Ecommerce business technology society Sixth Edition Kenneth C
E-commerce business. technology. society. Sixth Edition Kenneth C. Laudon Carol Guercio Traver Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
Chapter 9 Online Retail and Services Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -2
Blue Nile Sparkles For Your Cleopatra Class Discussion n Why is selling (or buying) diamonds over the Internet difficult? n How has Blue Nile built its supply chain to keep costs low? n How has Blue Nile reduced consumer anxiety over online diamond purchases? n What are some vulnerabilities facing Blue Nile? n Would you buy a $5, 000 engagement ring at Blue Nile? Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -3
Major Trends in Online Retail 2009– 2010 n Growth in social shopping n Online retail remained profitable during recession n Online retail still fastest growing retail channel n Buying online a normal, mainstream experience n Selection of goods increases, includes luxury goods n Informational shopping for big-ticket items expands n Specialty retail sites show most rapid growth Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -4
The Retail Sector Most important theme in online retailing is effort to integrate online and offline operations n U. S. retail market accounts for over $9. 7 trillion (70%) of total GDP n Personal consumption: n 60% services v 29% nondurable goods v 11% durable goods v n Distinction between “goods” and “services” becoming more ambiguous Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -5
The Retail Industry n Nine segments (clothing, durable goods, etc. ) v Each offers different opportunities for online retail Information n Direct purchasing n n General merchandisers vs. specialty retailers n Mail order/telephone order (MOTO) sector most similar to online retail sector v Sophisticated order entry, delivery, inventory control systems Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -6
Composition of the U. S. Retail Industry Figure 9. 1, Page 577 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. SOURCE: U. S. Census Bureau, 2009. Slide 9 -7
E-commerce Retail: The Vision n n n Greatly reduced search and transaction costs would result in customers using Web to find lowest prices Market entry costs would be lower than those for physical storefronts, and online merchants would be more efficient than offline competitors Traditional offline physical store merchants would be forced out of business Some industries would become disintermediated as manufacturers built direct relationship with consumer Few of these assumptions were correct—structure of retail marketplace has not been revolutionized Internet has created new venues for multichannel firms and supported a few pure-play merchants Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -8
The Online Retail Sector Today n Smallest segment of retail industry (5%) n Growing at faster rate than offline segments n Revenues flat during recession, expected to continue growth between 2010– 2013 n 70% Internet users bought online in 2009 n Primary beneficiaries: v Established offline retailers with online presence Staples) v First mover dot-com companies (e. g. , Amazon) Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. (e. g. , Slide 9 -9
Online Retail and B 2 C E-commerce Is Alive and Well Figure 9. 2, Page 580 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. SOURCES: e. Marketer, 2009 a; U. S. Department of Commerce, 2009; Forrester Research, 2008; authors’ estimates. Slide 9 -10
Multi-Channel Integration n Integrating Web operations with traditional physical store operations v v n Provide integrated shopping experience Leverage value of physical store Types of integration v v v v Online order, in-store pickup Online order, store directory and inventory In-store kiosk or clerk Web order, home delivery Web order, in-store returns and adjustments Online Web catalog Web promotions to drive customers to stores Gift cards, program points usable in any channel Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -11
Analyzing the Viability of Online Firms n Economic viability: v Ability of firms to survive as profitable business firms during specified period (i. e. , 1– 3 years) n Two business analysis approaches: 1. Strategic analysis n Focuses on both industry as a whole and firm itself 2. Financial analysis n How firm is performing Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -12
Strategic Analysis Factors n Key industry strategic factors v v v n Barriers to entry Power of suppliers Power of customers Existence of substitute products Industry value chain Nature of intra-industry competition Strategic factors related to specific firm v v v Firm value chain Core competencies Synergies Technology Social and legal challenges Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -13
Financial Analysis Factors n Statements of Operations v Revenues v Cost of sales v Gross margin v Operating expenses v Operating margin v Net margin n Balance sheet v Assets, current assets v Liabilities, current liabilities and long-term debt v Working capital Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -14
E-tailing Business Models n Four main online retail business models: 1. Virtual merchant n 2. Bricks-and-clicks n 3. Wal-Mart, J. C. Penney, Sears Catalog merchant n 4. Amazon Lands’ End, L. L. Bean, Victoria’s Secret Manufacturer-direct n Dell Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -15
E-commerce in Action: Amazon. com n Vision: v n Business model: v n Greatly improved, profitable; still heavy long-term debt Strategic analysis/business strategy: v n Amazon Retail, Third Party Merchants, and Amazon Web Services (merchant and developer services) Financial analysis: v n Earth’s biggest selection, most customer-centric Maximize sales volume, cut prices Strategic analysis/competition: v Online and offline general merchandisers Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -16
E-commerce in Action: Amazon. com n Strategic analysis/technology: v Largest, most sophisticated collection of online retailing technologies available n Strategic analysis/social, legal: v Antitrust, sales tax, patent lawsuits v Toys’R’Us lawsuit n Future prospects: v In 2008, net sales grew 30% v Ranks among top five in customer service, speed, accuracy v However, net margins still much narrower than Wal-Mart Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -17
Common Themes in Online Retailing n Online retail fastest growing channel on revenue basis n Profits for startup ventures have been difficult to achieve n Disintermediation has not occurred n Most significant online growth: offline general merchandiser giants extending brand to online channel n Second area of rapid growth: v Specialty merchants with high-end goods, e. g. , Blue Nile Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -18
Insight on Technology Using the Web to Shop ’Til You Drop Class Discussion n What do shopping bots and comparison sites offer consumers? n Why are shopping bots more successful with hard goods than soft goods? n What is the strategy of Shopping. com? n How can shopping bots compare luxury goods? n How does adding content to comparison sites help consumers? Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -19
The Service Sector: Offline and Online n Service sector: v Largest and most rapidly expanding part of economies of advanced industrial nations v Concerned with performing tasks in and around households, business firms, and institutions n Includes doctors, lawyers, accountants, business consultants, etc. v 76% of U. S. labor force— 108 million v 58% of GDP—$7. 7 trillion Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -20
Service Industries n Major service industry groups: v Finance v Insurance v Real estate v Travel v Professional services—legal, accounting v Business services—consulting, advertising, marketing, etc. v Health services v Educational services Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -21
Service Industries n Companies can be further categorized as: v Transaction brokers v Hands-on service providers n Services industry features: v Knowledge- and information-intense n Makes them uniquely suited to e-commerce applications v Amount of personalization and customization differs depending on type of service n required E. g. , medical services vs. financial services Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -22
Online Financial Services Example of e-commerce success story, but success is somewhat different from what had been predicted n Brokerage industry transformed n 4 of 5 households use online banking n Effects less powerful in insurance, real estate n Multi-channel established financial services firms continue to show strong growth n Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -23
Financial Service Industry Trends n Two important global trends 1. Industry consolidation n 2. Financial Reform Act of 1998 amended Glass-Steagall Act and allows banks, brokerages, and insurance firms to merge Movement toward integrated financial services n Financial supermarket model Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -24
Industry Consolidation and Integrated Financial Services Figure 9. 3, Page 606 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -25
Online Financial Consumer Behavior n Consumers attracted to online financial sites because of desire to save time and access information rather than save money n Most online consumers use financial services firms for mundane financial management v Check balances v Pay bills n Greatest deterrents are fears about security and confidentiality Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -26
Online Banking and Brokerage Online banking pioneered by Net. Bank and Wingspan; no longer in existence n Established brand-name national banks have taken substantial lead in market share n Over 100 million people use online banking; expected to rise to 192 million in 2013 n Early innovators in online brokerage (E*Trade) have also been displaced by established brokerages (Fidelity, Schwab) n Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -27
The Growth of Online Banking Figure 9. 4, Page 610 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. SOURCE: e. Marketer, Inc. , 2008 a; authors’ estimates. Slide 9 -28
Multi-channel vs. Pure Online Financial Service Firms Online consumers prefer multi-channel firms with physical presence n Multi-channel firms n v Growing faster than pure online firms v Lower online customer acquisition costs n Pure online firms v Rely on Web sites, advertising to acquire customers v Users utilize services more intensively v Users shop more, are more price-driven and less loyal Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -29
Financial Portals and Account Aggregators n Financial portals v Comparison shopping services, independent financial advice and financial planning v Revenues from advertising, referrals, subscriptions v E. g. , Yahoo! Finance, Quicken. com, MSN Money n Account aggregation v Pulls together all of a customer’s financial data at a personalized Web site v E. g. , Yodlee: provides account aggregation technology v Privacy concerns; control of personal data, security, etc. Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -30
Online Mortgage and Lending Services n Early entrants hoped to simplify and speed up mortgage value chain v n Many early pure-online firms failed due to difficulties of developing brand simplifying mortgage generation process Three kinds of online mortgage vendor today Established online banks, brokerages, and lending organizations 2. Pure online mortgage bankers 3. Mortgage brokers 1. n Online mortgage industry has not transformed process of obtaining mortgage v Complexity of process Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -31
Online Insurance Services n Online term life insurance: v n n One of few products for which Internet lowered search costs, increased price comparison, and resulted in lower prices Other insurance product lines: v Web gives insurance companies new opportunities for product and service differentiation and price discrimination v Online use is more for discovering prices and terms of policies than purchasing policies online v Reduced search and price discovery costs Industry affected by being regulated at state as opposed to federal level Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -32
Online Real Estate Services Early vision: local, complex, and agent-driven real estate industry would transform into disintermediated marketplace where buyers and sellers would transact directly n However, major impact is influencing of purchases offline n Impossible to complete property transaction online v Main services are online property listings, loan calculators, research, and reference material v n Despite revolution in available information, there has not been a revolution in the industry value chain Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -33
Insight on Society Turf Wars—Antitrust and the Online Real Estate Market Class Discussion What is a Multiple Listing Service (MLS) and how does the National Association of Realtors maintain a monopoly over this service? n Why did the Department of Justice believe the NAR’s policies were anti-competitive? n Why can’t online real estate firms develop alternatives to local multiple listing services? n Would you buy a home using e. Bay or Craigslist? n Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -34
Online Travel Services n One of most successful B 2 C e-commerce segments n 2007: first year online bookings greater than offline n 2009: online travel bookings declined slightly due to recession but expected to grow to $118 billion by 2013 n For consumers: more convenient than traditional travel agents n For suppliers: a singular, focused customer pool that can be efficiently reached through onsite advertising Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -35
Online Travel Services n Travel an ideal service/product for Internet v Information-intensive product v Electronic product—travel arrangements can be accomplished for the most part online v Does not require inventory v Does not require physical offices with multiple employees v Suppliers are always looking for customers to fill excess capacity v Does not require an expensive multi-channel presence Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -36
Online Travel Services Revenues Figure 9. 5, Page 622 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. SOURCE: e. Marketer, 2009, 2007, 2005 b. Slide 9 -37
The Online Travel Market n Four major sectors: 1. 2. 3. 4. n Two major segments: 1. 2. n Airline tickets Hotel reservations Car rentals Cruises/tours Leisure/unmanaged business travel Managed business travel—expected to be a major growth area as corporations seek better control of corporate travel expenses Corporate online-booking solutions (COBS) Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -38
Projected Growth of Online Travel Market Segments Figure 9. 6, Page 625 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. SOURCES: e. Marketer, 2009 d, 2007, 2005 b; authors’ estimates. Slide 9 -39
Insight on Business Zipcars Class Discussion What is the Zipcar business model? How does it make money? n How does Zipcar use the Internet? n Does Zipcar compete with traditional car rental firms? n Will Zipcar work only in urban markets? Can it expand to the suburbs? n Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -40
Online Travel Industry Dynamics n n n Intense competition among online providers Price competition difficult Industry consolidation v Stronger, offline established firms purchasing weaker online firms to create multi-channel travel sites n Industry impacted by meta-search engines v Commoditize online travel n Suppliers are attempting to eliminate intermediaries—global distribution systems and travel agencies—using Web as means Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -41
The Travel Services Value Chain Figure 9. 7, Page 628 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -42
Online Career Services Top sites generate over $1 billion annually n Three main players: Career. Builder, Monster, Hot. Jobs n Traditional recruitment: n v n Classified, print ads, career expos, on-campus recruitment, staffing firms, internal referral programs Online recruiting More efficient, cost-effective, reduces total time-to-hire Enables job hunters to more easily distribute resumes while conducting job searches v Ideally suited for Web due to information-intense nature of process v v Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -43
It’s Just Information: The Ideal Web Business? n Recruitment ideally suited for Web v Information-intense process v Initial match-up doesn’t require much personalization n Saves time and money for both job hunters and employers n One of the most important functions: ability to establish market prices and terms (online national marketplace) Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -44
Recruitment Market Segments n Three major segments 1. General job recruitment: n 2. Executive search: n 3. Highest revenue potential Specialized job placement services: n n Largest segment and primary focus Often run by professional societies Online recruitment has focused on general job market, but increasing services for executive recruiting Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -45
Online Recruitment Industry Trends n Consolidation: v Career. Builder, Monster, and Hot. Jobs together dominate the market Diversification: niche employment sites n Localization: n v Local boards compete with local newspapers, Craigslist n Job search engines/aggregators: v “Scraping” listings: Indeed. com, Job. Central n Social networking: v Linked. In; Facebook apps Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 9 -46
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