Laudon-Traver Ec16 PPT ch02 Accessible
Laudon-Traver Ec16 PPT ch02 Accessible
Technology. Society.
Seventeenth Edition, Global Edition
Chapter 2
E-commerce Business
Strategies
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Learning Objectives
2.1 Identify the key components of e-commerce business
models.
2.2 Describe the major B2C business models.
2.3 Describe the major B2B business models.
2.4 Understand key business concepts and strategies
applicable to e-commerce.
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E-commerce Business Models
• Business model
– Set of planned activities designed to result in a profit
in a marketplace
• Business plan
– Describes a firm’s business model
• E-commerce business model
– Uses/leverages unique qualities of Internet and Web
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Eight Key Elements of a Business Model
1. Value proposition
2. Revenue model
3. Market opportunity
4. Competitive environment
5. Competitive advantage
6. Market strategy
7. Organizational development
8. Management team
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1. Value Proposition
• “Why should the customer buy from you?”
• Successful e-commerce value propositions:
– Personalization/customization
– Reduction of product search, price discovery costs
– Facilitation of transactions by managing product
delivery
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2. Revenue Model
• “How will you earn money?”
• Major types of revenue models:
– Advertising revenue model
– Subscription revenue model
▪ Freemium strategy
– Transaction fee revenue model
– Sales revenue model
– Affiliate revenue model
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3. Market Opportunity
• “What marketspace do you intend to serve and what is
its size?”
– Marketspace: Area of actual or potential commercial
value in which company intends to operate
– Realistic market opportunity: Defined by revenue
potential in each market niche in which company
hopes to compete
• Market opportunity typically divided into smaller niches
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4. Competitive Environment
• “Who else occupies your intended marketspace?”
– Other companies selling similar products in the same
marketspace
– Includes both direct and indirect competitors
• Influenced by:
– Number and size of active competitors
– Each competitor’s market share
– Competitors’ profitability
– Competitors’ pricing
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5. Competitive Advantage
• “What special advantages does your firm bring to the
marketspace?”
– Is your product superior to or cheaper to produce
than your competitors’?
• Important concepts:
– Asymmetries
– First-mover advantage, complementary resources
– Unfair competitive advantage
– Leverage
– Perfect markets
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6. Market Strategy
• “How do you plan to promote your products or services
to attract your target audience?”
– Details how a company intends to enter market and
attract customers
– Best business concepts will fail if not properly
marketed to potential customers
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7. Organizational Development
• “What types of organizational structures within the firm
are necessary to carry out the business plan?”
• Describes how firm will organize work
– Typically, divided into functional departments
– As company grows, hiring moves from generalists to
specialists
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8. Management Team
• “What kind of backgrounds should the company’s
leaders have?”
• A strong management team:
– Can make the business model work
– Can give credibility to outside investors
– Has market-specific knowledge
– Has experience in implementing business plans
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Categorizing E-commerce Business
Models
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B2C Business Models
• E-tailer
• Community provider (social network)
• Content provider
• Portal
• Transaction broker
• Market creator
• Service provider
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B2C Models: E-Tailer
• Online version of traditional retailer
• Revenue model: Sales
• Variations:
– Virtual merchant
– Bricks-and-clicks
– Catalog merchant
– Manufacturer-direct
• Low barriers to entry
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B2C Models: Community Provider
• Provide online environment (social network) where
people with similar interests can transact, share
content, and communicate
– Examples: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Pinterest
• Revenue models:
– Typically hybrid, combining advertising,
subscriptions, sales, transaction fees, and so on
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B2C Models: Content Provider
• Digital content on the Web:
– News, music, video, text, artwork
• Revenue models:
– Use variety of models, including advertising,
subscription; sales of digital goods
– Key to success is typically owning the content
• Variations:
– Syndication
– Aggregators
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B2C Business Models: Portal
• Search plus an integrated package of content and
services
• Revenue models:
– Advertising, referral fees, transaction fees,
subscriptions for premium services
• Variations:
– Horizontal/general (examples: Yahoo, AOL, MSN)
– Vertical/specialized (vortal) (example: Sailnet)
– Search (examples: Google, Bing)
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B2C Models: Transaction Broker
• Process online transactions for consumers
– Primary value proposition-saving time and money
• Revenue model:
– Transaction fees
• Industries using this model:
– Financial services
– Travel services
– Job placement services
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B2C Models: Market Creator
• Create digital environment where buyers and sellers can
meet and transact
– Examples: Priceline, eBay
– Revenue model: Transaction fees, fees to merchants
for access
• On-demand service companies (sharing economy):
platforms that allow people to sell services
– Examples: Uber, Airbnb
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B2C Models: Service Provider
• Online services
– Examples: Google
▪ Google Maps, Gmail, and so on
• Value proposition
– Valuable, convenient, time-saving, low-cost
alternatives to traditional service providers
• Revenue models:
– Sales of services, subscription fees, advertising,
sales of marketing data
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B2B Business Models
• Net marketplaces
– E-distributor
– E-procurement
– Exchange
– Industry consortium
• Private industrial network
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B2B Models: E-distributor
• Version of retail and wholesale store, MRO goods, and
indirect goods
• Owned by one company seeking to serve many
customers
• Revenue model: Sales of goods
• Example: Grainger
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B2B Models: E-procurement
• Creates digital markets where participants transact for
indirect goods
– B2B service providers, SaaS and PaaS providers
– Scale economies
• Revenue model:
– Service fees, supply-chain management, fulfillment
services
• Example: Ariba
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B2B Models: Exchanges
• Independently owned vertical digital marketplace for
direct inputs
• Revenue model: Transaction, commission fees
• Create powerful competition between suppliers
• Tend to force suppliers into powerful price competition;
number of exchanges has dropped dramatically
• Example: Go2Paper
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B2B Models: Industry Consortia
• Industry-owned vertical digital marketplace open to
select suppliers
• More successful than exchanges
– Sponsored by powerful industry players
– Strengthen traditional purchasing behavior
• Revenue model: Transaction, commission fees
• Example: SupplyOn
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B2B Models: Private Industrial Networks
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Copyright
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