INTRODUCTION
Unless you have been living under a rock for the last two years, you
have heard about e-commerce! And you have heard about it from
several different angles. For example:
- You have heard about all of the companies that offer e-commerce
because you have been bombarded by their TV and radio ads.
- You have read all of the news stories about the shift to e-commerce
and the hype that has developed around e-commerce companies.
- You have seen the huge valuations that web companies get in
the stock market, even when they don't make a profit.
- And you may have actually purchased something on the web, so
you have direct personal experience with e-commerce
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COMMERCE
THE ELEMENTS OF COMMERCE
WHY THE HYPE
THE LURE OF E - COMMERCE
EASY AND HARD ASPECTS OF E - COMMERCE
BUILDING AN E - COMMERCE SITE
IMPLEMENTING AN E - COMMERCE SITE |
COMMERCE
Before we get into a complete discussion of e-commerce, it
is helpful to have a good mental image of plain old commerce first.
If you understand commerce, then e-commerce is an easy extension.
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary defines commerce as follows:
com.merce n [MF, fr. L commercium, fr. com- + merc-, merx merchandise]
(1537) 1: social intercourse: interchange of ideas, opinions, or
sentiments 2: the exchange or buying and selling of commodities
on a large scale involving transportation from place to place 3:
sexual intercourse
We tend to be interested in the second definition, but that third
one is interesting and unexpected - maybe that's what all of the hype
is about!
So commerce is, quite simply, the exchange of goods and services,
usually for money. We see commerce all around us in in millions
of different forms. When you buy something at a grocery store or
at Wal-mart you are participating in commerce. In the same way,
if you cart half of your possessions onto your front lawn for a
yard sale, you are participating in commerce from a different angle.
If you go to work each day for a company that produces a product,
that is yet another link in the chain of commerce. When you think
about commerce in these different ways, you instinctively recognize
several different roles:
- Buyers - these are people with money who want to purchase a
good or service.
- Sellers - these are the people who offer goods and services
to buyers. Sellers are generally recognized in two different forms:
retailers who sell directly to consumers and wholesalers
or distributors who sell to retailers and other businesses.
- Producers - these are the people who create the products and
services that sellers offer to buyers. A producer is always, by
necessity, a seller as well. The producer sells the products produced
to wholesalers, retailers or directly to the consumer.
You can see that at this high level, commerce is a fairly simple concept!
Whether it is something as simple as a person making and selling popcorn
on a street corner or as complex as a contractor delivering a space
shuttle to NASA, all of commerce at its simplest level relies on buyers,
sellers and producers. |
THE
ELEMENTS OF COMMERCE
When you get down to the actual elements of commerce and commercial
transactions, things get slightly more complicated because you have
to deal with the details. However, these details boil down to a finite
number of steps. The following list highlights all of the elements
of a typical commerce activity. In this case, the activity is the
sale of some product by a retailer to a customer:
- If you would like to sell something to a customer, at the very
core of the matter is the something itself. You must have a product
or service to offer. The product can be anything from ball
bearings to back rubs. You may get your products directly from
a producer, or you might go through a distributor to get them,
or you may produce the products yourself.
- You must also have a place from which to sell your products.
Place can sometimes be very ephemeral - for example a phone number
might be the place. If you are a customer in need of a back rub,
if you call "Judy's Backrubs, Inc." on the telephone to order
a back rub, and if Judy shows up at your office to give you a
backrub, then the phone number is the place where you purchased
this service. For most physical products we tend to think of the
place as a store or shop of some sort. But if you think about
it a bit more you realize that the place for any traditional mail
order company is the combination of an ad or a catalog and a phone
number or a mail box.
- You need to figure out a way to get people to come to your place.
This process is known as marketing. If no one knows that
your place exists, you will never sell anything. Locating your
place in a busy shopping center is one way to get traffic. Sending
out a mail order catalog is another. There is also advertising,
word of mouth and even the guy in a chicken suit who stands by
the road waving at passing cars!
- You need a way to accept orders. At Wal-mart this is
handled by the check out line. In a mail order company the orders
come in by mail or phone and are processed by employees of the
company.
- You also need a way to accept money. If you are at Wal-mart
you know that you can use cash, check or credit cards to pay for
products. Business-to-business transactions often use purchase
orders. Many businesses do not require you to pay for the product
or service at the time of delivery, and some products and services
are delivered continuously (water, power, phone and pagers are
like this). That gets into the whole area of billing and
collections.
- You need a way to deliver the product or service, often known
as fulfillment. At a store like Wal-mart fulfillment is
automatic. The customer picks up the item of desire, pays for
it and walks out the door. In mail-order businesses the item is
packaged and mailed. Large items must be loaded onto trucks or
trains and shipped.
- Sometimes customers do not like what they buy, so you need a
way to accept returns. You may or may not charge certain
fees for returns, and you may or may not require the customer
to get authorization before returning anything.
- Sometimes a product breaks, so you need a way to honor warranty
claims. For retailers this part of the transaction is often handled
by the producer.
- Many products today are so complicated that they require customer
service and technical support departments to help customers
use them. Computers are a good example of this sort of product.
On-going products like cell phone service may also require on-going
customer service because customers want to change the service
they receive over time. Traditional items (for example, a head
of lettuce), generally require less support that modern electronic
items.
You find all of these elements in any traditional mail order company.
Whether the company is selling books, consumer products, information
in the form of reports and papers, or services, all of these elements
come into play.
In an e-commerce sales channel you find all of these elements as
well, but they change slightly. You must have the following elements
to conduct e-commerce:
- A product
- A place to sell the product - in the e-commerce case a web site
displays the products in some way and acts as the place
- A way to get people to come to your web site
- A way to accept orders - normally an on-line form of some sort
- A way to accept money - normally a merchant account handling
credit card payments. This piece requires a secure ordering page
and a connection to a bank. Or you may use more traditional billing
techniques either on-line or through the mail.
- A fulfillment facility to ship products to customers (often
outsource-able). In the case of software and information, however,
fulfillment can occur over the Web through a file download mechanism.
- A way to accept returns
- A way to handle warrantee claims if necessary
- A way to provide customer service (often through email, on-line
forms, on-line knowledge bases and FAQs, etc.)
In addition, there is often a strong desire to integrate other business
functions or practices into the e-commerce offering. An extremely
simple example -- you might want to be able to show the customer the
exact status of an order.  |
WHY
THE HYPE?
There is a huge amount of hype that surrounds e-commerce. Given the
similarities with mail order commerce, you may be wondering why the
hype is so common. Take, for example, the following quotes from this
page :
- "On the retail side alone, Forrester projects $17 billion in
sales to consumers over the Internet by the year 2001. Some segments
are really starting to take off." --Forrester Research, "Content
and Context..," DMA Insider, Spring 1998.
- "Worldwide business access to the Web is expected to grow at
an even faster rate than the US market--from 1.3 million in 1996
to 8 million by 2001." --O'Reilly & Associates
- "Home continues to be the most popular access location, with
nearly 70% of users accessing from their homes...almost 60% shop
online. The most popular activities include finding information
about a product's price or features, checking on product selection
and determining where to purchase a product." --IntelliQuest Information
Group, Inc., WWITS Survey
- "In general, the more difficult and time-consuming a purchase
category is, the more likely consumers will prefer to use the
internet versus standard physical means." eMARKETER.
This sort of hype applies to a wide range of products. According to
eMARKETER
the biggest product categories include:
- Computer products (hardware, software, accessories)
- Books
- Music
- Financial Services
- Entertainment
- Home Electronics
- Apparel
- Gifts and flowers
- Travel services
- Toys
- Tickets
- Information
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THE
LURE OF E-COMMERCE
The following list summarizes what might be called the "lure of e-commerce":
- Lower transaction costs - if an e-commerce site is implemented
well, the web can significantly lower both order-taking costs
up front and customer service costs after the sale by automating
processes.
- Larger purchases per transaction - AMAZON
offers a feature that no normal store offers. When you read the
description of a book, you also can see "what other people who
ordered this book also purchased". That is, you can see the related
books that people are actually buying. Because of features like
these it is common for people to buy more books that they might
buy at a normal bookstore.
- Integration into the business cycle - A Web site that is well-integrated
into the business cycle can offer customers more information than
previously available. For example, if Dell tracks each computer
through the manufacturing and shipping process, customers can
see exactly where their order is at any time. This is what FedEx
did when they introduced on-line package tracking - FedEx made
far more information available to the customer.
- People can shop in different ways. Traditional mail order companies
introduced the concept of shopping from home in your pajamas,
and e-commerce offers this same luxury. New features that web
sites offer include:
- The ability to build an order over several days
- The ability to configure products and see actual prices
- The ability to easily build complicated custom orders
- The ability to compare prices between multiple vendors easily
- The ability to search large catalogs easily
- Larger catalogs - A company can build a catalog on the web that
would never fit in an ordinary mailbox. For example, AMAZON
sells 3,000,000 books. Imagine trying to fit all of the information
available in Amazon's database into a paper catalog!
- Improved customer interactions - With automated tools it is
possible to interact with a customer in richer ways at virtually
no cost. For example, the customer might get an email when the
order is confirmed, when the order is shipped and after the order
arrives. A happy customer is more likely to purchase something
else from the company.
It is these sorts of advantages that create the buzz that surrounds
e-commerce right now.
There is one final point for e-commerce that needs to be made.
E-commerce allows people to create completely new business models.
In a mail order company there is a high cost to printing and mailing
catalogs that often end up in the trash. There is also a high cost
in staffing the order-taking department that answers the phone.
In e-commerce both the catalog distribution cost and the order taking
cost fall toward zero. That means that it may be possible to offer
products at a lower price, or to offer products that could not be
offered before because of the change in cost dynamics.
However, it is important to point out that the impact of e-commerce
only goes so far. Mail order sales channels offer many of these
same advantages, but that does not stop your town from having a
mall. The mall has social and entertainment aspects that attract
people, and at the mall you can touch the product and take delivery
instantly. E-commerce cannot offer any of these features. The mall
is not going to go away anytime soon...

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EASY
AND HARD ASPECTS OF E-COMMERCE
The things that are hard about e-commerce include:
- Getting traffic to come to your web site
- Getting traffic to return to your web site a second time
- Differentiating yourself from the competition
- Getting people to buy something from your web site. Having people
look at your site is one thing. Getting them to actually type
in their credit card numbers is another.
- Integrating an e-commerce web site with existing business data
(if applicable)
There are so many web sites, and it is so easy to create a new e-commerce
web site, that getting people to look at yours is the biggest problem.
The things that are easy about e-commerce, especially for small
businesses and individuals, include:
- Creating the web site
- Taking the orders
- Accepting payment
There are inumerable companies that will help you build and put up
your electronic store. We'll discuss some options in the next section.
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BUILDING
AN E-COMMERCE SITE
The things you need to keep in mind when thinking about building
an e-commerce site include:
- Suppliers - this is no different from the concern that any normal
store or mail order company has. Without good suppliers you cannot
offer products.
- Your price point - a big part of e-commerce is the fact that
price comparisons are extremely easy for the consumer. Your price
point is important in a transparent market.
- Customer relations - E-commerce offers a variety of different
ways to relate to your customer. E-mail, FAQs, knowledge bases,
forums, chat rooms... Integrating these features into your e-commerce
offering helps you differentiate yourself from the competition.
- The back end: fulfillment, returns, customer service - These
processes make or break any retail establishment. They define,
in a big way, your relationship with your customer.
When you think about e-commerce, you may also want to consider these
other desirable capabilities:
- Gift-sending
- Affiliate programs
- Special Discounts
- Repeat buyer programs
- Seasonal or periodic sales
The reason why you want to keep these things in mind is because they
are all difficult unless your e-commerce software supports them. If
the software does support them, they are trivial.  |
IMPLEMENTING
AN E-COMMERCE SITE
Let's say that you would like to create an e-commerce site. There
are three general ways to implement the site with all sorts of variations
in between. The three general ways are:
- Enterprise computing
- Virtual hosting services
- Simplified e-commerce
These are in order of decreasing flexibility and increasing simplicity.
Enterprise computing means that you purchase hardware and
software and hire a staff of developers to create your e-commerce
web site. AMAZON,
DELL
and all of the other big players participate in e-commerce at the
enterprise level. You might need to consider enterprise computing
solutions if:
- You have immensely high traffic - millions of visitors per month
- You have a large database that holds your catalog of products
(especially if the catalog is changing constantly)
- You have a complicated sales cycle that requires lots of customized
forms, pricing tables, etc.
- You have other business processes already in place and you want
your e-commerce offering to integrate into them.
Virtual hosting services give you some of the flexibility
of enterprise computing, but what you get depends on the vendor.
In general the vendor maintains the equipment and software and sells
them in standardized packages. Part of the package includes security,
and almost always a merchant account is also an option. Database
access is sometimes a part of the package. You provide the web designers
and developers to create and maintain your site.
Simplified e-commerce is what most small businesses and
individuals are using to get into e-commerce. In this option the
vendor provides a simplified system for creating your store. The
system usually involves a set of forms that you fill out online.
The vendor's software then generates all of the web pages for the
store for you. Two good examples of this sort of offering include
YAHOO
STORES and VERIO
STORES (if you'ld like to speak with someone at Verio, Eric
Lacy at 800-226-7996 ext. 1158 has been very helpful). You pay a
couple of hundred dollars a month for these services.
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