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Chapter One

Chapter One. Moving from E-commerce to E-business. Network Infrastructure. Adaptive Supply Chains. Process Automation. Why Study E-business?. Promise: Streamlined Business. Reality: Blizzard of Buzzwords. Customers.com. Lack of Framework. ERP. CRM. Digital Economy. SCM.

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Chapter One

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  1. Chapter One Moving from E-commerce to E-business

  2. Network Infrastructure Adaptive Supply Chains Process Automation Why Study E-business? Promise: Streamlined Business Reality: Blizzard of Buzzwords Customers.com Lack of Framework ERP CRM Digital Economy SCM Portals Exchanges The scale and scope of modern IT investments requires that managers have a clear understanding of e-business fundamentals! www.ebstrategy.com

  3. Consequences of not Studying E-business? Locally Optimized Business Processes Incompatible Projects Order Fulfillment Procurement ERP CRM Poorly Designed Business Processes Persistent Channel Conflicts & Cross-Department Tensions Resistance to Changes www.ebstrategy.com

  4. E-business Course Goals Rationalize buzzwords Recognize commonalties across business environments Framework for designing more effective new systems Provide a Managerial Perspective A set of basic principles Understand how to map business needs to e-business solutions Synthesis Need for a Robust Framework Information Technology (IT) changes, but management principles persist! www.ebstrategy.com

  5. Framework for Book What is the basic framework that ties business strategies to applications? What are the key ideas of e-business strategies and how do they translate into e-business design to align IT with business needs? Business Strategies and Processes Drive Enable E-business Applications Drive Enable IT Infrastructure www.ebstrategy.com

  6. Table of Contents E-commerce vs. E-business? E-Business Success Stories Ten Rules of E-business What does this mean for managers – Looking Deep Key Take-Aways www.ebstrategy.com

  7. E-commerce • Refers to selling of products and services over the Web • Transactions fall into three categories: • Business-to-business (B2B) • Business-to-consumer (B2C) • Consumer-to-consumer (C2C) • The goal of e-commerce is to reduce transaction costs www.ebstrategy.com

  8. Complex Communities of Interest Mega-Portals E-commerce Transactions Web Storefront Functionality Brochure ware Limited 1 2 3 4 0 E-commerce Maturity E-commerce Progression E-commerce has evolved rapidly since 1995 www.ebstrategy.com

  9. E-business • The back-office applications, systems or processes that create goods and/or provide services. • E-business includes: • Customer Relationship Management • Enterprise Resource Planning • Supply Chain Management • Human Resource Management Systems • And more . . . www.ebstrategy.com

  10. value added E-commerce vs. E-business E-commerce E-business “INPUTS” “OUTPUTS” TRANSFORMATION • Processes • Facilities • Equipment • Finance • People • Serves Customers • Product Sold • People • Raw Material E-business: The transformation of key business processes through the use of Internet technologies! www.ebstrategy.com

  11. A business process is a network of activities that takes one or more inputs and creates an output of value to customer E-business: All About Managing Business Processes Process Analysis & Management Customer Feedback for control E-business Network of activities Inputs E-commerce Flow Units (Raw material, people, information, etc.) Products Services Resources Labor & Capital www.ebstrategy.com

  12. E-business: Linking Today’s Business with Tomorrow’s Technology • E-business -- includes all apps and processes enabling a company to service a transaction • E-business Evolution • Phase 1: Presence, information-only • Phase 2: Transactions • Phase 3: Profitability • E-business in third phase today: • Psychology of first two phases: technology would trump experience; future would belong to upstarts as eToys • Psychology of this phase: experience, distribution, margins are worth something www.ebstrategy.com

  13. Table of Contents E-commerce vs. E-business? E-business Success Stories Ten Rules of E-business What does this mean for managers – Looking Deep Key Take-Aways www.ebstrategy.com

  14. E-business is Changing All Industries Communications Utilities Transportation Hospitality Manufacturing Automotive Financial Petrochemical/ Insurance Process Consumer/ Entertainment/ Health Care Retail Services Hi-Tech What differentiates the e-business efforts of leading companies from the pack? www.ebstrategy.com

  15. Visionary Firms and E-business • Visionary companies understand current business designs are inadequate for doing business in the e-commerce era • Can buy a $999 built-to-order PC from Dell online but not a customized $3000 color copier from Xerox • Cisco can overhaul its product line every 2 years, but Kodak cannot seem to deliver rapid innovations to meet changing customer requirements • Visionary companies have integrated operations to support changing customer requirements • E-customers’ needs, tastes, and expectations transforming shape of the enterprise Necessary: fusion of business designs, processes, apps, and systems on an unprecedented scale www.ebstrategy.com

  16. Visionary Firms and E-business • Management at leading companies often ask: • How will ecommerce change our customer priorities? • How can we construct a business design to meet these new customer priorities? • What kind of new apps infrastructure do we need to orchestrate the new business design? • What short-term and long-term investments in people, partners, and tech must we make to survive, let alone thrive, in the new economy? www.ebstrategy.com

  17. E-business Capabilities • Process-based • Capacities that transforms material or information and provide advantages on dimensions of cost and quality. • E.g., United Parcel Service (UPS) • Systems-based • Capacities that are broad-based involving the entire supply chain and provide advantages of short lead times and customization. • E.g., Dell Computer • Organization-based • Capacities that are difficult to replicate and provide abilities to master new technologies. • E.g., Cisco Systems Let’s look at a few visionary companies…. www.ebstrategy.com

  18. United Parcel Service • Founded in 1907 to become world’s largest express and package delivery firm • 13.2 million packages per day, 3 billion/year • 344,000 employees; $29.8 billion revenue • 11th largest airline; Largest cellular user in the world • Initially a laggard in use of IT. In 1980s and throughout the 90s, spent billions of dollars putting in place • Tracking and tracing technology • Frontline handheld technology • E-commerce capabilities • Huge customer databases • Benefits • 2 Million tracking requests per day over the web • Connect 1.7 million sellers with 7 million buyers every day Annual IT investment of over $1 billion www.ebstrategy.com

  19. Dell - Build to Order E-channel • Challenges • Scale to large volumes - $50 million a day • Service consumers & businesses • Solution • Premier Pages: Provide full-service (leasing, financing, order status) • Increases effectiveness of their sales force • Benefits • Sales today: 60% Businesses, 40% Consumers • Improved Customer Service (7x24 account status, real-time order status) • More efficient, lower-cost sales cycle www.ebstrategy.com

  20. Cisco Systems • Most successful “New Economy” firm with “Old Economy” discipline and operational excellence • Cisco has propagated IT throughout the organization, in every major function • Significant investments in back office ERP ($30M) and Internet/Intranet ($100M) • Almost $400M annual savings from use of technology • E-business use is a major competitive long-term strategy for Cisco • Made it very difficult for slow-moving, traditional companies (Lucent, Nortel) to catch up www.ebstrategy.com

  21. What Do Leading Firms Have in Common, Business-Wise? • Unusually successful within their industries • Profitable and growing • Clear strategic intent – Wal-Mart (Low Price Guarantee) • Long-term technology blueprint -- “Built to last” • Complex, multi-functional business model • Good places to work – employees turnover low • Continually innovative • Fit among strategy, business model, systems www.ebstrategy.com

  22. Table of Contents E-commerce vs. E-business? E-business Success Stories Ten Rules of E-business What does this mean for you – Looking Deep Key Take-Aways www.ebstrategy.com

  23. Ten Rules of E-business www.ebstrategy.com

  24. Ten Rules of E-business www.ebstrategy.com

  25. Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 1 • Technology is no longer an afterthought in forming business strategy, but the actual cause and driver • Conventional, risk-averse businesses cannot ignore e-business • E-commerce poses most significant challenge since advent of computing • Most execs unaware of impact of these changes • Need to see business differently; maintaining status quo not a viable option www.ebstrategy.com

  26. Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 2 • The ability to streamline the structure, influence, and control of the flow of information is dramatically more powerful and cost-effective than moving and manufacturing physical products • Core driver of structural transformation of business • Few companies have info-centric business designs for continuous business change and innovation • Changing info flow requires changing product mix and ecosystem • DEC’s demise • Most companies unable to cannibalize existing business structures, reallocate assets to compete with startups www.ebstrategy.com

  27. Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 3 • Inability to overthrow the dominant, outdated business design often leads to business failure • CompuServe & Prodigy Vs. AOL • Not the earliest adopters, but the most serious, eventually prevail • AOL outlasted, outwit, and outsmart competition • Often in the early phase, there is an “arms race” between competitors • Need to convert technology advantage to process advantage to business model advantage • Deeply-embedded innovations are difficult to implement – but also to copy! www.ebstrategy.com

  28. Value Chain Disaggregation and Reaggregation • Disaggregation to separate means, or products, from ends, or customer needs • Value of a business in the needs it serves, not in products it offers • Intel with continuous innovation in chip design and manufacturing • Requires identifying, valuing, and nurturing core of business: the underlying needs satisfied by company • Reaggregation to lower cost or enhance differentiation from competitors • Streamlines entire value chain • Success dependent on well-integrated enterprise apps • Amazon.com Vs. Barnes and Nobles www.ebstrategy.com

  29. The Road Ahead: Steps to a New Beginning • Six steps of disaggregation and reaggregation • What is the new industry structure? • Configuration • What does the digital consumer want? • Value in terms of experience and expectations • What are the new economics? • How to convert value creation into revenue? • How do you engineer the end-to-end value stream? • How do we reorganize our business? • Right partnerships • Where is the value? • Integration • How do we implement change? • New generation leaders who understand how to create digital future by design and intent, not by accident www.ebstrategy.com

  30. Challenging Traditional Definitions of Value • Customers need businesses to improve • Speed of service • Convenience • Personalization • Price • Managers should ask how they can use technology to create new value proposition for the customer • Domino’s Pizza, Dell, Amazon.com • Ability to view world from customers’ perspective prevents visionary companies from starting in wrong place and ending up at wrong destination • Market segmentation analysis difficult to execute in turbulent environment www.ebstrategy.com

  31. Changing the Notion of Value: E-commerce • Web and ecommerce have accelerated value innovation in speed, convenience, personalization and price dimensions of a service • Changed underlying value proposition • Customer’s looking for cheapest, most familiar, or best quality product • A product or service that is 98 percent as good, unfamiliar or costs 50 cents more will not survive • Companies following such middle-of-the-road strategies will underperform www.ebstrategy.com

  32. Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 4 • E-commerce is enabling companies to listen to their customers and become either “the cheapest,” “the most familiar,” or “the best” • “The cheapest” not synonymous with inferior quality • Southwest’s “No Frills Flying” • Wal-Mart’s “Everyday Low Prices” • “The most familiar” means customers know what to expect • McDonald’s, Coca-Cola took decades to build brand • AOL and Yahoo carved out strong identities in only a few years using technology www.ebstrategy.com

  33. Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 4 • Being “the best” • Reinventing service processes to enhance quality • Turning company on a dime to move in more profitable directions • Raising relationships with customers and suppliers to unprecedented levels of cooperation and trust • Amercian Express’ Return Protection Plan www.ebstrategy.com

  34. Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 5 • Don’t use technology just to create the product; use it to innovate, entertain, and enhance the entire experience surrounding the product, from selection and ordering to receiving and service • Amazon.com in the book retailing industry identified new source of customer value by streamlining consumers’ buying experience • Microsoft anticipated changing customer experiences and reengineered several value chains: Travel (Expedia), Automotive (CarPoint), Real Estate (HomeAdvisor), Finance (Investor) www.ebstrategy.com

  35. Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 5 • CEOs must understand the threat posed by value migration • Is there an Amazon.com that can squeeze margins in your business? • If not, can you create one -- “destroy your business” initiative at GE? • Are any new entrants in your industry leveraging Web to rewire customer experience and change service expectations? • CEOs must understand how to manage in a fast-moving environment www.ebstrategy.com

  36. Cost Flexibility Delivery Quality Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 6 • The business design of the future increasingly uses reconfigurable e-business community models to best meet customers’ needs • Competition no longer between companies but between Business Webs (BWs) • Auto-By-Tel vs. Big Three in the car industry www.ebstrategy.com

  37. Harvesting Outsourcing: E-business Core Competencies 3rd Gen: Need advice, contacts and Web savvy 2nd Gen: Cannot go at it alone Process Outsourcing Investment Partnerships 1st Gen: Cannot do everything well Contract Manufacturing Co-create critical tasks Focus: Market position via ease of doing business (e.g, GE in India) Administration HR Accounting IT Outsource critical tasks Focus: Time-to-market, Market position via ease of doing business Do not outsource core competence Focus: efficiency and cost reduction www.ebstrategy.com

  38. Creating the New Technoenterprise: Integrate, Integrate, Integrate Strategy Process • App integration key to e-business • Not easy, requires major app overhaul for integrated front-end/back-end infrastructure • Integrated app architecture critical with advent of e-commerce • Threat of losing customers looming large with advent of new market entrants Customer Needs Corporate Strategy Process Strategy Application Integration Decisions www.ebstrategy.com

  39. Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 7 • The goal of new business designs is for companies to create flexible outsourcing alliances that not only off-load costs but also make customers ecstatic • E-business enabled outsourcing a big deal • Pressure by shareholders for double-digit revenue growth • CEOs have already reengineered, downsized and cut costs; now looking at technology to transform business model and deliver results www.ebstrategy.com

  40. Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 8 • For urgent e-business projects its easy to minimize application infrastructure needs and to focus on the glitzy front end apps. The oversight can be costly in more ways than one • Decision to adopt e-business architecture is a business, not technical, decision The lack of attention to the back-office systems and process side of E-business is the primary reason for many project failures. www.ebstrategy.com

  41. Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 9 • The ability to plan an e-business infrastructure course swiftly and to implement it ruthlessly are key to success; ruthless execution is norm • Most e-business strategies in dire straits even before they start • Managers often don’t understand complexity of converting strategy into a working architecture The goal of every successful e-business strategy is help the firm either save or make money. www.ebstrategy.com

  42. Ten Rules of E-business: Rule 10 • The tough task for management is to align business strategies, processes, and applications fast, right, and all at once; Strong leadership is imperative • Many managers good at planning strategy and looking at things strategically but not at implementing strategy • Implementation takes leadership, commitment and backbone • “Creative destruction” or breaking free from habits of past necessary www.ebstrategy.com

  43. Table of Contents E-commerce vs. E-business? E-business Success Stories Ten Rules of E-business What does this mean for managers – Looking Deep Key Take-Aways www.ebstrategy.com

  44. Current Issues in E-Business • Effectively consolidating the processes and IT operations resulting from mergers • Developing flexible supply chains – physical, information and financial -- to enable mass customization of products and services • Managing global supplier, production and distribution networks • The customer oriented integration -- using technology to combat the increased “commoditization” of products/services • Using self-service to cut internal and external operating costs www.ebstrategy.com

  45. Are You Ready? • Does senior management understand? • Implementation side of strategy? • That entire business platform is being transformed by new technology that tightly integrates internal and external processes? • The risks, challenges in integrating and implementing enterprise apps necessary for an e-business enterprise? • What it takes to build inter-enterprise, tech-supported processes, such as SCM, that form backbone of ebusiness? • Do you have baggage – legacy apps, calcified processes, bureaucratic controls and inflexible business models www.ebstrategy.com

  46. Fundamental Questions in Each Phase • How will e-commerce change our customer priorities? • What new things do our customers want? • How can we construct a business design to meet these new customer priorities? • What kind of new applications infrastructure do we need to orchestrate the new business design? • What short-term and long-term investments in people, partners, and technology must we make to survive, let alone thrive in this new environment? www.ebstrategy.com

  47. Are Customers Are Looking for Internet Business Solutions • Customer attitudes — from tactical to strategic • Customers require solutions — not just products and services • Internet business solutions are evaluated and selected by the business decision-makers — not the technical staff • Business decision-makers are looking for a trusted advisor www.ebstrategy.com

  48. Table of Contents E-commerce vs. E-business? E-business Success Stories Ten Rules of E-business What does this mean for managers – Looking Deep Key Take-Aways www.ebstrategy.com

  49. E-business decision-makers are Presidents, CEO’s, CFO’s, and department heads What motivates them – business strategy & direction, NOT technology E-business is NOT about Technology Business decisions Strategic Technology decisions Tactical Time www.ebstrategy.com

  50. E-business Management Challenges Why Should Senior Management Be Much More Focused On E-business Decisions Today? The Cost Of Making A Technology Mistake Has Increased Exponentially Nike reports 400 Million loss due to supply chain software snafu Siemens invests 1 Billion in Supply Chain Project Coco-Cola invest 600 Million in Logistics platform www.ebstrategy.com

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