Retailing in Electronic Commerce (E-Tailing) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Retailing in Electronic Commerce (E-Tailing)

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Define and describe the primary business models of electronic retailing ('e-tailing' ... PriceGrabber.com comparison shopping. 25. E-Tailing Business Models ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Retailing in Electronic Commerce (E-Tailing)


1
Retailing in Electronic Commerce (E-Tailing)
2
Learning Objectives
  • Define and describe the primary business models
    of electronic retailing (e-tailing)
  • Discuss various e-tail consumer aids, including
    comparison-shopping aids
  • Discuss various e-tail markets, such as
    groceries, music, cars, and others
  • Identify the critical success factors of direct
    marketing and e-tailing, along with mistakes to
    avoid

3
Learning Objectives (cont.)
  • Identify the principles of click-and-mortar
    strategies for traditional retailers
  • Describe the issue of disintermediation,
    reintermediation, and channel conflicts in
    e-tailing
  • Identify various managerial issues of concern to
    e-tailers

4
Amazon.com
  • B2C business model where customers look for a
  • Low price
  • Fast shipment
  • Good return policy
  • Helpful customer service

5
Amazon.com (cont.)
  • Largest Bookstore in the world
  • Offers millions of items
  • Books and music
  • DVDs and videos
  • Toys and video games
  • Electronics and software
  • Home improvement products

6
Amazon.com (cont.)
  • Started business in 1995
  • Sales
  • 1996 15.7 million
  • 2000 1.8 billion
  • Products
  • 1999 5 million titles
  • 2000 13 million books, music, DVD/video titles

7
Amazon.com (cont.)
  • Auctions
  • Hosts and operates auctions for individuals and
    small businesses
  • zShops, Amazon marketplace, Amazon payment
    processing
  • Provide the opportunity for small businesses to
    develop custom storefront
  • Storefronts are supported by Amazons backend
    order fulfillment processing

8
Amazon.com (cont.)
Features
  • Broad selection and low prices
  • Secure payment system (1-Click order technology)
  • Gifts department
  • Online community
  • Secured payments
  • Easy browsing and searching
  • Useful product information
  • Reviews, recommendations, and personalization

9
Amazon.com (cont.)
  • Customer relationship management
  • Creates interesting and informative front-end
  • Highly automated and efficient back-end support
  • Personalized service
  • Return customers are welcomed back by name
  • Customer wish lists available
  • E-mails customers purchase recommendations based
    on their purchasing history

10
Amazon.com (cont.)
  • Financial performance
  • Overall losses rather than profits
  • Ability to move into new areas of business should
    move them toward profitability, but makes money
    from books
  • High level of customer service and customer
    loyalty adds value

11
Amazon.com (cont.)
  • Diversification through business alliances
  • Online sale of cars - greenlight.com
  • Online health and beauty aids - drugstore.com
  • Wireless phones multiple business partners
  • Toys - ToysrUs.com

12
E-Tailing and B2C Market Growth
  • Business-to-business (B2B)
  • Requires precise record keeping, trackability,
    accountability, and formal contracts, usually
    with high volume of transactions and large amount
    payments
  • Also online retailing
  • Business-to-consumer (B2C)
  • Ability to create direct relationships with
    consumer without intermediaries like
    distributors, wholesalers, or dealers

13
E-Tailing and B2C Market Growth (cont.)
  • The B2C Market success is derived from
  • Offering quality merchandise at good prices
  • Excellent customer service
  • Convenience

14
E-Tailing and B2C Market Growth (cont.)
  • Characteristics of goods leading to high online
    sales volumes
  • Brand recognition and guarantees
  • Digitized products
  • Frequently purchased, inexpensive items
  • Well-known items with standard specifications

15
Consumer Purchase Processand Marketing Plan
  • Purchase decision process
  • Prepurchase steps
  • Awareness of need for purchase
  • Identify basic need or want
  • Actual purchase
  • Establish decision criteria
  • Seek recommendations and information
  • Make purchase
  • Postpurchase steps
  • Assistance with installation or setup
  • Online help desks and instruction manuals

16
The Consumer Purchase Decision Process
17
Consumer Purchase Processand Marketing Plan
(cont.)
  • Types of online shoppers
  • Traditionalists
  • Hunter-gatherers
  • Brand loyalists
  • Single shoppers
  • Time-starved consumers
  • Shopping avoiders
  • New technologists
  • Time-sensitive materialists or click-and-mortar
    consumers

18
Decision Criteria
  • Value propositioncustomer service, better
    prices, higher quality
  • Personal servicetreat the customer as a unique
    individual
  • Convenienceself-contained site that serves all
    the customers needs
  • Other criteriaservice after the sale

19
A Marketing Plan
  • Influence the consumers decision process through
    the marketing mix
  • Productportfolio of items available
  • Price of the products
  • Promotion of products (advertisements and
    giveaways)
  • Packaging and delivery

20
Online Purchasing Aids
  • Shopping portals
  • Comprehensive portals
  • Links to many different sellers
  • Shopping comparison sites
  • Comparison tools are available
  • Niche oriented
  • Specialize in a certain line of products
    (dogtoys.com)
  • Some collect referral fee only
  • Others have formal relationships with affiliates

21
Online Purchasing Aids (cont.)
  • Shopbots and agentstools that scout the Web for
    specific search criteria requested by consumers
  • Mysimon.com - best prices on multiple items
  • AutoBytel.com cars
  • Zdnet.com/computershopper computers
  • Office.com office supplies

22
Online Purchasing Aids (cont.)
  • Business ratings sitessites that rate e-tailers
  • Bizrate.comcompiles results provided by a
    network of shoppers
  • Gomez.comconsumer identifies relative importance
    of different criteria

23
Online Purchasing Aids (cont.)
Trust verification sitesevaluate and verify
trustworthiness and integrity of e-tailers
  • TRUSTe seal of assurance
  • E-tailers pay TRUSTe for use of seal
  • Hope consumers use seal as proxy for actual
    research about their site
  • BBBOnLine
  • Yearly license fees based on companys annual
    revenue
  • Secure Assure
  • Yearly license fees based on companys annual
    revenue
  • Ernst and Young
  • Created its own service for auditing e-tailers
  • Offers some guarantee of integrity of business
    practices

24
Online Purchasing Aids (cont.)
  • Other shopping tools
  • Escrow services3rd party to assure quality
  • Proper exchange of money and goods
  • Research information
  • Payment-processing support
  • Communities of consumers
  • Epinions.comsearchable recommendations on
    products
  • PriceGrabber.comcomparison shopping

25
E-Tailing Business Models
  • Subscription models charge monthly or annual
    subscription fee for service
  • Transaction fee models charge service fee based
    on the level of transaction offered
  • Advertising-supported models charge fee to
    advertisers instead of customers
  • Sponsorship models companies sponsor the
    business through donations (usually supplemental
    income)

26
Disintermediation in the B2C Supply Chain
Source M. Warkentin, et al. (2000). Used with
permission of Dr. Merrill Warkentin.
27
E-Tailing Business Models (cont.)
  • Direct marketingsell directly to consumers
  • Manufactures can sell directly to customers
  • Disintermediationremoval of business process
    layers in the value chain
  • Shortens the distribution chain
  • Eliminates inefficiencies
  • Shortens delivery time
  • Builds closer relationships with consumers
  • Click-and-mortar
  • Additional marketing channel to the conventional
    one
  • Effectively supports build-to-order requests

28
E-Tailing Business Models (cont.)
  • Pure-play e-tailerssell over the Internet
    without a physical sales channel
  • General purpose e-tailers (Amazon.com)
  • Broad range of products
  • Large number of consumers
  • Specialty or niche e-tailers (CatToys.com)
  • One specific product area
  • High demand items in the area
  • Effective practices for customer appeal

29
E-Tailing Business Models (cont.)
  • Traditional retailers with Web sites
  • Physical store
  • May include mail-order or catalog sales
  • Multichannel store operates both
  • Physical store
  • E-tail site

30
ODDS Grocery Market
  • On-Demand Delivery Services (ODDS)
  • Own fleet of delivery vehicles
  • Regular deliveries (weekly bases)
  • Delivery within short time period (1 hour or same
    day)

31
ODDS Grocery Market (cont.)
  • Potential online grocery shoppers
  • Shopping avoiders
  • Necessity userslimited by their ability to shop
  • New technologists
  • Time-starved consumers
  • Responsible consumers
  • Traditionals
  • Repeat customers
  • Example Parknshop in Hong Kong

32
Digital Delivery
  • Digital (soft) goods
  • Music, movies, videos, software, newspapers,
    magazines, graphics, etc.
  • Can be delivered in hard or soft form
  • Computer program on CD-ROM with owners manual
    and warranty card
  • Download from Web site after payment

33
Digital Goods
34
Digital Delivery (cont.)
  • Napster experienceperson-to-person sharing tool
  • Enables individual users to download music files
    from each others computers
  • Phenomenal growth of Napster community
  • New version of its file-swapping software
    includes a buy button linked to CDNow
  • May be beneficial to overall music sales as
    individuals easily sample a broader range of
    music

35
Digital Delivery (cont.)
  • New developments
  • Custom-publishing music CD sitescollection of
    personal favorites
  • Disintermediation of traditional print media
  • Journals and magazines
  • Newspapers (e.g., Wall Street Journal)

36
Successful Click-and-Mortar Strategies
  • Click-and-mortar hybrid strategies
  • Speak with one voicelink all back-end systems to
    create an integrated customer experience
  • Empower the customerpowerful channel for service
    and information
  • Leverage the channelsoffs advantages of each
    channel to customers from all channels
  • Return item purchased online at physical store
  • Order via the Web at the physical store items not
    available there

37
Successful Click-and-MortarStrategies (cont.)
  • Circuit City Case transform to click-and-mortar
    (CircuitCity.com)
  • Educates customers about features and
    capabilities of products
  • Customers can perform powerful searches to find
    most appropriate products
  • Offers extensive amount of information on
    electronics etc., organized very flexibly
  • Online purchases are smooth, secure and seamless

38
Successful Click-and-MortarStrategies (cont.)
  • Amazon and Toys R Us alliance of pure-play with
    traditional retailer
  • Toys R Us had limited logistics capabilities
    including distribution centers
  • Amazon failed in the toy market lacking supplier
    relationships with toy manufacturers
  • Alliance allows each partner to leverage each
    others core strengths
  • Innovative model still working out problems

39
Disintermediation Reintermediaries
  • Disintermediationmanufacturer sells directly to
    consumer
  • Reintermediariesnew intermediary roles in the
    digital environment offer new ways to
  • Reach new customers
  • Bring value to customers
  • Generate revenues

40
Channel Conflict Personalization
  • Channel conflictmembers antagonistic over
  • Incentives
  • Rewards
  • Policies
  • Support
  • Personalizationcustom designed marketing plan
  • Tailored to buying patterns
  • Appeal to sense of value
  • Excellent customer service
  • Mass customization

41
E-Tailing Lessons Learned
  • Profitabilityonline marginal sales dont lead to
    marginal profits
  • Brandingdrive to establish brand can lead to
    excessive spending
  • PerformanceWeb sites need to function in a fast,
    user-friendly manner
  • Static designdynamic sites with rich databases
    of information appeal most to customers

42
Managerial Issues
  • First-mover advantage or wait and learn
  • Strategic positioning
  • Trust
  • New risk exposure
  • Financial viability
  • Successes
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