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Slide 2.1

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Chapter 2

E-commerce fundamentals

Slide 2.2

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Learning outcomes

• After completing this chapter the reader should be able to:– Complete an online marketplace analysis to

assess competitor, customer, and intermediary and competitor use of the Internet as part of strategy development

– Identify the main business and marketplace models for electronic communications and trading

– Evaluate the effectiveness of business and revenue models for online businesses.

Slide 2.3

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Management issues

• What are the implications of changes in marketplace structures for how we trade with customers and other partners?

• Which business models and revenue models should we consider in order to exploit the Internet?

• What will be the importance of online intermediaries and marketplace hubs to our business and what actions should we take to partner these intermediaries?

Slide 2.4

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.1 The environment in which e-business services are provided

Slide 2.5

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Activity – the e-commerce environment

• For each of the environment influences shown in Figure 2.1, give examples of why it is important to monitor and respond in an e-business context.

• For example, the personalization mentioned in the text is part of why it is important to respond to technological innovation.

Slide 2.6

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Environment constraints and opportunities

• Customers – which services are they offering via their web site that your organization could support them in?

• Competitors – need to be benchmarked in order to review the online services they are offering – do they have a competitive advantage?

• Intermediaries – are new or existing intermediaries offering products or services from your competitors while you are not represented?

• Suppliers – are suppliers offering different methods of procurement to competitors that give them a competitive advantage?

Slide 2.7

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

• Macro-environment• Society – what is the ethical and moral consensus on

holding personal information?• Country specific, international legal – what are the

local and global legal constraints for example, on holding personal information, or taxation rules on sale of goods?

• Country specific, international economic – what are the economic constraints of operating within a country or global constraints?

• Technology – what new technologies are emerging by which to deliver online services such as interactive digital TV and mobile phone-based access?

Environment constraints and opportunities (Continued)

Slide 2.8

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

• Capability to respond to environmental opportunities and threats to gain competitive advantages

• Read the pp. 58-59 Mini Case Study 2.1• The video may be searched form Google video

search.• Discuss the key points of strategic agility

• P. 59, Activity 2.1 Give examples of why it’s important to monitor and respond in an e-business context

Strategic Agility

Slide 2.9

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.2 Professor Donald Sull of London Business School talks aboutstrategic agilitySource: www.ft.com

Slide 2.10

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.3 An online marketplace map

Slide 2.11

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

• Customer Segment– The phase that the customer is at in his/her lifecycle

http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/economic/friedman/mmmarketsegmentation.htm

– Psychographic segmentation is sometimes also referred to as behavioural segmentation. http://tutor2u.net/business/marketing/segmentation-psychographic.html

• Search Intermediaries

Online Marketplace Analysis

Slide 2.12

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

• Intermediaries and Media Sites– Mainstream news media sites or portal, e.g., cbc.ca, Google– Niche or vertical media sites, e.g., e-consultancy– Price comparison sites (also called aggregator), e.g.,

http://www.pricecanada.com/ – Super-affiliates– Niche affiliate or bloggers—often small or individual sites

• Destination Sites– The sites that the marketer tries to generate traffic to

Online Marketplace Analysis

Slide 2.13

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Resource for Analysing e-Marketplace

• Ref. pp. 63-64, Tab 2.2. Some websites have changed and some need registration

Slide 2.14

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.4 Google trends for web sites – useful for benchmarking the growth of online intermediaries and destination sitesSource: http://trends.google.com/websites

Slide 2.15

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Marketplace Channel Structure

• It describes the way a manufacture / supplier delivers products and services to its customers

• Fig. 2.5 and Fig 2.6 display variety of options

Slide 2.16

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.5 B2B and B2C interactions between an organization, its suppliers and its customers

Slide 2.17

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

B2B and B2C characteristics

Characteristics B2C B2B

Proportion of adopters with access

Low to medium High to very high

Complexity of buying decisions

Relatively simple – individual and influencers

More complex – buying process involves users, specifiers, buyers, etc.

Channel Relatively simple – direct or from retailer

More complex, direct or via wholesaler, agent or distributor

Purchasing characteristics Low value, high volume or high value, low volume. May be high involvement

Similar volume/value. May be high Involvement. Repeat orders (rebuys) more common

Product characteristic Often standardized items Standardized items or bespoke for Sale

Slide 2.18

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.6 Disintermediation of a consumer distribution channel showing (a) the original situation, (b) disintermediation omitting the wholesaler, and(c) disintermediation omitting both wholesaler and retailer

Slide 2.19

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Reinter-mediation

• The creation of new intermediaries between customers and suppliers, such as search engine, price comparator, etc. such as http://www.esurance.com/, http://www.pricecanada.com/

• Supplies need to– Be represented with new intermediaries– Monitor other suppliers via intermediaries– Create own intermediaries

Slide 2.20

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.7 From original situation (a) to disintermediation (b) and reintermediation (c)

Slide 2.21

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Countermediation

• Creation of a new intermediary by an established company

• Example:– B&Q www.diy.com– Opodo www.opodo.com– Boots www.wellbeing.com www.handbag.com– Ford, Daimler (www.covisint.com)

• Partnering with existing intermediary – Mortgage broker Charcol and Freeserve

Slide 2.22

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Trading Location

• Trading can be done on seller-controlled site, buyer-controlled side, or neutral third-party site

• P. 67, Table 2.3 and P. 69 Fig. 2.8 present various options

Slide 2.23

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.8 Variations in the location and scale of trading on e-commerce sites

Slide 2.24

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Commercial Mechanisms

• There are several ways for closing a transactions

• Ref. p. 69, Table 2.4 for detail

• Priceline.com uses a new model that allows client to bid on the services such as hotel, airline ticket

Slide 2.25

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.9 Priceline Hong Kong service (www.priceline.com.hk)

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Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Multi-channel Marketplace Model

• Consumers use a combination of channels for their purchases.

• M-Channel Defines how different marketing channels should integrate and support each other

• Fig. 2.10 (p.71) shows an example channel chain map

Slide 2.27

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.10 Example channel chain map for consumers selecting an estate agent to sell their property

Slide 2.28

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Types of Online Intermediary

• Infor-mediaries— intermediaries that capture, profile, and sell customer information

• Metamediaries— intermediaries that assist with selection and discussion of about different product and services; they connects customers with the providers– Example: http://www.metacritic.com/

Slide 2.29

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.11 Metacritic (www.metacritic.com)Source: CBS Interactive

Slide 2.30

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Types of Intermediary

• Intermediaries changed quite a lot since E-commerce first started.

• For a comprehensive list of intermediaries, ref. p. 75, table 2.5

Slide 2.31

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Interactive activity – portals

Q1. Define portal (p.74)

Q2. Is a search engine the same as a portal? Yes, No

Q3. Is a search engine the same as a directory? Yes, No

Q4. List search engines / portals you use and explain why

Slide 2.32

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Search engines

Directories

News aggregators

MR aggregators

Comparers

Exchanges

Meta services

Portal

‘A gateway to information resources and services’

Slide 2.33

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.12 Number of searches through the Google Keyword ToolSource: Google https://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordTool

Slide 2.34

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Business model

Timmers (1999) defines a ‘business model’ as:

An architecture for product, service and information flows, including a description of the various business actors and their roles; and a description of the potential benefits for the various business actors; and a description of the sources of revenue.

Slide 2.35

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Business model

Key elements1. Value proposition-products & services to offer

2. Market or audience

3. Revenue models and cost base

4. Competitive environment

5. Value chain and marketing positioning

6. Representation in the physical & virtual world

7. Organizational structure

8. Management

Complete Activity 2.3 on page 79

Slide 2.36

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Business model

Timmers identified 11 different types of business models. –ref. p. 78

Alternative Perspectives on Business Model1. Marketplace position perspective

2. Revenue model perspective

3. Commercial arrangement perspective

Slide 2.37

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.13 Alternative perspectives on business models

Slide 2.38

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Revenue model

• It describes how a business generate revenue• What are traditional ways?• The New Ways

Slide 2.39

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Revenue Model- Publisher Example

• Advertising CPM (cost per thousand/mille)• Advertising CPC (cost per click)• Sponsorship of section, content, or widget• Affiliate Revenue (CPA or CPC)• Transaction Fee• Subscription access to content or services• Per-per-view Access to document• Subscription Data Access for e-mail Marketing

Slide 2.40

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.14 Alex Tew’s Million Dollar Home Page (www.milliondollarhomepage.com)

Slide 2.41

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Online Business Revenue Calculation

• What factors to consider?– Number and size of ad units– Ads Capacity to be sold– Fee level negotiated for different ads models– Traffic – Visitor engagement (time to stay)

Slide 2.42

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.15 Example spreadsheet for calculating a site revenue model. Available for download at www.davechaffey.com/Spreadsheets

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Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.15 Example spreadsheet for calculating a site revenue model. Available for download at www.davechaffey.com/Spreadsheets (Continued)

Slide 2.44

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Online Business Revenue Calculation

• Lab exercise: Activity 2.4 on page 85.

Slide 2.45

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.16 Econsultancy (www.econsultancy.com)

Slide 2.46

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Revenue Model- Auction Example

Roles for auction (Klein 1997)

• Price discovery

• Efficient Allocation mechanism

• Distribution mechanism—attracting audience

• Coordination mechanism

Slide 2.47

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Business Model- Auction Example

Types of auction

• English—forward or upward, initiated by sellerthis is more of conventional auctions we commonly seen in physical world and on virtual market

• Dutch—Reverse, downward, initiated by buyerThis is more commonly seen in large manufacture procurement

Slide 2.48

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Business Model- Auction Example

• Read the Case Study 2.1 on page 87-88. Discuss the questions.

• Research on the web to find Reverse auction examples in Canada

Slide 2.49

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Business Model-Start-ups

1. Many dot.com start-ups failed. Some succeeded and newer ones are still created.

2. Value the Internet start-ups (pp. 90-91)– Concept– Innovation– Execution—promotion, performance, availibility,

security– Traffic– Financing– Profile—publicity and awareness in the market

Slide 2.50

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Lab Exercises

Case Study 2.2 on Pages 91-93– Read the case

– Discuss the question 1-3 on page 93

Mini Case Study 2.3 on pages 93-94– What’s business model of Firebox?

– What made it a success?

Slide 2.51

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Figure 2.17 Firebox (www.firebox.com)

Slide 2.52

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Lab Exercises

Case Study 2.3 on Pages 95-98– What is Zopa’s business model?

– Do you think it can succeed and develop further and why?

Slide 2.53

Dave Chaffey, E-Business and E-Commerce Management, 4th Edition, © Marketing Insights Limited 2009

Next Class

Preview the E-consultancy Interview.107-109

Prepare to discuss the following– What’re the impacts of the Internet to publishing

industry– How are publish industry coping with the challenges?– How do they reach online readers?– How do they use social network for their advantage?– What a role do digital content and ecommerce play in

their business?– From this interview, how do you feel about the

publishing industry and where it is going?

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