9:01 PM How E-commerce Works | |
Why the Hype?There is a huge amount of hype that surrounds e-commerce. Given the similarities with mail order commerce, you may be wondering why the hype is so common. Take, for example, the following quotes:
This sort of hype applies to a wide range of products. According to eMarketer the biggest product categories include:
The Dell ExampleThe hype doesn't explain the frantic rush by companies, both large and small, to get to the Web. Nor does it justify a small business making a big expenditure on an e-commerce facility. What is driving this sort of frenzy? To understand it a bit, let's take a look at one of the most successful e-commerce companies: Dell. Dell is a straightforward company that, like a host of others, sells custom-configured PCs to consumers and businesses. Dell started as a mail-order company that advertised in the back of magazines and sold their computers over the phone. Dell's e-commerce presence is widely publicized these days because Dell is able to sell so much merchandise over the Web. According toIDG, Dell sold something like $14,000,000 in equipment every day in 2000, and 25 percent of Dell's sales were over the Web. Does this matter? Dell has been selling computers by mail over the phone for more than a decade. Mail order sales is a standard way of doing things that has been around for over a century (Sears, after all, was a mail order company originally). So if 25 percent of Dell's sales move over to the Web instead of using the telephone, is that a big deal? The answer could be yes for three reasons:
These three trends are the main drivers behind the e-commerce buzz. There are other factors as well. The Lure of E-commerceThe following list summarizes what might be called the "lure of e-commerce":
It is these sorts of advantages that create the buzz that surrounds e-commerce right now. There is one final point for e-commerce that needs to be made. E-commerce allows people to create completely new business models. In a mail order company there is a high cost to printing and mailing catalogs that often end up in the trash. There is also a high cost in staffing the order-taking department that answers the phone. In e-commerce both the catalog distribution cost and the order taking cost fall toward zero. That means that it may be possible to offer products at a lower price, or to offer products that could not be offered before because of the change in cost dynamics. However, it is important to point out that the impact of e-commerce only goes so far. Mail order sales channels offer many of these same advantages, but that does not stop your town from having a mall. The mall has social and entertainment aspects that attract people, and at the mall you can touch the product and take delivery instantly. E-commerce cannot offer any of these features. The mall is not going to go away anytime soon... Easy and Hard Aspects of E-commerceThe things that are hard about e-commerce include:
There are so many Web sites, and it is so easy to create a new e-commerce web site, that getting people to look at yours is the biggest problem. The things that are easy about e-commerce, especially for small businesses and individuals, include:
There are inumerable companies that will help you build and put up your electronic store. We'll discuss some options in the next section. Building an E-commerce SiteThe things you need to keep in mind when thinking about building an e-commerce site include:
When you think about e-commerce, you may also want to consider these other desirable capabilities:
The reason why you want to keep these things in mind is because they are all difficult unless your e-commerce software supports them. If the software does support them, they are trivial. Affiliate ProgramsA big part of today's e-commerce landscape is the affiliate program (also known as associate programs). This area was pioneered by Amazon. Amazon allows anyone to set up a specialty book store. When people buy books from the specialty store, the person who owns the specialty bookstore gets a commission (up to 10 percent of the book's list price) from Amazon. The affiliate program gives Amazon great exposure because it now has over 1,000,000 specialty bookstores all over the Web [ref]. Therefore this model is now copied by thousands of e-commerce sites. If you are setting up an e-commerce site you will want to consider an affiliate program as one way to get exposure. Link Share is a company that helps e-commerce sites set up affiliate programs. Another twist on affiliate programs is the CPC Link (CPC=Cost Per Click), also known as affiliate links or click-thru links. You put a link on your site and the company pays you when someone clicks on the link. A typical payment ranges from 5 cents to 20 cents per click. Affiliate links represent the middle ground between banner ads and commission-based affiliate programs. With banner ads, the advertiser takes all the risk -- if no one clicks on the banner then the advertiser wastes money. Commission-based affiliate programs place all the risk on the Web site. If the Web site sends a bunch of people to the affiliate e-commerce site but no one buys anything, then it has no value for the Web site. In CPC links, both sides share risks and rewards equally. You may want to consider setting up this sort of affiliate program to gain exposure for your e-commerce site. Implementing an E-commerce SiteLet's say that you would like to create an e-commerce site. There are three general ways to implement the site with all sorts of variations in between. The three general ways are:
These are in order of decreasing flexibility and increasing simplicity. Enterprise computing means that you purchase hardware and software and hire a staff of developers to create your e-commerce web site. Amazon, Dell and all of the other big players participate in e-commerce at the enterprise level. You might need to consider enterprise computing solutions if:
Virtual hosting services give you some of the flexibility of enterprise computing, but what you get depends on the vendor. In general the vendor maintains the equipment and software and sells them in standardized packages. Part of the package includes security, and almost always a merchant account is also an option. Database access is sometimes a part of the package. You provide the web designers and developers to create and maintain your site. Simplified e-commerce is what most small businesses and individuals are using to get into e-commerce. In this option the vendor provides a simplified system for creating your store. The system usually involves a set of forms that you fill out online. The vendor's software then generates all of the web pages for the store for you. Two good examples of this sort of offering include Yahoo Stores and Verio Stores. You pay by the month for these services. | |
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