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Marketing of High-Technology Products and Innovations Chapter 11: E-Business, E-Commerce and the Internet Chapter Overview Lessons from the Dot Com Boom and Bust Effective Website Design and Management Consumer Behavior and the Internet E-business and Organizational (Business) Behavior Realizing the Internet’s Full Potential © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Definitions E-business: the application of Internet technologies to streamline business processes E-commerce: the subset of E-business activities that enables and supports customers to do online transactions © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 History of the Internet 1969 Arpanet 1974 TCP 1980s Ethernet Protocol 1982 1990 TCP/IP HTML 1992 Open access to the Internet 1993 Mosaic 1994 Netscape Navigator A decentralized network of computers commissioned by the U.S. Department of Defense to maintain communications in the event of catastrophe. Limitations on the amount of data traffic it could carry. Scientists and engineers, and universities used the network to communicate about research projects. Evolved into the global Internet. Vince Cerf developed Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), which could transmit large amounts of traffic over long distances. Developed by XEROX PARC. Allowed stand-alone PCs to be used for local area networking. TCP evolved into the current Internet protocol. Tim Berners-Lee, a computer programmer at CERN, Switzerland, started work on distributing and accessing documents across servers on a network using Hyper Text Markup Language (HTML) and a primitive browser. Congress approved commercial use of the Internet, which for the first 20 years was only for scientists, engineers and administrators. Mark Andreeson and his colleagues at the University of Illinois released Mosaic, a user-friendly browser that built on the work of Tim Berners Lee. Netscape released the first commercial browser. © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Lessons from the Dot Com Bust - Startups Dot Com founders lacked business experience Websites lacked value proposition for users Lack of vision and strategy Overspent on customer acquisition Intense competition © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Lessons from the Dot Com Bust - Venture Capitalists Inadequate due diligence on startups Imitated competitors Unfamiliar with consumer marketing Understaffed, spread too thin Micro-managed startups © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Lessons from the Dot Com Bust - Competition Reactive, venture-funded startups Low entry barriers, overcapacity Lack of differentiation among Websites Formidable competition from traditional businesses, bricks-and-clicks © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Lessons from the Dot Com Bust - Overall Every E-business needs a solid foundation of business strategy Business model or business plan Capitalize on unique characteristics of online environment Lower communication cost © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Framework for Online Business Strategy STRATEGY B2C 1. Target: B2B BOTH 2. Channels to Serve: On-line (pure-play) Combination on- and off-line (Brick-and-click) 3. Value Proposition (and source of revenue stream) EXECUTION 1. Infrastructure: Technology People Physical assets 2. Financial projections (path to profitability) 3. Start-up financing © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Online Business Models Portals Market makers Seller storefronts E-tailers E-procurement © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Effective Web Site Design* Context Customization Community Connection Communication *All elements have reinforcement (consistency) and fit (meets needs of the target). © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Content Commerce Website Management Build Site Traffic Network effects Scale economies Retention rates Manage Online Customer Relationships © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Consumer Behavior and the Internet Inhibitors Not compatible with consumer behavior Access to technology Spam Viruses, hackers, and fraud Concerns about privacy Facilitators Empowerment (via access to information and transaction cost efficiencies) Bricks-and-Clicks channel Capability to join online communities Peer-to-peer commuting Broadband technologies Wireless technologies © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 E-Business Organizational Behavior Changing distribution channels Gathering of market research Purchasing: B2B electronic marketplaces Efficient human resource management Streamlined supply chain management Accelerated research and development Effective partner relationship management Business Uses of the Web Enhanced knowledge management Delivery of Web services Efficient training and education Customization of products Improved customer service operations © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Realizing the Internet’s Full Potential New Devices for Access Diffusion of Broadband Semantic Web Overcoming Other Barriers: • • • • Quality/reliability Privacy Sociocultural/legal questions Internet taxes © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005