E-Commerce
Ecommerce, e-commerce and EC are all notations for electroniccommerce, which simply refers to any transaction done electronically, usually via the
Internet. Fundamentally, e-commerce has changed the way in which business is conducted. It may
include “old” forms of e-commerce such as fax, EDI, and the electronic transfer of funds as well as
the more recent and revolutionary changes that are now classified into B2B, B2C, C2C, P2P and
Mobile commerce (Laudon and Traver, 2002). B2C means business-to-consumer commerce; B2B defines
business transactions between commercial companies; C2C enables consumers selling and buying from
each other. Online auction sites are examples of C2C. P2P represents Peer-to-Peer exchanges.
Overview
According to a new report from Gartner, the global e-commerce market is forecasted to risefrom $1,930 billion in 2002 to $8,530 billion in 2005. ElectricNews reports that European business-to-business e-commerce sales
are expected to grow from $500 billion in 2002, to $2,300 billion by 2005. In the B2C market,
although some companies have failed and exited the e-commerce market, a recent study conducted by
the industry group Shop.org, the Boston Consulting Group, and Forrester Research predicts that B2C
e-commerce in the United States will grow from $38.8 billion in 2000 to $184.5 billion in 2004.
BizRate reports the average consumer transaction is up from $120 to $127 per purchase and online
transactions grew from $69 million in the second quarter of 2001, to $91.5 million in Q1 2002. In
addition to these industry forecasts, eMarketer estimates that nearly half of Internet users in the
US spent an average $1,089 on goods and services in 2002 purchased online. Jupiter expects online
retail spending to reach $105 billion by 2007, accounting for 5% of all US retail spending and
influencing 34% of all US retail spending.
shows the payment methods and consumer comfortable level as reported by Jupiter Research
(2003).
Consumer Comfort Level Using Various Payment Methods, March 2003 by Jupiter Research | ||
---|---|---|
Comfortable | Uncomfortable | |
Billed later | 68% | 18% |
Credit card | 55% | 27% |
Debit card | 32% | 49% |
Checking account | 25% | 57% |
Debit with PIN | 20% | 66% |
12-2 shows the top 10 e-commerce Web sites, the size of their consumer markets and the
effectiveness of the Web site to reach consumers. eBay which
represents C2C (consumer-to-consumer market) in the e-commerce segment, tops the list. eBay is made
up of a variety of people: individual buyers and sellers, small businesses and even Fortune 100
companies. The great shopping experience eBay offers to its members, including an interactive
environment created by discussion and chat boards, contributes to its success.
Rank | Brand or Channel | Industry | Unique Audience | Active Reach |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | EBay | Auction | 14,881,000 | 17.19% |
2. | Amazon | Online Retail | 8,795,000 | 10.16% |
3. | MSN Shopping | Online Retail | 3,364,000 | 3.89% |
4. | Yahoo! Shopping | Online retail | 3,006,000 | 3.47% |
5. | Expedia | Travel | 2,752,000 | 3.18% |
6. | Dell | Computer | 2,718,000 | 3.14% |
7. | Orbitz.com | Travel | 2,371,000 | 2.74% |
8. | Wal-Mart Stores | Online Retail | 2,204,000 | 2.55% |
9. | DealTime | Online Retail | 2,146,000 | 2.48% |
10. | Travelocity | Travel | 2,049,000 | 2.37% |
Development
E-commerce involves both selling and buying, and each needs its own platform. Sell-Sideplatforms cover content, order, catalog management, analytics, interactive selling, legacy
integration and commerce syndication. Only a few vendors provide all these complete functions.
Administrative tools include product editors, sophisticated color and font editors, inventory
control, automated order status updates, product cloning, coupon activation, personalized marketing
tracking, affiliate tracking, html promotional e-mail capability, shipping manager, real-time
statistics, and image manager. Powerful administrative e-commerce tools enable virtual companies to
better protect their own business and their customers.Feature-rich software is now increasing the competitiveness of e-commerce sites. It is not
advisable to use the plentiful, free but outdated shopping cart software that does not include
security and transaction support features. A successful e-commerce site manages inventory, tracks
orders, and has a fully edited storefront. Web-based control panels are mandatory for
success.
However, it takes more than richly featured e-commerce software to be successful in the
virtual environment. Marketing strategies must be designed into the Web pages to increase site
traffic, which, as in brick-and-mortar business, must then convert visitors to customers. There are
many marketing tools available to persuade visitors to become customers and then to retain their
repeat business: coupon activation and other personalized discounts, enabling gift transactions,
tracking affiliates, promotional emails, product cross-selling, and so on. When an e-commerce
company maintains real-time statistics on inventory and purchases, it can evaluate the
effectiveness of a marketing strategy, even adjusting promotions in real-time based on demand and
availability of stock.