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Electronic Commerce Overview

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The paperless world of electronic business transactions, including EDI, EFT and EDMS ... gas pumps are a EPoS. Realistic Internet growth projections - on the record ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electronic Commerce Overview


1
Electronic CommerceOverview
  • Foothill College
  • Electronic Commerce

2
Electronic CommerceTopic overview
  • Context
  • Definitions
  • History
  • Statistics
  • Demographics
  • Requirements
  • The big picture

3
Phrasing the Context of Electronic Commerce
  • Computer - network mediated financial and
    information transactions (esp. the Internet)
  • The paperless world of electronic business
    transactions, including EDI, EFT and EDMS
  • Global commerce - and its synergistic
    relationship with electronic commerce
  • Vertical integration and supply chain management
  • Business Process Re-engineering (BPR)

4
Electronic Commerce - Definitions
  • Purchasing goods on-line
  • moving product
  • Exchange of business information electronically -
    EDI and EDMS
  • moving and managing digital information
  • Information transactions that have value
  • moving currency and capital (banking and
    insurance)
  • Electronic funds transfer (EFT) and payments
  • Electronic commerce is -
  • commerce done electronically

5
Electronic Commerce - History
  • EFT - Electronic Funds Transfer
  • EDI - Electronic Data Interchange
  • Visa Net, MasterCard, and ACH
  • ATMs, online banking, POS terminals
  • Debit and smart cards - in all shapes and forms
  • Internet, WWW, intranets, and extranets
  • Distributed network computing architectures

6
Electronic Commerce DriversCost and efficiency
of people vs. computers
People
Computers
  • expensive
  • slow
  • errors
  • cheap
  • fast
  • reliable

Networked business process
7
Electronic Commerce - Statistics
  • 1.5 billion spent on the Internet in 1996
  • 320 billion was measured for the year 2001
  • Most growth projections are exponential
  • from 50 to 100 per year for the next 3 - 5
    years
  • Projections of 1 trillion dollars by year 2003
  • Most statistics are generated using a formula
  • a rough estimate multiplied by an expectation
  • rigorous forecasting requires good modeling and
    data
  • trends are often more important than absolute
    numbers

8
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9
(No Transcript)
10
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11
Internet Spending by Category
12
Electronic CommerceComparisons 1996 and in 2001
  • 500 billion in credit card transactions
    worldwide in 1995
  • There were 4.5 trillion cash purchases lt 20
  • 600 billion in Internet purchases in year 2001
    (10x annual growth) would only equal 1996 credit
    card purchases
  • Electronic purchases replace cash purchases, and
    smart cards will be as significant as credit card
    purchases.
  • Electronic commerce makes sense for buying
    information, scheduling services, and bill
    payment - not just goods

13
Electronic CommerceDemographics
  • 300 - 500 million people use the Internet today
  • Its still mostly a North American experience
  • Rapid growth in Europe, Asia, and Latin America
  • New users will be less affluent than current
    users
  • Shift from computer professionals to mainstream

14
Closing the Gender GapWomen and Men on the WWW
15
Home Access and Office Accesson the WWW (North
America)
16
Percentage Spending on the Web
17
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18
ATM User Preference
  • grew very slowly
  • now 50 of users
  • 12 billion transactions annually, 5,000 per month
    per ATM
  • 1/3 cost of in branch
  • over 1 trillion dollars in annual transactions

19
Smart Cards
  • big in Europe
  • field trials in US
  • Mondex / MasterCard
  • replace cash transactions lt 20
  • can be 2 or 3 party
  • vertical industry use
  • encryption is built in

20
Point of Sale Terminal (PoS)
  • inventory input
  • transaction recording
  • connects cash registers to legacy systems
  • key to integration of database marketing, VMI and
    SRC
  • can initiate an EC process
  • not just credit / debit cards
  • gas pumps are a EPoS

21
Realistic Internet growth projections - on the
record
  • Number of users with Internet access will
    continue to grow by about 20 to 30 annually
    through the year 2005
  • The rate of growth may slow around the year 2003,
    but total growth continues well into 2005 ( 30
    to 50 annually)
  • One billion people will have WWW access by 2005
  • Half the planet could be connected by the year
    2010
  • The Web is more than just websites, its a
    method of connecting business processes through
    internetworking

22
People on the Internet Worldwide
23
Ratio Data Bits to Voice Bits(North America
estimates)
24
Electronic Commerce Requirements for Growth
  • Trust (security)
  • Rock solid encryption
  • Secure digital payments
  • Rock solid infrastructure
  • Participation by major banks
  • Protocols for microcommerce
  • Uniform legal and commercial codes

25
What are the security issues of users?
Other
Dont want any personal information on net
Lack of Security
20
4
28
Access to Personal Information
4
5
7
18
Theft
14
Unauthorized Access
Duplication Forgery
Fraud
26
IBMs E-business Vision
Customer Relationship Management
Supply Chain
Electronic Bill Presentment and Payment
27
Electronic Commerce Business Solution Design
Future EC
Current
Business Process
User / Community
Integrated Information Business Processes
User
28
Size of the Internet Commerce MarketSoftware,
Services, and Technology
29
Looking for Parity
  • People
  • Phones
  • Paper
  • Computers
  • Networks
  • Electronic documents
  • Human trust is established face to face
  • Compare written signatures with digital
    certificates
  • Documents exchange data from storage to
    processor
  • Networks let computers and processes talk to
    each other

30
Seeing the Bigger Picture
  • Information storage and delivery has changed -
    from primarily paper to primarily electronic
  • Production and consumption of new information is
    transitioning from people to computers
  • Commerce and workgroups are becoming human -
    digital hybrids, and forcing BPR
  • Computers have become an integral part of our
    business lives - and commerce naturally follows
  • Electronic commerce is absolutely driving the
    growth of global commerce - and vice versa
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