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BUSINESS TO BUSINESS ECOMMERCE

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Title: BUSINESS TO BUSINESS ECOMMERCE


1
BUSINESS TO BUSINESS E-COMMERCE
  • Miklos A. Vasarhelyi

2
Dynamic Commerce Basics
Evolving Business Models
3
EC Waves
  • The first wave of e-commerce generally focused on
    replicating traditional business models onto the
    Internet using static pricing schemes.
  • The second wave of e-commerce is driven by
    dynamic commerce applications that use the
    Internets intrinsic capacity for continuous
    activity to create new types of fluid,
    market-driven environments

4
STATISTICS
5
Forresters Report
  • By 2003, business-to-business e-commerce will
    draw 90 of the projected 1.4 trillion in total
    internet-based business by 2003
  • 10 to 20 times the projected retail market
  • Internet will have its biggest long-term impact
    on business to business e-commerce
  • new breed of small, private companies-
    business-to-business infomediaries, are blazing
    the trail

6
Top 10 B2B Companies (1)
  • Intel - Sold about 12 billion in chips and
    processors on the Web last year
  • Cisco Systems - A parts list only an IS director
    could love. But Cisco has money to burn
  • Dell Computer - In the business of bring
    technology to your business
  • 3Com - expects 80 of its business to be
    conducted over the Net by years end
  • IBM - No one ever got fired for buying IBM
    software and hardware over the internet
  • Gateway 2000 - A lot of small businesses are run
    from American homes

7
Top 10 B2B Companies (2)
  • Boise Cascade Office Products - E-commerce
    pioneer and office-products supplier to the
    Fortune 500
  • W. W. Grainer - Seventy-year old distributor of
    corporate maintenance and operating supplies
  • Sabre Group - The original online reservation
    clearinghouse is a backbone for many travel sites
  • Office Depot - Americas largest office-products
    supplier has a location near you -- the Web

(These companies bring in much more money than
consumer focused e-tailers)
8
Companies Making Dents
  • New B2B Companies expected to make it within five
    years
  • Chemdex (1997) - Life-science chemicals market
  • Instill Corp. (1993) - restaurant supplies
  • Metal Site (1998) - online exchange for selling
    surplus inventory steel and other metal products
  • National Transportation Exchange (1996) -
    Net-based exchange for empty truck space
  • Neoforma (1996) - Medical equipment and supplies

9
Dents (2)
  • SciQuest.com (mediates in the laboratory and
    scientific equipment marketplace)
  • PlasticNet.com (plastic manufacturers and plastic
    processors)
  • e-Steel (buyers and sellers of steel)
  • Ultraprise (between mortgage originators and
    mortgage buyers - secondary market)

10
A COMPARISON OF TRADITONAL AND CONTEMPORARY
B-TO-B ELECTRONIC COMMERCE
A COMPARISON OF TRADITONAL AND CONTEMPORARY
B-TO-B ELECTRONIC COMMERCE
11
Traditional E-Commerce (1)
  • Buyer and supplier organizations required to
    implement and maintain expensive software
    applications
  • Adhere to restrictive standards for data
    presentation and transmission
  • Pay continuous transaction and network usage fees

12
Traditional E-Commerce (2)
  • Results - 1. E-commerce limited to largest
    organizations
  • 2. Establishment of closed and incomplete
    trading communities
  • 3. Most organizations maintain inefficient,
    error-prone, paper-based business processes

13
B2B E-Commerce on the Internet (1)
  • Reduction in the technology and cost barriers
    traditionally associated with B-2-B e-commerce
    (IBM expects that selling over the web will
    reduce its costs by 340 million this year)
  • Delivers a low-cost method for electronically
    accessing, distributing and presenting data
  • based on open communication protocols and common
    data standards

14
B2B E-Commerce on the Internet (2)
  • Internet connects all businesses to each other,
    regardless of location, or position in the supply
    chain
  • ability to bargain directly with a range of
    suppliers
  • poses a threat to traditional intermediaries like
    wholesalers and brokers
  • Companies can reach beyond their size on the net

15
B2B E-Commerce on the Internet (3)
  • Result 1. New, improved and automated business
    processes that can deliver significant benefits
    to buyer and supplier organizations, regardless
    of size or technological sophistication

16
B-TO-B E-COMMERCE
17
Why B2B E-Commerce
  • Business to Consumer e-commerce has been largely
    disappointing (with some notable exceptions like
    Amazon.com)
  • B2B e-commerce is not new
  • Value Added Networks (VANs) were used before the
    Net where mainframes and minis were connected via
    direct dial-up or proprietary third-party
  • The real money to be made on the web is in
    selling to other businesses

18
Business to Business E-Commerce
  • Sales stem from long standing trend of large
    companies outsourcing to small ones
  • The small companies then use technology to
    increase their efficiency and reach beyond their
    size
  • a vibrant market for computer products and other
    office necessities on the Internet
  • The most successful companies have back-office
    technology necessary to automate the entire
    chain, from acquisition to fulfillment

19
Successful B2B E-Commerce (1)
  • Providing Information
  • McKesson shifts from drug distribution to
    information provider for the health-care
    industry, exploiting its massive database for
    information on sales and units for pharmacies

20
Successful B2B E-Commerce (2)
  • Supplying customized websites/extranet services
  • Federal Express is leveraging its existing
    infrastructure for rapid package delivery to
    provide web-based complete order fulfillment
    services to businesses for Dell, corporate
    customers log paperless purchase orders or check
    in with help desks whose services and support
    options are tailored to the customers systems

21
Successful B2B E-Commerce (3)
  • Moving to an Internet Platform
  • Wells Fargo and Bank of America are investing in
    moving EDI functions for business-to-business
    transactions to the lower cost internet platform

22
Conceptual
23
B2B Industry Models
Hubs as Marketplaces
  • Two primary types HORIZONTAL (functional) and
    VERTICAL
  • Horizontal specialize along a specific function
    or process
  • Vertical specialize along a specific industry or
    market

Horizontal
Auction
Barter
Catalogues
Exchanges
Vertical
Vertical
24
Lets get vertical
  • B2B math
  • B2C benefits to an individual buyer are similar
    with 100 or 100K buyers
  • B2B hub creates value by reducing search costs,
    information transfer costs,standardizing systems,
    improving matching. Value increases with the
    square number of participants in the hub.

from Business 2.0 Sept. 99 Sawhney Kaplan
25
B2B Hubs
  • requires extensive industry expertise
  • customer acquisition requires expensive
    procurement of buyers and sellers
  • supplier catalogs must be loaded
  • business processes must be understood and
    integrated
  • these obstacles also increase the barriers to
    entry from hub competitors

26
Types of Hubs
  • Vertical hubs
  • serve a market or industry focus
  • Altra energy (energy), Band X (telecom.), Cattle
    Offering Worldwide (beef and dairy), e-Steel,
    Floraplex (florist), IMX Exchange
    (mortgages),PaperExchange (paper),
    PlasticsNet.com (plastics), Ultraprise (secondary
    mortgage exchange)

27
Vertical Business Models
Vertical Net (NASDAQ vert)
  • VerticalNet is the premier owner/operator of
    B2B-communities, providing a variety of services
    including editorial content, an online
    marketplace, and a career center.
  • VerticalNet, which originated in 1995 with
    WaterOnline, paves new sales avenues and creating
    communities for 41 unglamorous industries
  • VerticalNet derives revenues as follows
  • Rent from Virtual Storefronts
    65 (6000/year/storefront)
  • Sponsorships 25
  • Transaction Commissions 10 (avg. transaction
    of 25,000)
  • Industry Portal Requirements
  • Minimum of 3,000 companies, with 40,000 buyers
    to ensure fragmented market
  • Minimum of 10B in domestic sales, with 10M
    trade publication ad budget

28
Vertical Business Models
Sample Communities
29
Types (2)
  • Functional hubs
  • provide the same function or automate the same
    business process across different industries
  • iMark.com (buy sell used capital equipment),
    Employease (employee benefits administration),
  • Celarix (global logistics monitoring and
    tracking),
  • BidCom (project management), AdAuction (media
    buying), YOUtilities (energy management)

30
Horizontal Business Models
Moai.com (privately held)
  • Moai provides LiveExchange technology and
    services for customized online auctions and
    exchanges (public/private) for B2B, B2C or C2C.

31
Horizontal Business Models
MRO.com (NASDAQ psdi)
  • Links an online community of suppliers and buyers
    to a group of Internet desktop requisition and
    online procurement software products.
  • Transaction fee-based system that reduces
    purchasing and inventory costs.

Maintenance Parts, materials and services
required for planned maintenance of facilities
or equipment
Repair Parts, materials and services required
for unplanned or emergency repair of equipment
Operating Other indirect materials used to
operate a business
NON-TIME CRITICAL
TIME CRITICAL
NON-TIME CRITICAL
Examples Machinery Parts / Paints Valves /
Switches Cleaning Supplies / Etc..
Examples Machinery Parts / Seals Gaskets /
Bearings Fasteners / Etc..
Examples Office Supplies/ Furniture Computers /
Software Machines/ Forms / Etc..
32
Horizontal Business Models
Exchange Model
  • Creates value by temporal matching of supply and
    demand and
  • Require a real-time, bid-ask matching process,
    marketwide price determination, and a settlement
    and clearing mechanism.
  • Best Industries/Settings
  • Near-commodity items with several attributes,
    but are easy to specify.
  • Significant value in markets where demand and
    prices are volatile.
  • Allow businesses to manage excess supply and
    peak-load demand.
  • Examples
  • BAND-X telecommunications
  • e-Steel steel
  • Altra energy
  • Tradex.com end-to-end commerce platform provider

33
Horizontal Business Models
BAND-X.com (privately held)
  • Launched in 1997 as the first independent virtual
    market for international wholesale telecom
    capacity.
  • BAND-X provides a portal for buyers and sellers
    of bandwidth and related wholesale services to
    anonymously trade.
  • BAND-X act as a clearing market and perform
    billing, settlement, arbitration and quality
    monitoring (blacklist).

Traded Goods
Other Services
Switched Minutes
Circuits
Dig Co-Location
Recruitment
Facilities Co-Location
34
Key design and execution issues
  • Market-making mechanisms
  • fixed price mechanism using a catalog model
  • for fragmented buyers and sellers who transact
    frequently for relatively small ticket items
  • prequalified suppliers and pre-defined business
    rules
  • small price fluctuations
  • Chemdex, SciQuest.com, MRO.com

35
Design (2)
  • Auction models
  • one-of-a-kind, non-standard, or perishable
    products or services
  • capital equipment, used products, returned
    products, hard-to-find products
  • different perceptions of the value of the product
  • iMark.com (used capital equipment)
  • Adaution.com

36
Design (3)
  • Exchange models
  • temporal matching of supply and demand
  • near commodity items that are easy to specify
  • manage excess supply and peak-load demand
  • paperExchange
  • e-Steel
  • Altra

37
Horizontal Business Models
Barter Model
  • Creates value by matching two parties that
    possess reciprocal assets within an asset class
    or across asset classes.
  • Enables buying at the variable cost of
    producing additional units
  • Products - Manufacturing Capacity -
    Services-for-Services
  • - High Transportation Cost Assets (such as
    paper/steel)
  • Examples
  • Ubarter.com various goods and services

38
Horizontal Business Models
Ubarter.com (NYSE ubtr)
  • Members purchase and sell goods or services with
    Ubarter dollars.
  • Ubarter dollars can only be spent between Ubarter
    members.
  • Ubarter charges a 5 transaction fee.
  • Claims to have 35,000 clients, each conducting 50
    transactions/year.
  • Revenues for 1Q 2000 (ended June) were 909,000,
    up 612.
  • Has no direct competitorsyet.

5 Main Ubarter Areas
Business Items Office Furniture Staff
Training Equipment Rental Printing
Advertising TV Radio Newspaper/Mag Public
Relations Direct Mail
Personal Golf Reservations Jewelry
Gifts Restaurants Home Renovation
Employee Health Services Staff Incentives Car
Service Fitness Clubs
Travel/Entertain Restaurants Resorts/Hotels Theatr
e Tickets Sporting Events
39
Technology providers
  • Catalog (Ariba, Commerce One, IBM)
  • Auction (Moai Technologies, Dynamic Trade,
    OpenSite Technology)
  • Exchange (Tradex Technologies)

40
Strategic Issues
  • Chicken-and-egg dilemma
  • Timing market entry
  • Managing channel conflict
  • Choosing software platform
  • Co-siting
  • Expanding the scope of the offering

41
The Cons of Business to Business E-Commerce
42
Profitability
  • Data presented in the Online Marketing Practices
    for Premium Specialty Goods study show that
  • Profitable Premium Specialty Goods...52
  • Profitable B-to-B web sites..........35

43
Reasons for Limited Profitability of B-to-B
E-Commerce Web sites
  • Some B2B web sites maintain information-only web
    sites, and so lag behind the rest of the Net in
    terms of profitability
  • Unlike B-to-C web sites, B-to-B site
    profitability is somewhat subordinated as a
    company goal

44
Other Cons of B2B Web sites
  • Slower to implement e-commerce
  • due to legacy integration issues
  • Invest heavily in web site development
  • in anticipation of creating client confidence by
    providing secure and efficient transactions for
    clients
  • their web presence is therefore, seen as a
    crucial element in their marketing mix
  • 1 in 3 B-to-B sites will be in the black within
    two years

45
Challenges Faced by Web Managers
  • Web site business competition is harsh
  • Technology for delivering professional web sites
    advances rapidly
  • site redesign and upgrade cycles are measured in
    months rather than years as sites ride up in the
    learning curve
  • Competition for online marketers attentions is
    equally stiff
  • hardware, software, prepackaged suites, outside
    virtual services and consulting vie to offer web
    sites a competitive edge

46
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50
Conclusions
Widely-Held B2B Predictions
  • Hubs will have winner-take-all characteristics
    Strong returns-to-scale
    will create even more advantages for the 1st hub
    to achieve scale and liquidity than in the
    consumer arena.
  • Vertical hubs will find it hard to diversify
    beyond their verticals Unless closely related
    domains can leverage these assets, they will find
    it difficult to diversify into other vertical
    markets, due to domain-specific relationships and
    expertise.
  • Vertical hubs will form alliances with Horizontal
    hubs Verticals possess domain
    expertise but lack functional expertise, while
    functional hubs possess functional expertise, but
    lack domain expertise.
  • Software vendors will climb out of their silos
    MAs among the
    currently types software vendors will increase.
  • Transaction Software Vendors (Ariba)
  • Auction Software Vendors (Moai / OpenSite)
  • Exchange Platform Vendors (Tradex)

51
Conclusions
Widely-Held B2B Predictions
  • Exchange models will evolve to include
    derivatives Current
    limitation to spot markets will change as
    participants become more sophisticated and
    software platforms improve in functionality, hubs
    will begin to offer derivative products like
    forward contracts and options on commodities and
    capacity.
  • All except the biggest firms will give up on
    hosting hubs 1st wave of B2B
    software focused on catalogs, auctions, and
    exchanges hosted by individual firms. This
    firm-centric model limits liquidity.
  • New "metahubs" may emerge w/ shared
    infrastructure/ services Emergence of new market
    hubs with shared back-ends and common functional
    hubs servicing the different "tenant" vertical
    hubs.
  • The power of conventional commodity exchanges
    will erode. Conventional commodity exchanges will
    find it difficult to compete with the powerful
    integration of context and exchange
    functionalities that hubs will provide. As a
    result, hubs will gradually drain liquidity from
    conventional commodity exchanges.
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