代写 Introduction to Electronic Commerce HC3152 Ebusiness A
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代写 Introduction to Electronic Commerce HC3152 Ebusiness Applications
Chapter 1 Introduction to Electronic Commerce
HC3152 Ebusiness Applications Week 1
Holmes 2011
Learning Objectives
In this chapter, you will learn about:
What electronic commerce is and how it has evolved into a second wave of growth
Why companies concentrate on revenue models and the analysis of business processes instead of business models when they undertake electronic commerce initiatives
How economic forces have created a business environment that is fostering the second wave of electronic commerce
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Learning Objectives (cont’d.)
How businesses use value chains and SWOT analysis to identify electronic commerce opportunities
The international nature of electronic commerce and the challenges that arise in engaging in electronic commerce on a global scale
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Electronic Commerce: The Second Wave
Electronic commerce history
Mid-1990s to 2000: rapid growth
“Dot-com boom” followed by “dot-com bust”
2000 to 2003: overly gloomy news reports
2003: signs of new life
•Sales and profit growth return
•Electronic commerce growing at a rapid pace
•Electronic commerce becomes part of general economy
2008 general recession
•Electronic commerce hurt less than most of economy
Second wave underway
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Electronic Commerce and Electronic Business
Electronic commerce
Shopping on the Web
Businesses trading with other businesses
Internal company processes
Broader term: electronic business (e-business)
Electronic commerce includes:
All business activities using Internet technologies
• Internet and World Wide Web (Web)
• Wireless transmissions on mobile telephone
networks
Dot-com (pure dot-com)
Businesses operating only online
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Categories of Electronic Commerce
Business-to-consumer (B2C)
Consumer shopping on the Web
Business-to-business (B2B): e-procurement
Transactions conducted between Web businesses
Supply management (procurement) departments
• Negotiate purchase transactions with suppliers
Business processes
Using Internet technologies to support organisation
selling and purchasing activities
Consumer-to-consumer (C2C)
Business-to-government (B2G)
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FIGURE 1-1 Elements of electronic commerce
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Categories of Electronic Commerce (cont’d.)
Elements of electronic commerce
Relative sizes of elements
• Rough approximation
Dollar volume and number of transactions
• B2B much greater than B2C
Number of transactions
• Supporting business processes greater than B2C
and B2B combined
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Categories of Electronic Commerce (cont’d.)
Activity
Task performed by a worker in the course of doing his
or her job
May or may not be related to a transaction
Transaction: exchange of value
Purchase, sale, or conversion of raw materials into
finished product
Involves at least one activity
Business processes
Group of logical, related, sequential activities and
transactions
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Categories of Electronic Commerce (cont’d.)
Web helping people work more effectively
Telecommuting (telework)
Consumer-to-consumer (C2C)
Individuals buying and selling among themselves
• Web auction site
C2C sales included in B2C category
• Seller acts as a business (for transaction
purposes)
Business-to-government (B2G)
Business transactions with government agencies
• Paying taxes, filing required reports
B2G transactions included in B2B discussions
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FIGURE 1-2 Electronic commerce categories
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The Development and Growth of Electronic Commerce
People engaging in commerce:
Adopt available tools and technologies
Internet
Changed way people buy, sell, hire, organise
business activities
• More rapidly than any other technology
Electronic Funds Transfers (EFTs)
Wire transfers
Electronic transmissions of account exchange
information
• Uses private communications networks
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The Development and Growth of Electronic Commerce
(cont’d.)
Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
Business-to-business transmission
• Computer-readable data in standard format
Standard transmitting formats benefits
• Reduces errors
• Avoids printing and mailing costs
• Eliminates need to reenter data
Trading partners
Businesses engaging in EDI with each other
EDI pioneers (General Electric, Sears, Wal-Mart)
• Improved purchasing processes and supplier
relationships
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The Development and Growth of Electronic Commerce
(cont’d.)
EDI pioneers problem
High implementation cost
• Expensive computer hardware and software
• Establishing direct network connections to trading
partners or subscribing to value-added network
Value-added network (VAN)
• Independent firm offering EDI connection and
transaction-forwarding services
• Ensure transmitted data security
• Charge fixed monthly fee plus per transaction
charge
Gradually moved EDI traffic to the Internet
• Reduced EDI costs
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The Dot-Com Boom, Bust, and Rebirth
1997 to 2000 irrational exuberance
12,000 Internet-related businesses started
$100 billion of investors’ money
5,000+ companies went out of business or acquired
2000 to 2003
$200 billion invested
Fueled online business activity growth rebirth
Online B2C sales growth continued more slowly
2008-2009 recession
B2C and B2B increasing growth rates continue
Driving force: people with Internet access increasing
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FIGURE 1-3 Actual and estimated online sales in B2C and B2B categories
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The Second Wave of Electronic Commerce
Four waves based on the Industrial Revolution
First and second wave characteristics
Regional scope
•First wave: United States phenomenon
•Second wave: international
Start-up capital
•First wave: easy to obtain
•Second wave: companies using internal funds
Internet technologies used
•First wave: slow and inexpensive (especially B2C)
•Second wave: broadband connections
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The Second Wave of Electronic Commerce (cont’d.)
First and second wave characteristics (cont’d.)
Internet technology integration
•First wave: bar codes, scanners
•Second wave: Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) devices, smart cards, biometric technologies
Electronic mail (e-mail) use
•First wave: unstructured communication
•Second wave: integral part of marketing, customer contact strategies
Revenue source
•First wave: online advertising (failed)
•Second wave: Internet advertising (more successful)
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The Second Wave of Electronic Commerce (cont’d.)
First and second wave characteristics (cont’d.)
Digital product sales
•First wave: fraught with difficulties (music industry)
•Second wave: fulfilling available technology promise
•Mobile telephone based commerce (mobile commerce or m-commerce)
•Smart phone technology enabling mobile commerce
•Web 2.0: making new Web business possible
Business online strategy
•First wave: first-mover advantage
•Second wave: businesses not relying on first-mover advantage
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FIGURE 1-4 Key characteristics of the first two waves of electronic commerce
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Business Models, Revenue Models, and Business Processes
Business model
Set of processes combined to achieve company goal of yielding profit
Electronic commerce first wave
Investors sought Internet-driven business models
•Expectations of rapid sales growth, market dominance
Saw copying of successful “dot-com” business models
•Michael Porter argued business models did not exist
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Business Models, Revenue Models, and Business Processes (cont’d.)
Instead of copying model, examine business elements
Streamline, enhance, replace with Internet technology driven processes
Revenue model used today
Specific collection of business processes
•Identify customers
•Market to those customers
•Generate sales
Helpful for classifying revenue-generating activities
•Communication and analysis purposes
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Focus on Specific Business Processes
Companies think in terms of business processes
Purchasing raw materials or goods for resale
Converting materials and labor into finished goods
Managing transportation and logistics
Hiring and training employees
Managing business finances
Identify processes benefiting from e-commerce technology
Uses of Internet technologies
Improve existing business processes, identify new business opportunities, adapt to change
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Role of Merchandising
Merchandising
Combination of store design, layout, product display knowledge
Salespeople skills
Identify customer needs
•Find products or services meeting needs
Merchandising and personal selling
Difficult to practice remotely
Web site success
Transfer merchandising skills to the Web
•Easier for some products than others
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Product/Process Suitability to Electronic Commerce
Classifications
Depend on available technologies’ current state
•Change as new e-commerce tools emerge
FIGURE 1-5 Business process suitability to type of commerce
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Product/Process Suitability to Electronic Commerce (cont’d.)
Commodity item: well suited to e-commerce selling
Product or service hard to distinguish from same products or services provided by other sellers
Features: standardised and well known
Price: distinguishing factor
Consider product’s shipping profile
Collection of attributes affecting how easily that product can be packaged and delivered
Note value-to-weight ratio
•DVD: good example
•Expensive jewelry: high value-to-weight ratio
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Product/Process Suitability to Electronic Commerce (cont’d.)
Easier-to-sell products have:
Strong brand reputation (Kodak camera)
Appeal to small but geographically diverse groups
Traditional commerce
Better for products relying on personal selling skills
Combination of electronic and traditional commerce
Business process includes both commodity and personal inspection items
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Advantages and Disadvantages of Electronic Commerce
E-commerce increases sales and decreases costs
Virtual community: gathering of people online
Using Web 2.0 technologies
E-commerce buyer opportunities
Increases purchasing opportunities
Identifies new suppliers and business partners
Efficiently obtains competitive bid information
•Easier to negotiate price and delivery terms
Increases speed, information exchange accuracy
Wider range of choices available 24 hours a day
•Immediate access to prospective purchase information
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Advantages and Disadvantages of Electronic Commerce (cont’d.)
Benefits extend to general society welfare
Lower costs to issue and secure:
•Electronic payments of tax refunds
•Public retirement
•Welfare support
Provides faster transmission
Provides fraud, theft loss protection
•Electronic payments easier to audit and monitor
Reduces commuter-caused traffic, pollution
•Due to telecommuting
Products and services available in remote areas
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Disadvantages of Electronic Commerce
Poor choices for electronic commerce
Perishable foods and high-cost, unique items
Disadvantages will disappear when:
E-commerce matures
•Becomes more available to and accepted by general population
Critical masses of buyers become equipped, willing to buy through Internet
•Online grocery industry example
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Disadvantages of Electronic Commerce (cont’d.)
Additional problems
Calculating return on investment
Recruiting and retaining employees
Technology and software issues
Cultural differences
Consumers resistant to change
Conflicting laws
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Economic Forces and Electronic Commerce
Economics
Study how people allocate scarce resources
•Through commerce and government actions
Commerce organisations participate in markets
Potential sellers come into contact with buyers
Medium of exchange available (currency or barter)
Organisation hierarchy (flat or many levels)
Bottom level includes largest number of employees
Pyramid structure
Transaction costs
Motivation for moving to hierarchically structured firms
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Transaction Costs
Total costs a buyer and seller incur
While gathering information and negotiating
purchase-and-sale transaction
Includes:
• Brokerage fees and sales commissions
• Cost of information search and acquisition
Sweater dealer example (Figure 1-6)
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FIGURE 1-6 Market form of economic organisation
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Markets and Hierarchies
Coase’s analysis of high transaction costs
Hierarchical organisations formed
• Replace market-negotiated transactions
• Strong supervision and worker-monitoring
elements
Sweater example (Figure 1-7)
Oliver Williamson (extended Coase’s analysis)
Complex manufacturing, assembly operations
• Hierarchically organised, vertically integrated
Manufacturing innovations increased monitoring
activities’ efficiency and effectiveness
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Strategic business unit (business unit)
One particular combination of product, distribution
channel, and customer type
Exception to hierarchy trend
Commodities
FIGURE 1-7 Hierarchical form of economic organisation
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Using Electronic Commerce to Reduce Transaction Costs
Electronic commerce
Change vertical integration attractiveness
Change transaction costs’ level and nature
Example: employment transaction
Telecommuting
•May reduce or eliminate transaction costs
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Network Economic Structures
Neither market nor hierarchy
Strategic alliances (strategic partnerships)
Coordinate strategies, resources, skill sets
Form long-term, stable relationships with other companies and individuals
•Based on shared purposes
Strategic partners
Come together for specific project or activity
Form many intercompany teams
•Undertake variety of ongoing activities
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Network Economic Structures (cont’d.)
Network organisations
Well suited to information-intensive technology industries
Sweater example
•Knitters organise into networks of smaller organisations
•Specialise in styles or designs
Electronic commerce makes such networks easier to construct and maintain
•Will be predominant in the near future
Manuel Castells predicts economic networks will become the organising structure for all social interactions
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FIGURE 1-8 Network form of economic organisation
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Network Effects
Activities yield less value as consumption amount increases
Law of diminishing returns
•Example: hamburger consumption
Networks (network effect)
Exception to law of diminishing returns
•More people or organisations participate in network
•Value of network to each participant increases
Example: telephone
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Using Electronic Commerce to Create Network Effects
E-mail account example
Provides access to network of people with e-mail accounts
If e-mail account is part of smaller network
•E-mail generally less valuable
Internet e-mail accounts
Far more valuable than single-organisation e-mail
•Due to network effect
Need way to identify business processes
Evaluate electronic commerce suitability
•For each process
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Identifying Electronic Commerce Opportunities
Focus on specific business processes
Break business down
Series of value-adding activities
•Combine to generate profits, meet firm’s goal
Commerce conducted by firms of all sizes
Firm
Multiple business units owned by a common set of shareholders or company
Industry
Multiple firms selling similar products to similar customers
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Strategic Business Unit Value Chains
Value chain
Organising strategic business unit activities to design, produce, promote, market, deliver, and support the products or services
Michael Porter includes supporting activities
•Human resource management and purchasing
Strategic business unit primary activities
Identify customers, design, purchase materials and supplies, manufacture product or create service, market and sell, deliver, provide after-sale service and support
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Strategic Business Unit Value Chains (cont’d.)
Strategic business unit primary activities
(cont’d.)
Importance depends on:
• Product or service business unit provides
• Customers
Central corporate organisation support activities
Finance and administration
Human resource
Technology development
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Left-to-right flow
Does not imply strict time sequence
FIGURE 1-9 Value chain for a strategic business unit
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Industry Value Chains
Examine where strategic business unit fits within
industry
Porter’s value system
Describes larger activities stream into which particular
business unit’s value chain is embedded
Industry value chain refers to value systems
Delivery of product to customer
Use as purchased materials in its value chain
Awareness of businesses value chain activities
Allows identification of new opportunities
Useful way to think about general business strategy
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FIGURE 1-9 Value chain for a
strategic business unit
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SWOT Analysis: Evaluating Business Unit
Opportunities
SWOT analysis
Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats
Consider all issues systematically
First: look into business unit
• Identify strengths and weaknesses
Then: review operating environment
• Identify opportunities and threats presented
Take advantage of opportunities
Build on strengths
Avoid threats
Compensate for weaknesses
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FIGURE 1-11 SWOT analysis questions
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FIGURE 1-12 Results of Dell’s SWOT analysis
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International Nature of Electronic Commerce
Internet connects computers worldwide
When companies use Web to improve business
process:
They automatically operate in global environment
Key international commerce issues
Trust
Culture
Language
Government
Infrastructure
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Trust Issues on the Web
Important to establish trusting relationships with customers
Rely on established brand names
Difficult for online businesses
Anonymity exists in Web presence
Banking example: browsing site’s pages
•Difficult to determine bank size or how well established
Business must overcome distrust in Web “strangers”
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FIGURE 1-13 This classic cartoon from The New Yorker illustrates anonymity on the Web
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Language Issues
Business must adapt to local cultures
“Think globally, act locally”
Provide local language versions of Web site
Customers more likely to buy from sites translated into own language
50 percent of Internet content in English
Half of current Internet users do not read English
•By 2015: 70% of e-commerce transaction will involve at least one party outside of the United States
Languages may require multiple translations
Separate dialects
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Language Issues (cont’d.)
Large site translation may be prohibitive
Decided by corporate department responsible for page content
Mandatory translation into all supported languages
Home page
All first-level links to home page
High priority pages to translate
Marketing, product information, establishing brand
Use translation services and software
Human translation: key marketing messages
Software: routine transaction processing functions
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Cultural Issues
Important element of business trust
Anticipating how the other party to a transaction will act in specific circumstances
Culture
Combination of language and customs
Varies across national boundaries, regions within nations
Personal property concept
•Valued in North America and Europe (not Asia)
Cultural issue example
Virtual Vineyards (now Wine.com)
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Cultural Issues (cont’d.)
Subtle language and cultural standard errors
General Motors’ Chevrolet Nova automobile
Baby food in jars in Africa
Select icons carefully
Shopping cart versus shopping baskets, trolleys
Hand signal for “OK”: obscene gesture in Brazil
Dramatic cultural overtones
India: inappropriate to use cow image in cartoon
Muslim countries: offended by human arms or legs uncovered
White color (purity versus death)
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Cultural Issues (cont’d.)
Online business apprehension
Japanese shoppers’ unwillingness to pay by credit
Softbank
Devised a way to introduce electronic commerce to a reluctant Japanese population
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Culture and Government
Online discussion inhospitable to cultural environments
Government controls in some cultures
Unfettered communication not desired
Unfettered communication not considered acceptable
•Denounced Internet material content
Unrestricted Internet access forbidden
•Filter Web content
Regularly reviews ISPs and their records
Impose language requirements
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Culture and Government (cont’d.)
Internet censorship
Restricts electronic commerce
Reduces online participant interest levels
China
Wrestling with issues presented by the growth of the Internet as a vehicle for doing business
Created complex set of registration requirements and regulations governing any business engaging in electronic commerce
Regularly conducts reviews of ISPs and their records
Strong cultural requirements finding their way into the legal codes that govern business conduct
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Infrastructure Issues
Internet infrastructure
Computers and software connected to Internet
Communications networks’ message packets travel
Infrastructure variations and inadequacies exist
Outside United States
Government-owned industry
•Heavily regulated
High local telephone connection costs
•Affect buying online behavior
International orders: global problem
No process to handle order and paperwork
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Infrastructure Issues (cont’d.)
Business face challenges posed by variations and inadequacies in the infrastructure supporting the Internet throughout the world
Local connection costs
Inability to handle order
Freight forwarder
Arranges international transactions’ shipping and insurance
Customs broker
Arranges tariff payment and compliance
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Infrastructure Issues (cont’d.)
Bonded warehouse
Secure location
Holds international shipments until customs requirements or payments satisfied
Handling international transactions paperwork
Annual cost: $800 billion
Software automates some paperwork
•Countries have own paper-based forms, procedures
•Countries have incompatible computer systems
See Figure 1-14: complex information flows
代写 Introduction to Electronic Commerce HC3152 Ebusiness Applications
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FIGURE 1-14 Parties involved in a typical international trade transaction
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Summary
Electronic commerce
Application of new Internet and Web technologies
• Helps individuals, businesses, other organisations
conduct effective business
Adopted in waves of change
• First wave ended in 2000
• Second wave focuses on improving specific
business processes
Technology improvements
Create new products and services
Improved promotion, marketing, delivery of existing
offerings
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Summary (cont’d.)
Technology improvements (cont’d.)
Improve purchasing and supply activities
Identify new customers
Operate finance, administration, human resource
management activities more efficiently
Reduce transaction costs
Create network economic effects
• Leads to greater revenue opportunities
Electronic commerce
Fits into markets, hierarchies, networks
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Summary (cont’d.)
Value chains
Occur at business unit, industry levels
Value chains and SWOT analysis
Tools to understand business processes
• Analyse suitability for electronic commerce
implementation
Key international commerce issues
Trust
Culture and language
Government
Infrastructure
代写 Introduction to Electronic Commerce HC3152 Ebusiness Applications