Electronic Commerce Ninth Edition

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Electronic Commerce Ninth Edition

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Title: Electronic Commerce Ninth Edition


1
Electronic CommerceNinth Edition
  • Chapter 6Social Networking, Mobile Commerce, and
    Online Auctions

2
Learning Objectives
  • In this chapter, you will learn about
  • Social networking and online business activities
  • Using mobile devices to do business online
  • Online auctions and auction-related businesses

2
3
From Virtual Communities to Social Networks
  • Online Web communities
  • Not limited by geography
  • Individuals and companies with common interests
  • Meet online and discuss issues, share
    information, generate ideas, and develop valuable
    relationships
  • Companies make money by serving as relationship
    facilitators
  • Combine Internets transaction cost-reduction
    potential with a communication facilitator role

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Virtual Communities
  • Virtual community (Web community, online
    community)
  • Gathering place for people and businesses
  • No physical existence
  • Early virtual communities
  • Bulletin board systems (BBSs)
  • Revenue source monthly fees and selling
    advertising
  • Usenet newsgroups
  • Message posting areas on usenets

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Virtual Communities (contd.)
  • Current forms
  • Web chat rooms
  • Sites devoted to specific topics or general
    exchange of information, photos, videos
  • People connect and discuss common issues,
    interests
  • Considerable social interaction
  • Relationship-forming activities
  • Similar to physical communities

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Early Web Communities
  • 1985 WELL (whole earth lectronic link)
  • Monthly fee to participate in forums and
    conferences
  • 1999 bought by Salon.com
  • 1995 Beverly Hills Internet virtual community
    site
  • Offered webcams, free Web site space
  • Grew into GeoCities
  • Revenue source advertising, pop-up pages
  • 1999 purchased by Yahoo! (5 billion)
  • Closed in 2009

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Early Web Communities (contd.)
  • 1995 Tripod virtual community
  • Offered free Web page space, chat rooms, news,
    weather updates, health information pages
  • Revenue source sold advertising
  • 1995 Theglobe.com Cornell University class
    project
  • Included bulletin boards, chat rooms, discussion
    areas, personal ads
  • Added more features
  • Revenue source sold advertising
  • Most early Web community businesses closed

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Social Networking in the Second Wave of Online
Communities
  • As the Internet and Web grew
  • Experience of sharing new online communication
    faded
  • New phenomenon in online communication began
  • Multiple common bonds joined people with all
    types of common interests
  • Social networking sites
  • Allow individuals to create and publish a
    profile, create a list of other users with whom
    they share a connection (or connections), control
    that list, and monitor similar lists made by
    other users

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Social Networking in the Second Wave of Online
Communities (contd.)
  • Social networking sites
  • Six Degrees (1997)
  • Friendster (2002)
  • Had features found in todays social networking
    sites
  • LinkedIn devoted to business connections
  • Tribe.net
  • YouTube popularized video inclusion
  • MySpace popular with younger Web users
  • Twitter
  • Users can send short messages to other users who
    sign up to follow their messages (tweets)

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Social Networking in the Second Wave of Online
Communities (contd.)
  • Basic idea behind social networking
  • People invited to join by existing members
  • Site provides directory
  • New members work through friends established in
    the community

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FIGURE 6-1 Social networking Web sites
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Social Networking in the Second Wave of Online
Communities (contd.)
  • Web logs (Blogs)
  • Web sites containing individual commentary on
    current events or specific issues
  • Form of social networking site
  • Encourages interaction among people
  • Visitors add comments
  • Early blogs focused on technology topics
  • 2004 blogs used as political networking tool
  • 2008 all major candidates using blogs
  • Communicating messages, organizing volunteers,
    raising money, meetups

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Social Networking in the Second Wave of Online
Communities (contd.)
  • Retailers embracing blogs to engage site visitors
  • Bluefly.com online discount apparel retailer
  • Flypaper blog
  • Ice.com online jeweler
  • Blogs may encourage potential customers to visit
    online store
  • Business uses
  • CNN
  • Blog information included in television newscasts

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Social Networking in the Second Wave of Online
Communities (contd.)
  • Business uses (contd.)
  • Newspapers
  • Inviting information and opinion contributions
  • Targeting 18- to 35-year-old generation
  • Participatory journalism
  • Trend toward having readers help write the online
    newspaper
  • Blogs can become businesses in themselves
  • Must generate financial support (fees,
    advertising)

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Social Networking in the Second Wave of Online
Communities (contd.)
  • Social networking Web sites for shoppers
  • Social shopping
  • Practice of bringing buyers and sellers together
    in a social network to facilitate retail sales
  • Example craigslist
  • Operated by not-for-profit foundation
  • All postings free (except help wanted ads)
  • Example Etsy Web site
  • Marketplace for selling handmade items
  • We Love Etsy Etsy buyers, sellers share
    information

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Social Networking in the Second Wave of Online
Communities (contd.)
  • Social networking Web sites for shoppers
    (contd.)
  • Social networking sites form communities based on
    connections among people
  • Idea-based virtual communities
  • Communities based on connections between ideas
  • Idea-based networking
  • Participating in idea-based virtual communities
  • Examples del.icio.us site, 43 Things site

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Social Networking in the Second Wave of Online
Communities (contd.)
  • Virtual learning networks
  • Distance learning platforms for
    student-instructor interaction (Blackboard)
  • Tools include
  • Bulletin boards, chat rooms, drawing boards
  • Moodle and uPortal
  • Open-source software projects devoted to virtual
    learning community development
  • Open-source software
  • Developed by a programmer community
  • Software available for download at no cost

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Social Networking in the Second Wave of Online
Communities (contd.)
  • Web portals
  • Combine portal and social networking features
  • Typical portal offerings
  • Search engines, directories, free e-mail, news
    stories, weather reports
  • Social networking elements
  • Games and chat rooms
  • Allow site visitors to interact with each other
  • Examples
  • Yahoo!, AOL, MSN

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Revenue Models for Social Networking Sites
  • By late 1990s
  • Revenue created by selling advertising
  • Used by virtual communities, search engine sites,
    Web directories
  • 1998
  • Purchases and mergers occurred
  • New sites still used advertising-only
    revenue-generation model
  • Included features offered by virtual community
    sites, search engine sites, Web directories,
    other information-providing and entertainment
    sites
  • Goal be every Web surfers doorway to the Web

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Revenue Models for Social Networking Sites
(contd.)
  • Advertising-supported social networking sites
  • Smaller sites with specialized appeal
  • Can draw enough visitors to generate significant
    advertising revenue
  • Example I Can Has Cheezburger site
  • Recall from Chapter 3
  • Sites with higher number of visitors can charge
    more
  • Stickiness important element in sites
    attractiveness
  • Rough measure of stickiness
  • Time user spends at the site

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FIGURE 6-2 Popularity and stickiness of leading
Web sites
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Revenue Models for Social Networking Sites
(contd.)
  • Advertising-supported social networking sites
    (contd.)
  • Social networking sites
  • Members provide demographic information
  • Potential for targeted marketing very high
  • High visitor counts
  • Can yield high advertising rates
  • Second-wave advertising fees
  • Based less on up-front site sponsorship payments
  • Based more on revenue generation from continuing
    relationships with people who use the social
    networking sites

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Revenue Models for Social Networking Sites
(contd.)
  • Mixed-revenue and fee-for-service social
    networking sites
  • Most social networking sites use advertising
  • Some charge a fee for some services
  • Examples Yahoo! All-Star Games package, Yahoo!
    premium e-mail service
  • Monetizing
  • Converting site visitors into fee-paying
    subscribers or purchasers of services
  • Concern visitor backlash
  • More examples The Motley Fool and TheStreet.com

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Revenue Models for Social Networking Sites
(contd.)
  • Fee-based social networking
  • Google Answers site
  • Early attempt to monetize social networking
  • Questions answered for a fee
  • Google operated service from 2002 to 2006
  • Similar free services
  • Yahoo! Answers, Amazon (Askville)
  • Uclue (paid researchers earn 75 percent of total
    fee)
  • Advocates claim better quality
  • Fee-based Web sites can generate revenue by
    providing virtual community interaction

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Revenue Models for Social Networking Sites
(contd.)
  • Microlending sites
  • Function as clearinghouses for microlending
    activity
  • Microlending
  • Practice of lending very small amounts of money
  • Lend to people starting or operating small
    businesses (especially in developing countries)
  • Microlending key element
  • Working within social network of borrowers
  • Provide support, element of pressure to repay
  • Examples Kiva and MicroPlace

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Revenue Models for Social Networking Sites
(contd.)
  • Internal virtual communities
  • Provide social interaction among organizations
    employees
  • Run on organizations intranet
  • Save money (less paper)
  • Provide easy access to employee information
  • Good for geographically dispersed employees
  • Adding wireless connectivity
  • Combine second-wave technology with first-wave
    business strategy
  • Wireless communications with internal Web portals

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Mobile Commerce
  • Short messaging service (SMS)
  • Allows mobile phone users to send short text
    messages to each other
  • 2008 United States developments allowing phones
    as Web browsers
  • High-speed mobile telephone networks grew
    dramatically
  • Manufacturers offered range of smart phones with
    Web browser, operating system, applications

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Mobile Operating Systems and Applications
  • Japan and Southeast Asia mobile commerce
  • Much larger online business activity
  • Had high-capacity networks early on
  • Mobile wallets
  • Mobile phones functioning as credit cards
  • Japans NTT DoCoMo phones combined capabilities
  • Generate significant business

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Mobile Operating Systems and Applications
(contd.)
  • United States mobile commerce capabilities began
    in 2008
  • Smart phone and high-capacity network
    introductions
  • Mobile commerce smart phone examples
  • Apple iPhone, Palm Pre, several BlackBerry models
  • Use the Android operating system
  • Provide serious U.S. mobile commerce for the
    first time

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FIGURE 6-3 Smart phones come in a range of
different styles
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Mobile Operating Systems and Applications
(contd.)
  • Mobile commerce browser display options
  • Wireless Application Protocol (WAP)
  • Allows Web pages formatted in HTML to be
    displayed on devices with small screens
  • Display a normal Web page on the device
  • Made possible by increased screen resolution
  • Example Apple iPhone
  • Design Web sites to match specific smart phones
  • Much more difficult to accomplish

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Mobile Operating Systems and Applications
(contd.)
  • Mobile commerce browser display options (contd.)
  • Apple, BlackBerry, Palm
  • Use proprietary operating systems
  • HTC, Motorola, Nokia
  • At one time created their own operating systems
    and software applications
  • Now use a standard operating system provided by a
    third party
  • Most common third-party operating systems
  • Android, Windows Mobile, Symbian

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Mobile Operating Systems and Applications
(contd.)
  • Common operating systems emergence
  • Occurred due to a change in the way software
    applications developed and sold
  • Old U.S. mobile phone company revenue strategy
  • Control application software
  • Apple turned old revenue strategy on its head
  • Apple Apps for iPhone online store
  • Independent developers create apps and sell them
  • BlackBerry and Palm followed Apples lead

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The Future of Mobile Commerce
  • Companies wanting mobile user commerce
  • Review Web sites for compatibility
  • May create separate Web sites for mobile users
  • Mobile phones for online banking
  • In early stages in the United States
  • Physicians using smart phones
  • Phones global positioning satellite (GPS)
    service capabilities
  • Allow mobile business opportunities

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Online Auctions
  • Business opportunity perfect for the Web
  • Auction site revenue sources
  • Charging both buyers and sellers to participate
  • Selling advertising
  • Targeted advertising opportunities available
  • Online auctions capitalize on Internets strength
  • Bring together geographically dispersed people
    sharing narrow interests

36
Auction Basics
  • From Babylon to the Roman Empire to Buddhists
  • Common activity of 17th century England
  • Sothebys (1744), Christies (1766), colonial
    auctions
  • Auction seller offering item for sale
  • Bids price potential buyer willing to pay
  • Bidders potential buyers
  • Private valuations amounts buyer willing to pay
  • Auctioneer manages auction process
  • Shill bidders work for seller or auctioneer
  • May artificially inflate price

37
Auction Basics (contd.)
  • English auctions
  • Bidders publicly announce successively higher
    bids
  • Item sold to highest bidder (at bidders price)
  • Also called ascending-price auction
  • Open auction (open-outcry auction)
  • Bids publicly announced
  • Minimum bid
  • Beginning price
  • If not met item removed (not sold)

38
Auction Basics (contd.)
  • English auctions (contd.)
  • Reserve price (reserve)
  • Sellers minimum acceptable price
  • Not announced
  • If not exceeded item withdrawn (not sold)
  • Yankee auction
  • Multiple item units offered for sale (bidders
    specify quantity)
  • Highest bidder allotted bid quantity
  • Remaining items allocated to next highest bidders
    until all items distributed
  • Bidders pay lowest successful bidder price

39
Auction Basics (contd.)
  • English auctions (contd.)
  • Seller drawback
  • May not obtain maximum possible price
  • Buyer drawback
  • Winners curse psychological phenomenon
  • Bidder gets caught up in competitive bidding
    excitement
  • Bids more than their private valuation

40
Auction Basics (contd.)
  • Dutch auctions
  • Open auction
  • Bidding starts at a high price
  • Drops until bidder accepts price
  • Also called descending-price auctions
  • Seller offers number of similar items for sale
  • Common implementation
  • Use a clock (price drops with each tick)
  • Bidders stop clock and take items at the given
    price
  • If items remain clock restarted

41
Auction Basics (contd.)
  • Dutch auctions (contd.)
  • Often better for the seller
  • Quickly move large numbers of commodity items
  • Successful examples
  • Google initial public offering stock sale (2004)
  • LookSmart stock repurchase

42
Auction Basics (contd.)
  • First-price sealed-bid auctions
  • Sealed-bid auctions
  • Bidders submit bids independently
  • Prohibited from sharing information
  • First-price sealed-bid auction
  • Highest bidder wins
  • If multiple items auctioned next highest bidders
    awarded remaining items at their bid price

43
Auction Basics (contd.)
  • Second-price sealed-bid auction
  • Same as first-price sealed-bid auction
  • Except highest bidder awarded item at
    second-highest bidder price
  • Commonly called Vickrey auctions
  • William Vickrey 1996 Nobel Prize in Economics
  • Findings
  • Yields higher seller returns
  • Encourages all bidders to bid private valuation
    amounts
  • Reduces tendency for bidder collusion

44
Auction Basics (contd.)
  • Open-outcry double auctions
  • Example Chicago Board of Trade auctions of
    commodity futures and stock options
  • Buy and sell offers shouted by traders in trading
    pit
  • Each commodity, stock option traded in own pit
  • Quite frenzied
  • Double auctions (either sealed bid or open
    outcry)
  • Good for items of known quality traded in large
    quantities
  • No item inspection before bidding

45
Auction Basics (contd.)
  • Double auctions
  • Buyers, sellers submit combined price-quantity
    bids
  • Auctioneer
  • Matches sellers offers
  • Starts with lowest price and then goes up
  • To buyers offers
  • Starts with highest price and then goes down
    until all quantities offered are sold
  • Operation format
  • Sealed bid or open-outcry
  • Example New York Stock Exchange

46
Auction Basics (contd.)
  • Reverse (seller-bid) auction
  • Multiple sellers submit price bids
  • Auctioneer represents single buyer
  • Bids for given amount of specific item to
    purchase
  • Prices go down as bidding continues
  • Until no seller willing to bid lower
  • Occasionally operated for consumers
  • Most involve businesses as buyers and sellers

47
FIGURE 6-4 Key characteristics of seven major
auction types
48
Online Auctions and Related Businesses
  • Online auction business rapidly changing
  • Three auction Web site categories
  • General consumer auctions
  • Specialty consumer auctions
  • Business-to-business auctions
  • Varying opinions on categorizing consumer
    auctions
  • Business-to-consumer
  • Consumer-to-consumer
  • Consumer-to-business

49
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • General consumer auctions
  • eBay registration required, seller fees, rating
    system
  • Sellers risk stolen credit cards buyer fails
    to conclude transaction
  • Buyers risk no item delivery misrepresented
    item
  • Most common auction format English auction
  • Seller may set reserve price
  • Bidders listed bids not disclosed (until auction
    end)
  • Continually updated high bid amount displayed
  • Private auction option available

50
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • General consumer auctions (contd.)
  • Another eBay auction format Dutch auction
  • Both formats require minimum bid increment
  • Amount by which one bid must exceed previous bid
  • Proxy bid
  • Bidder specifies maximum bid
  • May cause bidding to rise rapidly
  • eBay stores
  • Integrated into auction site
  • Sellers generate additional profits

51
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • eBays success due to unspecified audience
  • Also spends 1 billion each year to market and
    promote Web site
  • Major determinants of Web auction site success
  • Attracting enough buyers and sellers
  • Yahoo! Auction operation closed in 2007
  • Amazon.com with Auctions Guarantee
  • Offered buyer protection through escrow service
  • Closed in 2006
  • Overstock.com (still active)

52
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • Future challengers to eBay
  • Must overcome lock-in effect
  • New auction participants inclined to patronize
    established marketplaces
  • Example Japanese general consumer auction
  • Yahoo! first to enter market
  • Now dominates (more than 90 market share)
  • eBay maintains low market share (less than 3)

53
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • Specialty consumer auctions
  • Identify special-interest market targets
  • Create specialized Web auction sites
  • No need to compete with eBay
  • Examples
  • JustBeads.com, Cigarbid.com, Winebid

54
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • Consumer reverse auctions
  • Reverse bid
  • Visitor describes desired items or services
  • Site routes visitor to participating merchants
  • Reply to visitor by e-mail
  • Offer item at particular price
  • Buyer accepts
  • Lowest offer
  • Offer best matching buyers criteria
  • All these types of sites now closed

55
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • Consumer reverse auctions (contd.)
  • Priceline.com
  • Considered a seller-bid auction site
  • Visitor states desired airline ticket, car
    rental, hotel room price
  • If sufficiently high price transaction completed
  • Many transactions come from inventory
  • Priceline operates more as a liquidation broker

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Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • Group shopping sites
  • Seller posts item with tentative price
  • Individual buyers enter bids
  • Agreement to buy one unit (no price provided)
  • Site negotiates with seller for lower price
  • Posted price decreases
  • As number of bids increases (only if number of
    bids increases)
  • Result buyers force seller to reduce price
  • Similar to consumer reverse auction

57
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • Group shopping sites (contd.)
  • Well-suited product types
  • Branded products, well-established reputations
  • Produces buyer confidence of good bargain
  • High value-to-size ratio, non-perishable
  • Disadvantages
  • Difficulty attracting sellers interest
  • Well-suited companies
  • Find no advantage, fear sites cannibalize product
    sales, reluctant to offend current distributors
  • Group purchasing sites closed

58
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • Business-to-business auctions
  • Evolved to meet specific existing need
  • Excess inventory disposal (manufacturing)
  • Two methods
  • Liquidation specialists find buyers for unusable
    items
  • Liquidation broker firm that finds buyers for
    items
  • Online auctions
  • Logical extension of these inventory liquidation
    activities to a new and more efficient channel
    (Internet)

59
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • Business-to-business auctions (contd.)
  • Emerging business-to-business Web auction models
  • Large-company model creates own auction site
  • Small-company model uses third-party Web auction
    site instead of liquidation broker
  • Both are direct descendants of traditional methods

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Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • Business-to-business auctions (contd.)
  • Third emerging business-to-business Web auction
    model
  • New business entity enters market lacking
    efficiency and creates a site at which buyers and
    sellers who have not historically done business
    with each other can participate in auctions
  • Resembles consumer online auctions
  • Example hospitals using online auctions to fill
    temporary employment openings

61
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • Business-to-business reverse auctions
  • Example Owens Corning purchases
  • Examples Agilent, Bechtel, Boeing, Raytheon,
    Sony
  • Potential disadvantage
  • Suppliers compete on price alone
  • Cut corners on quality or miss scheduled delivery
    dates
  • Potential advantage
  • Useful for nonstrategic commodity items with
    established quality standards

62
Online Auctions and Related Businesses (contd.)
  • Business-to-business reverse auctions (contd.)
  • Companies opting out
  • Cisco, Cubic, IBM, Solar Turbines
  • If suppliers do not participate
  • Impossible to conduct reverse auctions
  • If competition high among suppliers
  • Reverse auctions provide efficient way to
    conduct, manage price bidding

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FIGURE 6-5 Supply chain characteristics and
reverse auctions
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Auction-Related Services
  • Entrepreneurs encouraged by eBay and other
    auction site growth
  • Provide various kinds of auction-related services
  • Escrow services
  • Auction directory and information services
  • Auction software for sellers and buyers
  • Auction consignment services

65
Auction-Related Services (contd.)
  • Auction escrow services
  • Buyers common concern seller reliability
  • Buyers protect interests in high-value items
  • Independent party holds payment until
  • Buyer receives item
  • Buyer satisfied item is as expected
  • May take delivery of item from seller
  • Perform buyer inspection (qualified to do so)
  • Charge fees
  • Percent of items cost subject to minimum fee

66
Auction-Related Services (contd.)
  • Auction escrow services (contd.)
  • Examples Escrow.com, eDeposit, Square Trade
  • May sell auction buyers insurance
  • Protect buyers from nondelivery and quality risks
  • Avoid escrow fraud
  • Determine if licensed, bonded (licensing agency)
  • Avoid offshore escrow companies entirely
  • Other buyer protections
  • Check sellers rating
  • Use Web site listings of unreliable sellers

67
Auction-Related Services (contd.)
  • Auction directory and information services
  • Example Auctionguide.com
  • Guidance for new auction participants
  • Helpful hints and tips for experienced
    participants
  • Directories of online auction sites
  • Example AuctionBytes
  • Publishes e-mail newsletter
  • Online auction industry articles

68
Auction-Related Services (contd.)
  • Auction directory and information services
    (contd.)
  • Example PriceWatch
  • Advertiser-supported site
  • Advertisers post current selling prices
  • Computer hardware, software, electronics
  • Example PriceSCAN
  • Similar price-monitoring service
  • Also includes books, movies, music, sporting goods

69
Auction-Related Services (contd.)
  • Auction software
  • Target sellers
  • Helps manage online auctions
  • Example AuctionHawk and Vendio
  • Seller management software and services
  • Automate tasks
  • Create attractive page layouts
  • Manage hundreds of auctions

70
Auction-Related Services (contd.)
  • Auction software (contd.)
  • Target buyers
  • Helps manage online auctions
  • Sniping software
  • Observes auction progress until last second
  • As auction expires places bid high enough to win
    (unless bid exceeds sniping software owners
    limit)
  • Snipe act of placing winning bid at the last
    second
  • Almost always wins out over human bidder

71
Auction-Related Services (contd.)
  • Auction software (contd.)
  • Example Cricket Sniping Software site
  • Created in 1997 by David Eccles
  • Companies offer sniping service
  • Sniping software runs on company Web site
  • Customer enters instructions on site
  • Company may offer subscriptions
  • Company may offer mixed-revenue model
  • Sniping software and services business
    information
  • AuctionBytes Web site

72
FIGURE 6-6 AuctionBytes home page
73
Auction-Related Services (contd.)
  • Auction consignment services
  • Target people and small businesses
  • Want to use online auction
  • Do not have skills, time to become a seller
  • Auction consignment services
  • Take item and create online auction for that item
  • Handle transaction
  • Remit proceeds balance (after deducting fee)
  • Main auction consignment businesses
  • ePowerSellers, iSold It, USA AuctionDrop

74
Auction-Related Services (contd.)
  • Auction consignment services (contd.)
  • Key to success
  • Convenient locations for customer drop off
  • Open own stores, franchise stores
  • Electronic commerce first wave
  • Online auction business made possible by the Web
  • Electronic commerce second wave
  • Online auction business created opportunities
  • For even more entirely new types of business

75
Summary
  • Companies using the Web for entirely new things
  • Creating social networks
  • Using mobile technologies to make sales and
    increase operational efficiency
  • Operating auction sites
  • Conducting related businesses
  • Businesses creating online communities to connect
    with customers and suppliers
  • Individuals using social networking sites
  • Personal and business-related interactions
  • Mobile commerce opportunities emerging

76
Summary (contd.)
  • Companies internal social networking sites
  • Facilitate employee communication
  • Online auctions used to sell goods to customers
    and buy from suppliers
  • Seven major auction types
  • Consumer online auction business dominated by
    eBay (United States)
  • Ancillary service businesses support auctions
  • B2B auctions and reverse auctions
  • New methods of inventory disposal, procurement
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