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1. 16-3 Important issue in a new e-commerce business 1.Identify a consumer or business need in the marketplace 2.Investigate the opportunity 3.Determine.

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Presentation on theme: "1. 16-3 Important issue in a new e-commerce business 1.Identify a consumer or business need in the marketplace 2.Investigate the opportunity 3.Determine."— Presentation transcript:

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3 16-3 Important issue in a new e-commerce business 1.Identify a consumer or business need in the marketplace 2.Investigate the opportunity 3.Determine the business owner’s ability to meet the need

4 16-4 Building or Acquiring a Web Site Classification of Web Sites – informational Web site A Web site that does little more than provide information about the business and its products and services – interactive Web site A Web site that provides opportunities for the customers and the business to communicate and share information

5 16-5 – attractors Web site features that attract and interact with visitors in the target stakeholder group – transactional Web site A Web site that sells products and services – collaborative Web site A site that allows business partners to collaborate Building or Acquiring a Web Site Classification of Web Sites

6 16-6 Web Site Design information architecture How the site and its Web pages are organized, labeled, and navigated to support browsing and searching throughout the Web site Consistency Response time Appearance Quality Assurance Availability Interactivity Content Usability Security Scalability Web Site Design Criteria Navigation

7 16-7 Web Site Design

8 16-8 Web Site Design

9 Stage 1 – Creating an EC Architecture= a plan for organizing the underlying infrastructure & applications of site. Business Goals Business Vision Application Modules Hardware / software Security / reliability required HR & procedures for implementing the architecture Stages of Development process

10 Stage 2 – Selecting a development option In-house Outsource Combination of both Stages of Development process

11 Stage 3 – Installing – Testing Unit testing Integration testing Usability testing Acceptance testing – Deploying EC applications Stages of Development process

12 16-12 Stage 3: Building or Acquiring a Web Site – Select a Web host – Register a domain name – Create and manage content – Design the Web site – Construct the Web site and test – Market and promote the Web site

13 16-13 Web Site Hosting and Obtaining a Domain Name Web Hosting Options – storebuilder service A hosting service that provides disk space and services to help small and microbusinesses build a Web site quickly and cheaply Registering a Domain Name – domain name A name-based address that identifies an Internet- connected server. Usually, it refers to the portion of the address to the left of.com and.org, etc. – domain name registrar A business that assists prospective Web site owners with finding and registering the domain name of their choice

14 16-14 Content Creation, Delivery, and Management content The text, images, sound, and video that make up a Web page Categories and Types of Content – dynamic Web content Content that must be kept up-to-date – commodity content Information that is widely available and generally free to access on the Web

15 Stage 4 – Operation and maintenance Site continually updated Study usage patterns and performance Stages of Development process

16 16-16 Content Management and Maintenance – content management The process of adding, revising, and removing content from a Web site to keep content fresh, accurate, compelling, and credible – Content testing and updating – Measuring content quality – Pitfalls of content management – Content removal – Content management software

17 The Major EC Applications & their functionalities B2C storefronts An Electronic storefront need to offer buyers the ability to:- – Discover, search, evaluate, compare. – Select, negotiate – Place an order – Pay – Confirm an order – Track orders

18 On the other hand, the merchant needs to:- – Provide access to current catalogs – Provide E-shopping cart – Verify customer ’ s credit – Process orders – Arrange product delivery – Track shipments – Provide registrations – Provide FAQ – Analyze purchases – Provide language translation – Measure & analyze traffic at the site The Major EC Applications & their functionalities

19 The 3 inter-related subsystems: 1.Catalog, products, prices, promotions, shopping cart 2.Transaction system 3.Payment gateway

20 The Major EC Applications & their functionalities Supplier Sell-side B2B sites – Similar to B2C but has additional features:- Personalized catalogs & web-pages B2B payment gateway Electronic contract negotiation features Product configuration by customers Affiliate program capabilities Business alerts

21 The Major EC Applications & their functionalities E-Procurement site – Is an online intermediary that offers businesses access to hundreds of parts & services provided by suppliers. Aggregating Catalogs sites – Some specialized requirements for this type of site:- Search engine Comparison engine Ordering mechanism Budget & authorization features Usage comparison Payment mechanism

22 The Major EC Applications & their functionalities Reverse Auctions sites – Sites of this sort provides:- Catalog of items content management Search engine Personalized pages Reverse auction mechanism Ability to bid dynamically Automatic vendor approval & workflow Electronic collaboration with trading partners.

23 The Major EC Applications & their functionalities Online Exchange sites – An e-market place tying many buyers to many suppliers – Combines functions of buy-side, e-procurement, auction sites, in addition to:- Collaboration services Community services Data mining, customer behavior tracking Transaction flow managers Negotiation mechanism Language translation Comprehensive links to related resources

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25 Where does e-commerce begin… E-commerce, whether indirect or direct, is a layer (or several) above the actual infrastructure. It can consist of any range of activities unique to the needs or demands of specific consumer or user groups. – E.g., On-line business activities – E.g., On-line information sources Introduction

26 Why care about emerging legal and regulatory frameworks? There is an expression that arose from old western movies – “where the pavement ends and the West begins” – The Internet and emerging e-commerce has created new and emerging business and legal challenges – Dot ‘com’ companies challenged traditional business models – E-commerce, whether direct or indirect challenges legal and regulatory frameworks in which they’re developing – Have seen much activity in Europe, and beginning to see more in other regions of the world. Introduction

27 Why care?…. Local policy and regulatory issues impact operations on the Internet – Each country or distinct economy has unique issues, distinct to respective laws, cultures, perspectives. Legal frameworks impact current and future use and functionality of the Internet and and the benefits of e-commerce – That is, the laws in tangible world apply on-line, and often new ones for on-line are created. Introduction

28 Interest by industry and legislators Impact is on all aspects relating to e-commerce, that is conducting some for of business on-line. – Impacts consumers, and operational costs. Perpetuated by Internet explosion Social awareness Consumer demands Solutions to challenges – some technical, much private sector, and some legislative – National, international, regional. – The recipe to allow continued development and use Introduction

29 Global e-commerce issues – jurisdictional distinctions Introduction

30 Issue areas Authentication Privacy and data protection Liability and responsibility for illegal acts, including content issues Cybercrime Others Overview

31 Authentication Authentication of users – E.g, signing, certificates Uses include – verification of source in communication – authentication of data holders for data protection purposes Issues include: – Mutual recognition and inter-operability – Responsibilities and Liabilities – Varying legal recognitions of online authentication – Opportunity for any business or one national source Overview

32 Data Protection [Privacy] Protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data. – Personal data ranges from name, address, other. Collection, use and transmission of personally identifiable data – – Collection on websites, customers, users, employees. – Use for purposes other than intended – Transferred by company, customers, or others to another party our third country. Overview

33 Data Protection cont. Transfer of data to a third country Impact on companies, consumers, users – Marketing – Customer service – Employees Solutions – Safe harbor areas (abide by mutually approved principles) – Opt-in versus opt-out Overview

34 International Copyright Protection International is Copyright protection on-line – WIPO Copyright Treaties – National Implementation Digital Millennium Copyright Act EU E-Commerce and Copyright Directives Responsibilities and Liabilities – Transmitting content – Caching content – Hosting of content Overview

35 International Copyright Protection cont… Main criteria in determining responsibilities and liabilities – Threshold of knowledge or control Where did the content come from Model – Notice and Takedown – Transmission – merely relay it. Can’t monitor – Hosting – if proven to have knowledge, then take down Notice indemnification Overview

36 Content – transmissions and hosting Related to the international copyright debate came the discussion of illegal or harmful content. But problem – what is legal in one jurisdiction, may be illegal in another. – E.g., Yahoo case, Google case – Or advertising -- Lands End in Germany Attempted solutions: – Companies part of connection – either ISP, registry, often sought to monitor – Introducing a gTLD that is only for one content area, such as.kids – not feasible, what is one parent’s view as appropriate for their child may not be that of another. Overview

37 Content – transmissions and hosting Challenge – – enforceability – limited applicability to relevant jurisdiction – cost goes to consumer Solutions – notice and takedown – watch groups – content rating It is that content is allowed and encouraged to develop – consumers access sites where there is content, while global, why not have the source local. Overview

38 Cybercrime Recent developments seen in Europe, with the Council of Europe, European Commission, United States, Australia, South Africa, etc. Cybercrime convention seeks to – harmonize domestic criminal substantive law in the area of cyber- crime – provide domestic procedures to investigate and prosecute offences committed by means of a computer system or evidence in relation to electronic form – set up a fast and effective regime of international cooperation. Overview

39 Cybercrime – cont. Issues and Impact – Interception – Data Retention – Cost Reimbursement – Corporate Liability – Protection when cooperating with law enforcement – Privacy/Due process Overview

40 Intellectual Property Copyright – protection on-line Trademark – protection in global market – domain name and use of trademarks Patents Overview

41 Conclusion Industries (current and emerging), Internet, e- commerce, opportunities, and consumers impacted Main challenges to substantive issues – Avoid patchwork of laws, policies, etc. – self regulatory v. legislative solutions – Technical reality … These are new and emerging areas in the e- commerce legal field, they have to do with the outcome of using the Internet for all it has to offer. Summary


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