Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byReginald Stafford Modified over 9 years ago
1
Lesson 1 E-COMMERCE MANAGEMENT
2
What is a Small Business Entrepreneur? Entrepreneur n. a business man or woman of positive disposition who attempts to make profit from opportunities by risk, initiative and guidance from 2-small- business.com
3
SESSION OBJECTIVES INTERNET EVOLUTION COMMERCIAL POTENTIAL? ROLE OF INTERNET E-COMMERCE AND MANAGEMENT THEORIES STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
4
ORIGINS PENTAGON’S FOR DATA SHARING EMERGENCE OF ARPANET PERMITTING DATA EXCHANGE IN “PACKETS” CERF AND KAHN DEVELOPED TCP/IP COMMUNICATIONS PROTOCOL TOMLINSON DEVELOPED E-MAIL
5
TECHNOLOGY INTERNET COMPRISED OF LANS (LOCAL AREA) AND WANS (WIDE AREA NETWORKS) LINKED INTO GLOBAL NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE EACH INTERNET SITE HAS UNIQUE “DOMAIN NAME” STAGE HAS BEEN REACHED WHERE IMAGES, VIDEO CLIPS, GRAPHICS CAN ALL BE RAPIDLY TRANSMITTED
6
REAL OPPORTUNITY 1992 U.S. INTERNET GENERATED $332 BILLION REVENUE EQUIVALENT TO ENTIRE GDP OF SWITZERLAND 1999 EMERGENCE OF MIXED RETAILERS (INTERNET PLUS SHOP) GROWING FASTER THAN PURE ON-LINE OPERATIONS MIXED MODEL OFFERS LOWER COST PER CUSTOMER ATTRACTED
7
FORRESTER RESEARCH 2004 FORECASTS INTERNET RETAIL SALES $184 BILLION AND B2B $1.3 TRILLION IN MID-90s MANY OBSERVERS SCEPTICAL OF COMMERCIAL OPPORTUNITY LARGE OPERATIONS ONLY JUST BREAKING EVEN AND MANY STILL RUNNING AT LOSS VOLATILITY IN DOT.COM SHARE PRICES
8
BEYOND BROCHUREWARE EARLY SITES JUST PRESENTED STATIC ON-LINE BROCHURES SHOULD SEE INTERNET AS ONE OF NUMEROUS ELECTRONIC INFORMATION EXCHANGE SYSTEMS COMBINE PLATFORMS TO FORM ELECTRONIC OR E-COMMERCE
9
ARTHUR ANDERSEN STUDY OF “FIVE TRUTHS” – VERTICAL DISINTEGRATION OF SUPPLY CHAINS – KNOWLEDGE MORE VALUABLE THAN FIXED ASSETS – ZERO INVESTMENT COST TO EXPAND CAPACITY – OFFERS MARKETS OF “PERFECT INFORMATION” – CREATES INSTANT RESPONSE SUPPLY CHAINS
10
CHOICE OF “LOW” OR “HIGH” USE TO DELIVER INFORMATION CHOICE OF TRANSACTIONAL VERSUS RELATIONSHIP ORIENTATION RESULTS IN 4 ALTERNATIVE STRATEGIC POSITIONS HIGH INFORMATION/RELATIONSHIP ORIENTATION IN AMAZON.COM OPERATION
11
FIGURE 1:1 AN E-COMMERCE ALTERNATIVE ORIENTATION MATRIX Low High High Low Information focus orientation Integrated e-commerce orientation Low involvement orientation Transaction focus orientation Role of E- commerce in Information Provision Role of E-commerce in supporting the Purchase Transaction
12
INTERNET ECONOMICS INTERNET IS REDUCING OPERATING COSTS INCREASE IN ORGANISATIONAL PRODUCTIVITY PERFECT INFORMATION MARKET SCENARIOS COULD DRIVE DOWN PRICES QUESTION IS WHICH ECONOMIES, DEVELOPED OR DEVELOPING NATIONS, WILL BENEFIT
13
The current internal compentencies and ability to support E- commerce The Current Market and Role of E- commerce SWOT Future Objectives Incorporating E-commerce E-commerce Marketing Strategy E-commerce Marketing Plan Plan Implemen- tation Evaluation and Performance Control FIGURE 1:2 THE E-COMMERCE MARKETING STRATEGY PLANNING PROCESS Strengths and Weaknesses Opportunities and Threats EXTERNAL ANALYSIS INTERNAL ANALYSIS
14
STRATEGIC MODEL IS SIMILAR TO PRE- INTERNET MODEL ISSUE OF:WHERE ARE WE NOW? WHERE ARE WE GOING? HOW TO GET THERE? ENTREPRENEURIAL DOT COMS TEND NOT TO PLAN MORE APPLICABLE TO EXISTING FIRMS ENTERING E- COMMERCE
15
EARLY LESSONS DO NOT HAVE UNREALISTIC EXPECTATIONS OVER REVENUE NEED TO CONVERT “VISITS” INTO SALES NEED TRADITIONAL PROMOTIONAL TECHNIQUES TO BUILD WEB-SITE AWARENESS AFFILIATION WITH OTHER WEB-SITES CAN ASSIST SITE SHOULD BE MANAGED BY MARKETERS, NOT “TECHIES”
16
Reasons to join 2-small-business.com To get FREE marketing contentFREE marketing content To become an Entrepreneur To get these benefitsbenefits To get discounts on our servicesservices To get FREE software
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.