Enterprises, large or small, tend to develop their Web
presence in stages. Once a Web presence is created, then the enterprise wants
to use that site to enhance customer service and to produce revenue. It is at
the latter stage that electronic commerce comes into play.
A service provider's hosting customers will go
through the same evolution described in the preceding module. It is not enough
just to pick off the high-end client who represents the highest per-client
revenue; there simply are not enough of them. Furthermore, the future
opportunity is to provide a platform that can move a client along the range
from low- to high-function as client sophistication and needs evolve.
Many small- and medium-sized businesses are
struggling with the high cost of entry to electronic commerce. Creating a
complete on-line selling environment can require considerable time, money, and
technical expertise. Many businesses are stalled at the first or second of the
three steps to building an effective electronic-commerce Internet presence. The
three steps include the following.
Step One
Develop a content site (i.e., as opposed to a
database-driven catalog) and handle transactions off-line.
· advantages—Simple Web sites can be developed
easily and quickly at low cost.
· disadvantages—This limits Internet function to
promotion; no revenue opportunity is involved.
Step Two
Develop an on-line catalog and handle transactions
off-line.
· advantages—No need for sophisticated
technology is involved; the catalog can manage large product assortment.
Step Three
Develop an on-line catalog and handle transactions
on-line.
· advantages—This can manage large product
assortment and complete sales at lower cost.
· disadvantages—Catalog building is expensive, and
on-line transaction management requires sophisticated technology.
The Transaction Server
Service providers must provide a solution for
businesses that do not have the budget or technical expertise to progress to
step three themselves. The transaction-server aspect of the electronic system
enables electronic-directory publishers and ISPs to become full
electronic-commerce providers, offering complete outsourcing of electronic
transactions and security technology. It can include software for easy site
creation, using templates and simple point-click-and-drag method, as well as
commerce capability to complete sales for a large set of changing prices and
items.
With an electronic commerce–transaction server,
service providers can process transactions for multiple sellers from
distributed content. Easy-to-use Web site–construction tools help nontechnical
businesses create Web sites and catalog pages.
Service providers are likely to configure their
offerings in any combination of the following models for their hosted clients
on an electronic-commerce platform:
· single Web site—The client owns a Web site on a
shared Web server and could have a unique uniform resource locator (URL). There
are no on-line transactions, but there is e-mail capability.
· single storefront—The client owns a single store on
a single merchant server at the host. The storefront has unique URL, database,
and checkout process.
· mall—The customer offers (or client
contracts for) multiple storefronts in a mall environment on the same URL and
database, with shared registration, shopping cart, checkout, etc.
· multihome—Multiple single storefronts reside
on one server, but each has its own URL, database, shopping and order forms,
etc.
· on-site content and transaction
server—Nondatabase
storefronts are hosted in a multihome configuration with back-end transactions
handled by a host merchant server. These selling Web sites are created with a
buy button feature to enable product and transaction information to be sent to
the separate (but same environment) host merchant server.
· off-site content and on-site
transaction server—Nondatabase
storefronts are hosted outside the service provider–hosting environment.
Back-end transactions are handled by the remote host-merchant server on the
service-provider premises. These selling sites are created with a buy button
feature to enable product and transaction information to be sent to the remote
host merchant server. Figures 1 through 4 illustrate
various hosting models.
For each of the hosted-commerce scenarios there are
certain tasks that accompany the creation and implementation of an electronic
presence for a merchant. Some of these tasks could be performed by the
merchant, some by the service provider, and some by a third party on behalf of
the merchant or service provider.
· site setup and configuration—planning, system architecture
(single-server and distributed), installation, and configuration
· client enablement and support—store setup, catalog maintenance,
store maintenance, order management, shopper management, and reporting
· site administration and operation—systems management, site
maintenance, billing, reporting, and customer service and support
· back-end tasks—payment processing, tax
calculation, and order routing
Source: www. iec. org
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