1 / 29

C3 Consumer E-Commerce

C3 Consumer E-Commerce. 3.1 – Online Shopping. Effects of E-Commerce Fast Growth In 1999, business-to-consumer e-commerce totaled over $20 Billion. By 2004 it was $184 Billion. Slim Profits E-Commerce has taken away profits from traditional stores. For Example: Traditional Travel Agencies

emma-harvey
Download Presentation

C3 Consumer E-Commerce

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. C3 Consumer E-Commerce

  2. 3.1 – Online Shopping • Effects of E-Commerce • Fast Growth • In 1999, business-to-consumer e-commerce totaled over $20 Billion. By 2004 it was $184 Billion. • Slim Profits • E-Commerce has taken away profits from traditional stores. • For Example: Traditional Travel Agencies • By 2000, had lost over 2% of their business to online shoppers. A 5% loss would put most of them out of business.

  3. Effects Cont. • More Effects • Changing Rules • Funding was switched from traditional retailers and put into online resources, even though profits were not expected for years. • As the newness of e-commerce wore off, investor pressure to make a profit increased

  4. Economics • Traditional Store • Pay for the store itself (“called bricks and mortar”) • Utilities (Electricity, Water) • Insurance • E-Commerce • Minimizes the cost of renting or owning a building • Many times still need a warehouse for inventory • Traditional companies are doing both • Example: Barnes and Noble (“Clicks and Mortar”)

  5. Banking • A typical transaction with a live bank teller costs around $1.14 • The cost for the same transaction at an ATM is 29 cents • On the Internet the transaction on costs a penny • Offer a variety of services to save time and money online.

  6. Capital and Offsetting Costs • Online business need less working capital • Working Capital – money available to buy more goods or services to resell • The distributor can ship the product directly to the consumer (instead of it going to the store first). • Other Costs • Operate and maintain website that is reliable • Equipment and software • Personal to keep the site running

  7. Priceline • Consumers who visit the site are told they are setting the price of an airline ticket. • However, this is not the way it works. • The airline enters the minimum prices before the bids are received. So the bid is only filled if it meets or exceeds the airlines price.

  8. Different types of Sales • B2B = Business to Business • B2C = Business to Consumer • C2B = Consumer to Business sales (Priceline) • C2C = Consumer to Consumer (Ebay)

  9. Differences • What are the differences between online B2C and traditional retailing? • Answer: • B2C – Products delivered later, you can customize order • Traditional – can touch items, try on, take home right away.

  10. 3.2 Information Management • Gathering Data • Every purchase online leaves “footprints” of personal information • Credit Card • Phone Number • Mailing/shipping address • Online stores use that info to track trends (who, what, when, etc) • Software called Predictive and descriptive analysis does this for them

  11. Customer Profiles and Traffic • People do not like answering lots of questions when they first visit a site • Online retailers have to be careful about what and how much to ask • Result: If not careful people will not come back to site

  12. Segmenting and Tracking • Segmenting • Based on your demographic information and the web sites you visit, your ads are personalized to fit your interests. • Tracking • Traffic info includes the number of new visitors compared to repeat visitors • Whether the visit resulted in a sale, which pages were most popular, and how they got to the site

  13. Cookies • Most websites place a cookie on your computer • Cookie = A file created when you visit a website • You can stop these from being put on your computer or delete them • It allows the company to identify you and your preferences. • A company can only access the cookie they placed on your computer not others

  14. Your Web Address (Domain Name) • Unique name • Easy to remember • .com - commercial institutions or businesses • .edu – educational institutions • .gov - Government sites • .net – Network gateways • .org – non-profit organizations 3.3 E-Marketing

  15. Avoid names that are to challenging to remember • Example: www.dv2u.com • Avoid long and complicated domains from 3-rd party hosting • www.viaweb.com/muesumcompany/ • Register related items and common typos • Mcdonalds.com, bigmac.com, goldenarches.com, macdonalds.com Basic Guidelines for Effective names

  16. 75% of all online transactions are done through one of five portal sites: amazon.com, ebay, AOL, Yahoo, and Buy.com Portals

  17. Advertising • Online is similar to traditional advertising • Difference is its interactive • Banner Ads • Account for 60% of all online advertisements • Least likely kind of ad to get a customer response 3.4 E-Promotion

  18. Superstitials • Ads that pop-up on your monitor between web pages • Expanding Banners • Combine video, audio, animation, and photographs • Visitors can click on without leaving original page. Other Types

  19. Communicate directly with the customer Selling products or services to people through email is one of the least expensive methods The response rate to email is 5-25% Personal Selling

  20. Offering an incentive to special reason to buy a product or visit a website • A good place to find Coupons, Discounts, and samples of products. • Example: • John Hancock (insurance company) provides a place for parents to figure the cost of college at different universities • In doing so, parents must enter personal data on the website. Later the can sell products like life insurance that will pay for college Sales Promotion

  21. Banner ads that flash “Click here to win money” or “Enter this contest to win a i-pod” • In order to enter you must give personal information that the company can use Contests and Prizes

  22. Sponsorships • When an advertiser places a banner ad on the home page of a website, the advertiser becomes the sponsor. • The advertiser pays a fixed amount based on time. • Impressions • The number of times that viewers visit a web site that has a banner ad on it is counted. • The cost of the ad is figured as a cost per 1,000 impressions. How are Advertisers Paid

  23. Results • Base the payment on results • The website must draw in visitors to make sure that advertisers are paid for their advertisements. • Affiliates • Can receive payment by linking with the websites of affiliates. • Affiliates have similar products or services • The hosting site receives a % of all of the sales made by the affiliates. Amazon.com is an example. How they are paid cont.

  24. The main goal is brand building • Getting the company name and products known to potential customers. • In the future their will be an increase in how people are rewarded for viewing ads. Advertising Online

  25. The answers are not easy, you will have to do some critical thinking and research for this assignment. • Make up your own online store. Describe what types of products you would sell. Use this store to compare similar website and traditional stores. (Slide 1 in your PowerPoint) • Look at advertisements on 3 Websites and describe what they have in common, and what is different. (Slide 2) Project

  26. Broken down into 4 Parts • You must complete this assignment by yourself • Part 1 - Spreadsheet or Table to Compare (Slide 3) • Examples of sites: Amazon, buy.com, yahoo shopping, etc. • Examples of traditional: Target, Meijer, JC Penny, Best Buy (Use ones that are similar to yours) • What things are the same, what things are different? • Part 2 – What info do they collect when you try to buy something? (Slide 4) Project

  27. Example of Table What makes a E-commerce website effective? What makes it ineffective?

  28. Part 3 (Slide 5) • With the things you have found so far, how would you use that data and e-commerce advertising to attract young people age 13-22 to your website. • Part 4 (Slide 6) • Make a list of promotional activities you could use to further advertise your website. Project

More Related