auction/reverse auction, bid/ask exchange 2. Content Management Capabilities- The storage, management, and presentation of non-catalog content for users of the Net marketplace –Types of content include: documents, text, pictures, sound, and video

20 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Three Capabilities of Net Marketplaces (cont’d) 3. Community Capabilities- Provides discussion forums, online chat, and instant messaging, which can be utilized to enhance customer support and/or to develop third-party services for various critical processes, such as converting currency transactions in real time

21 September 2001Chapter 10: B2B Grows Up Challenges of the Net Marketplace Catalog Content Management- Acquiring and maintaining all aspects of catalog content Internationalization- The capability for a user to facilitate commerce across geographical boundaries from anywhere in the world Business Model- Develop a business model that provides enough value to the trading partners to justify the effort and costs associated with participation Adoption and Liquidity- Attracting and retaining buyers and sellers


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