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Saturday, June 14, 2008

An Example of E-Commerce successand its causes...............




eBay .com is managed by an American Internet company called eBay incorporation. It was launched online in 1995. eBay.com is an online auction and shopping website was found in San Jose, California, USA by French-born Iranian computer programmer Pierre Omidyar. .This website allows people and business buy and sell goods and services worldwide. Originally, the site belonged to Echo Bay Technology Group, Omidyar's consulting firm. Omidyar had tried to register the domain name echobay.com (the domain has recently been put up for sale) but found it already taken by the Echo Bay Mines, a gold mining company, so he shortened it to his second choice, eBay.com. eBay.com is a website that originated from U.S. website, it has established localized website in thirty other countries:- Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Malaysia, mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Philippines, Poland, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan and Turkey.

eBay.com is providing something to everyone. Buyer can buy practically anything at great prices. No matter how latest electronics, designer fashion, rare antique, favorite toy, furniture for your home or even a new car, eBay always provide the best product for the buyer. Almost million of items such as computer, equipment, vehicles and other miscellaneous items are listed, sold and bought daily. But those items that is illegal and violate to eBay Prohibited and Restricted items policies do not allow sold through eBay.com like tobacco, alcohol, drugs, used underwear and dirty used clothing and others. eBay.com on the other hand also offers several types of auctions which are Auction-style listing, Fixed Price format and Dutch Auction. Auction-style listings allow the seller to offer one or more items for sale fir a specified number of days where the seller can establish a reserve price. Instead of choosing the auction-style listing, fixed price format is an another way for auction which allows the seller to offer one or more items for sale at a Buy It Now price. Buyers who agree to pay that price win the auction immediately without submitting a bid. Otherwise dutch auction also allow the seller to offer two or more identical items in the same auction. Bidders can bid for any number from one item up to the total number offered.

The domain eBay.com attracted at least 902 million visitors annually by according to a Complete.com study. This was thrice the numbers of walmart.com. There must be reasons behind that can lead eBay.com is more competitive advantage than walmart.com or other company that is running electronic commerce. The ebay.com provide guaranty to buy and sell with confidence. In addition, eBay.com is one of the safest places to trade online and make sure those buyers’ and sellers’ experience on eBay safe and fund. Moreover, Trust and Safety team work together to provide the great way to complete your purchase or sales. Nevertheless, eBay.com also help for trade with peace of mind by provide feedback system, buyer protection programme and dedicated security centre. That is about the key success for eBay with million of buyers and a safe and easy system, therefore eBay is a great place to sell. SO, WHAT ARE YOU WAITIING FOR!!!!!!

Quickily visit this website for more information about your online transaction:

-----prepared by: Lyon-----

The failure of Napster and its caused


There are many companies extremely successful in the e-commerce business such as eBay, Amazon.com, Google and so on. On the other hand, there are also a large number of the companies’ failures to maintain their e-commerce. One of the company failures in the e-commerce is Napster.

Napster was a website provided online music file sharing service created by Shawn Fanning while he was attending Northeastern University in Boston and operating between June 1999 and July 2001. It was the first widely-used peer-to-peer sharing service, and it made a major impact on how people, especially university students, used the internet. It is a technology allowed music fans to easily share MP3 format song files with each other.

The primary reason that caused the Napster shut down is because leading to the music industry's accusations of massive copyright violations. In 2000, A&M records and several other recording companies sued Napster for contributory and vicarious copyright infringement under the US Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DCM Act). The music industry made the following claims against Napster:
(1) That its users were directly infringing the plaintiff's copyright;
(2) That Napster was liable for contributory infringement of the plaintiff's copyright; and
(3) That Napster was liable for vicarious infringement of the plaintiff's copyright.

Finally, Napster lost the case and the District Court ordered Napster to monitor the activities of its network and block access to infringing material when notified of that material’s location. Napster unable to do that, and so finally shut down its in July 2001 and declared bankrupt in 2002.

A company actually can avoid the pitfalls that plagued Napster by choosing a corporate culture which would insure that a similar situation doesn’t happen to your company. The companies, who interest to create a successful e-commerce, can entitle into the success company to refer them how to manage their business through internet and take up certain necessary action to maintain it.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Identify and compare the revenue model for Google, Amazon, and eBay.

To plan a portal venture successfully, careful analysis of the revenue models and customer adoption trends is essential. Make a mistake and you are liable to lose millions of dollars. So, what are the different revenue models? There are five basic portal revenue models: 1) access revenues, 2) advertising revenues, 3) subscription revenues, 4) transaction revenues, and 5) micro-transaction revenues. I will explain more on these revenue models when I pin point each of the models for three different companies which go online, Google, Amazon and eBay.

First and foremost, Google is a very famous, established and stable company that goes online. Its revenue models are Google AdWords which is a pay per click advertising program designed to allow the advertisers to present advertisements to the public at the second the people are looking for information related to what the advertiser has to offer.

The more recent revenue model of Google is the Google Publication Ads Program through which they distribute their advertisers’ ads for publication in magazines. Google recognize as revenue the fees charged advertisers when their ads are published in magazines.

Another model Google generate revenue is through Pay per Click Advertising. This model worked in such a way that it sends immediate, targeted traffic to public’s website. It is an online advertising payment model in which payment is based on qualifying click-through. An advertiser has to pay every time his advertisement receives a click. The Advertisers decide the keywords relevant to their offer that should display their advertisement and the maximum amount they are willing to pay per click for that keyword.

More than that,Google AdSense is also another revenue model. Website owners can enroll in this program to enable text, image and, video advertisements on their sites. Revenue is generated on a per-click or per-thousand-ads-displayed basis and the ads are administered by Google.

Furthermore, Google Answers is another revenue model too. Instead of performing a search ourselves users pay someone else to do the same. Customers ask questions, offer a price for an answer, and researchers answer them. Researchers are not Google employees. Prices for questions range from $2 to $200; after a question is answered, Google keeps 25% of the payment, sends the rest to the Researchers.

Last but not least, Froogle, a service from Google that makes it easy to find information about products for sale online. Froogle is a price engine website launched by Google Inc. Froogle is different from most other price engines in that it neither charges any fees for listings, nor accepts payment for products to show up first. Also, it makes no commission on sales. Any company can submit product information (via a “data feed”) and be included in the Froogle engine. Advertising space is available for purchase to be displayed in Froogle in the form of an AdWords ad.

eBay on the other hand generate its revenue from a number of fees.There are fees to list a product and fees when the product sells, plus several optional fees, all based on various factors and scales. For instance, the U.S.-based eBay.com takes $0.20 to $80 per listing and 5.25% or less of the final price.Besides, the Mexican eBay "mercado libre" takes 1% (price of the article × number of articles to be sold), and 4.99% of the final price if there is a successful trade. Other than that, the UK based ebay, it takes from £0.15 to a maximum rate of £3 per £100 for an ordinary listing and from 0.75% to 5.25% of the final price.

In addition, eBay now owns the PayPal payment system which has fees of its own. Revenues from PayPal's transaction fees were $243.9 million, a gain of 51 percent from the year-ago quarter and 145 percent from 2003. And the number of registered PayPal users shot up to 79 million from 50 million a year ago.

Under current U.S. law, a state cannot require sellers located outside the state to collect a sales tax, making deals more attractive to buyers. Although state laws require purchasers to pay sales tax to their own states on out-of-state purchases, most non-professional sellers ignore this requirement. However, most sellers that operate as a full time business do follow state tax regulations on their eBay transactions.However for the tax called Value Added Tax(VAT), eBay requires sellers to include the VAT fees in their listing price and not as an add-on and thus eBay profits by collecting fees based on what governments tax for VAT.

Another interesting aspect of eBay's revenue model is it's somewhat evenly spread out among a number of categories, with one glaring standout. Among the categories delivering more than $1 billion in gross market value are:

  • Clothing and accessories -- $3.3 billion
  • Consumer electronics -- $3.2 billion
  • Computers -- $2.9 billion
  • Home and garden -- $2.5 billion
  • Books/Movies/Music -- $2.4 billion
  • Sports -- $2.1 billion
  • Collectibles -- $2.0 million
  • Toys -- $1.6 billion
  • Jewelry and watches -- $1.5 billion
  • Business and industrial -- $1.5 billion
  • Cameras and photos -- $1.3 billion

Moreover, the company's current business strategy includes increasing revenue by increasing international trade within the eBay system. eBay has already expanded to over two dozen countries including China and India.

Amazon.com has finished its 13th Christmas season and the results are the best ever season, with its busiest day being December 10. On that day, Amazon customers ordered more than 5.4 million items, which is 62.5 items per second. Amazon Worldwide 2007 (Including results for the US, UK, Germany, France, Japan and Canada) shipped more than 99 percent of orders in time to meet holiday deadlines worldwide and on the peak day this season, Amazon's worldwide fulfilment network shipped over 3.9 million units to over 200 countries.

Amazon.co.uk received orders for over 950,000 items on its busiest day in the run up to Christmas this year – at a rate of 11 orders per second – exceeding all previous sales records. At its busiest, Amazon.co.uk shipped over 700,000 units in one 24 hour period, which represents 375 tonnes of goods. That means that on average, a delivery truck was leaving an Amazon.co.uk distribution centre once every seven minutes."

Like eBay, Amazon.com was born in 1995. The name reflected the vision of Jeff Bezos, to produce a large scale phenomenon like the Amazon River. This ambition has proved justified since just 8 years later, Amazon passed the $5 billion sales mark – it took Wal-Mart 20 years to achieve this. These are Amazon’s revenue models.

These three companies had indeed amazing e-commerce revue models. No one company started well and still doing well, so are these companies. They faced their ups and downs and had gone stable for the mean time, but in the future, no one will know what the outcome of these companies is. It depends on them, how they manage the company. Whatever it is, it would be great to see more e-commerce successes than failures.

The history and evolution of E-commerce

Electronic Commerce is a type of business model and enables people buying, selling, transferring, or exchanging products, services or information over the internet with the help of technology such as Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) is a set of standards developed in the 1960’s to exchange business information and do electronic transactions and Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) is transfer of funds between accounts by electronic such as Automatic Teller Machines (ATM). From the 1990s onwards, electronic commerce includes enterprise resource planning systems (ERP), data mining and data warehousing.

The Internet was conceived in 1969 and started by the U.S government during and its opening users were a largely technical audience of government agencies and academic research and scientists. In the early 1990s, when the internet was opened to commercial use and users began participate in the World Wide Web (WWW), e-commerce application rapidly expanded so that a large number of dot-coms also appeared. During year 1994, internet begins popularity in public and start developed the DSL which allowed fast access and constant connection to the internet and also develop the security protocols such as HTTP. In 1999, the e-commerce shifted from business-to-consumer to business-to-business and in 2001 from business-to-business to business-to-exchange.

Amazon and Ebay were the first internet companies to allow electronic transactions and currently, there have 5 largest and famous worldwide internet retailers which are Amazon, Dell, Staples, Office Depot and Hewlett Packard. During 2000, the dot-com collapse and causes many of e-commerce companies disappeared including Amazon. However, in 2003 the company made its first annual profit which was the first step to the further development. Dell was the company that contributes a lot to e-commerce development. The company’s unique strategy of selling goods over the World Wide Web with no retail outlets and no middlemen has been attracted by a lot of customers and imitated by a great number of ecommerce businesses. The key factor of Dell’s success is that Dell.com enables customers to choose and to control.

The summary of evolution e-commerce is:
1984
Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) was standardized through ASC X12. This guaranteed that companies would be able to complete transactions with one another reliability.

1990
Tim Berners-Lee wrote the first web browser, World Wide Web (WWW), using a NeXT computer.

1992
Compuserve offers online retail products to its customers. This gives people the first chance to buy things off their computer.

1994
Netscape arrived and providing users a simple browser to surf the Internet and a safe online transaction technology called Secure Sockets Layer.

1995
Two biggest names in e-commerce are launched which is Amozon.com and eBay.com

1998
The Digital Subscriber line (DSL) provides faster, always-on Internet service to subscriber across California. This prompts people to spent more time, and money, online.

1999
Retail spending over the Internet reaches $20billion, according to Business.com

2000
The dot-com bust.

2003
Amazon had its first year with a full year of profit.




The resources adopted from:
(1)
http://www.ecommerce-land.com/history_ecommerce.html
(2)
http://newmedia.medill.northwestern.edu/courses/nmpspring01/brown/Revstream/history.htm
(3)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-commerce