Bài giảng Thương mại điện tử - Chương 4: Thương mại điện tử trên võng mạng toàn cầu WWW - Nguyễn Đức Trí

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  1. Chương 4 Thương mại điện tử trên võng mạng toàn cầu WWWTrình bày TS Nguyễn Đức Trí Chủ nhiệm Bộ môn Du lịch Khoa Thương mại – Du lịch, ĐHKT TP. HCM tri@triduc.net
  2. Nội dung trình bày  Năm (5) P cũ và mới  Chiến lược thiết lập website dựa trên 5 P cũ  Chiến lược thiết lập website dựa trên 5 P mới  Thiết lập một website thương mại  Xây dựng cộng đồng TMĐT 2 22/9/04
  3. Năm (5) P Năm (5) P cũ Năm (5) P mới  Sản phẩm  Đối lập (Product) (paradox)  Giá  Quan điểm (Price) (Perspective)  Nơi chốn  Mô hình (Paradigm) (Place)  Thuyết phục  Chiêu thị và con người (Persuasion) (Promotion & People)  Tận tâm  Đóng gói (Passion) (Packaging) 3 22/9/04
  4. Chiến lược XD website dựa theo 5 P cũ  Sản phẩm  Xác định xem có thể trình bày SP một cách thân thiện trên Internet  Có cách thức mới nào để tiếp thị SP trên Internet  Ví dụ Dell  Tổ chức logistic về SP cho khách hàng  Đưa ra cấu hình dự kiến  Nhận đặt hàng  Mua linh kiện và lắp ráp  Phân phối cho khách hàng 4 22/9/04
  5. 5 22/9/04
  6. 5 P cũ: Giá  Thiết lập Catalog trên mạng có thể khá tốn kém. Tuy nhiên nó có thể giúp cắt giảm các chi phí khác:  Tồn kho  Phân phối trên qui mô lớn  Chi phí đi lại của khách hàng 6 22/9/04
  7. 5 P cũ: nơi chốn (phân phối)  Số lượng người bán (số website có chứa thông tin và bán cùng SP  Có cung cấp các dịch vụ khác không 7 22/9/04
  8. Chiêu thị và Con người  URL, email trên phương tiện quảng cáo 8 22/9/04
  9. Starting a New Online Business  Creating a New Company or Adding an Online Project  Step 1: Identify a consumer or business need in the marketplace  Step 2: Investigate the opportunity  Step 3: Determine the business owner’s ability to meet the need 9 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  10. Starting a New Online Business  Online Business Planning business plan A written document that identifies a company’s goals and outlines how the company intends to achieve the goals and at what cost business case A document that is used to justify the investment of internal, organizational resources in a specific application or project 10 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  11. Starting a New Online Business  Initial Funding of a New Online Business angel investor A wealthy individual who contributes personal funds and possibly expertise at the earliest stage of business development incubator A company, university, or nonprofit organization that supports businesses in their initial stages of development 11 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  12. Starting a New Online Business  Secondary Funding a New Online Business venture capital (VC) Money invested in a business by an individual or a group of individuals (venture capitalists) in exchange for equity in the business  Additional Funding: A Large Partner  The IPO 12 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  13. Adding EC Initiatives and Transforming to an E-Business  Adding EC Initiatives to an Existing Business  A storefront  A portal  E-procurement  Auctions and reverse auctions  Other initiatives 13 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  14. Adding EC Initiatives and Transforming to an E-Business  Transformation to an E-Business  What is organizational transformation?  How an organization can be transformed into an e-business  Software tools for facilitating transformation to e-business 14 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  15. Exhibit 16.1 Roadmap to Becoming an E-Business 15 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  16. Building or Acquiring a Web Site  Classification of Web Sites informational Web site A Web site that does little more than provide information about the business and its products and services interactive Web site A Web site that provides opportunities for the customers and the business to communicate and share information 16 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  17. Building or Acquiring a Web Site  Classification of Web Sites attractors Web site features that attract and interact with visitors in the target stakeholder group transactional Web site A Web site that sells products and services collaborative Web site A site that allows business partners to collaborate 17 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  18. Building or Acquiring a Web Site  Building a Web Site  Step 1—Select a Web host  Step 2—Register a domain name  Step 3—Create and manage content  Step 4—Design the Web site  Step 5—Construct the Web site and test  Step 6—Market and promote the Web site 18 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  19. Web Site Hosting and Obtaining a Domain Name  Web Hosting Options storebuilder service A hosting service that provides disk space and services to help small and micro businesses build a Web site quickly and cheaply ISP hosting service A hosting service that provides an independent, stand-alone Web site for small and medium- sized businesses 19 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  20. Web Site Hosting and Obtaining a Domain Name  A Pure Hosting Service Web hosting service A dedicated Web site hosting company that offers a wide range of hosting services and functionality to businesses of all sizes 20 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  21. Web Site Hosting and Obtaining a Domain Name  A Pure Hosting Service mirror site An exact duplicate of an original Web site that is physically located on a Web server on another continent co-location A Web server owned and maintained by the business is placed in the hands of a Web hosting service that manages the server’s connection to the Internet 21 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  22. Web Site Hosting and Obtaining a Domain Name  Web Hosting Options self-hosting When a business acquires the hardware, software, staff, and dedicated telecommunications services necessary to set up and manage its own Web site 22 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  23. Web Site Hosting and Obtaining a Domain Name  Registering a Domain Name domain name A name-based address that identifies an Internet- connected server domain name registrar A business that assists prospective Web site owners with finding and registering the domain name of their choice 23 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  24. Content Creation, Delivery, and Management content The text, images, sound, and video that make up a Web page dynamic Web content Content that is updated infrequently commodity content Information that is widely available and generally free to access on the Web 24 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  25. Exhibit 16.3 Digital Content Delivery Life Cycle 25 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  26. Content Creation, Delivery, and Management  Content Creation and Acquisition cross-selling Offering similar or related products and services to increase sales up-selling Offering an upgraded version of the product in order to boost sales and profit  Promotion (e.g., coupon, rebate, discount)  Comment (e.g., reviews, testimonials expert 26 advice) Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  27. Content Creation, Delivery, and Management  Creating Content: Content is usually created by the site’s owners and developers  Buying Content: Content that is acquired from outside sources should be supplemental content, not primary content 27 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  28. Content Creation, Delivery, and Management  Buying from a Syndicator syndication The sale of the same good (e.g., digital content) to many customers, who then integrate it with other offerings and resell it or give it away free RSS (“Rich Site Summary,” “RDF site summary,” or “Really Simple Syndication”) An XML format for syndicating Web content 28 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  29. Exhibit 16.4 The Syndication Supply Chain 29 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  30. Content Creation, Delivery, and Management  Content Creation and Acquisition  Content Providers and Networks premium content Content not available elsewhere on the Web 30 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  31. Content Creation, Delivery, and Management  Content Creation and Acquisition  Representative Content-Related Vendors  Content Delivery Networks personalized content Web content that is prepared to match the needs and expectations of the individual visitor 31 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  32. Content Creation, Delivery, and Management  Content Creation and Acquisition  Delivering Content by E-Newsletter e-newsletter A collection of short, informative articles sent at regular intervals by e-mail to individuals who have an interest in the newsletter’s topic  Writing Effective Content Delivering effective content involves not only what is said, but how it is said 32 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  33. Content Creation, Delivery, and Management  content management The process of adding, revising, and removing content from a Web site to keep content fresh, accurate, compelling, and credible  Content Testing  Measuring Content Quality  Pitfalls of Content Management  Content Removal  Content Management Software 33 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  34. Content Creation, Delivery, and Management  Catalog Content and Its Management  For buyers who aggregate suppliers’ catalogs on their own Web sites, content management begins with engaging suppliers and then collecting, standardizing, classifying, hosting, and continually updating their catalog data  Translation of Content to Other Languages  The primary problems with language customization are cost and speed 34 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  35. Content Creation, Delivery, and Management  Content Maximization and Streaming Services  Many companies provide media-rich content, such as video clips, music, or Flash media, in an effort to reach their target audience with an appealing marketing message  These and other content providers are concerned about the download time from the user’s perspective 35 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  36. Web Site Design information architecture How the site and its Web pages are organized, labeled, and navigated to support browsing and searching throughout the Web site deep linking Entry into a Web site via the site’s interior pages, not the homepage, typically through search engines or external links 36 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  37. Exhibit 16.6 A Simple Hierarchical Web Site Structure 37 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  38. Web Site Design site navigation Aids that help visitors find the information they need quickly and easily 38 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  39. Web Site Design  Site Map and Navigation frame An HTML element that divides the browser window into two or more separate windows Exhibit 16.7 A Generic Navigation Bar Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006 39
  40. Web Site Design  Consistency look and feel The elements, including layout, typeface, colors, graphics, and navigation aids, that visually distinguish a site from any other 40 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  41. Exhibit 16.8 A Web Page Layout Grid 41 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  42. Web Site Design  Performance  Speed ranks at or near the top of every list of essential design considerations, for good reason  Visitors who have to wait more than a few seconds for a Web page to load are likely to hit the “stop” or “back” button and go somewhere else 42 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  43. Web Site Design  Colors and Graphics  The key to effective use of color and graphics is to design the site to match the expectations of the target audience  Other rules that guide the use of color and graphics on Web sites are provided in Online File W16.12 43 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  44. Web Site Design  Quality Assurance  Quality assurance is about making sure the Web site design is properly tested before it is launched and ensuring that it continues to perform up to expectations after launch  A lesson most Web designers can learn from total quality management (TQM) principles is to design the site for easy maintenance 44 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  45. Providing EC Support Services  Who Builds the Web Site?  Do It Yourself internal Web site development The process of building and/or maintaining the Web site with company staff  Outsource external Web site development When the business hires another firm to build and/or maintain the Web site 45 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  46. Providing EC Support Services  Hybrid partnering Web site development When a mixture of internal and external development is used to build and/or maintain a Web site 46 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  47. Providing EC Support Services Web site construction The initial content creation, design, programming, and installation phases of a Web site’s development Web site maintenance The on-going process of keeping the Web site open for business, managing content, fixing problems, and making incremental additions to the site 47 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  48. Providing EC Support Services  Managing Web Site Construction  Start with a plan  Set goals early and stick to them  Use a fixed-price contract  Justify graphics and features 48 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  49. Providing EC Support Services  Payments: Accepting Credit Cards card-not-present (CNP) transaction A credit card transaction in which the merchant does not verify the customer’s signature 49 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  50. Providing EC Support Services  Web Site Promotion  Internal Web Site Promotion signature file A simple text message an e-mail program automatically adds to outgoing messages search engine optimization (SEO) The application of strategies intended to position a Web site at the top of Web search engines 50 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  51. Providing EC Support Services  Customer Relationship Management  Listening to Customers e-mail discussion list A group of people who share a common interest and who communicate with each other via e-mail messages managed by e- mail list software electronic discussion (e-forum) A portion of the Web site where visitors can post questions, comments, and answers chat group A portion of the Web site where visitors can communicate synchronously 51 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  52. Opening a Web Storefront  Options for Acquiring Storefronts  Build them from scratch  Build them from components  Build with templates  Use someone else’s storefront 52 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006
  53. Opening a Web Storefront  Options for Acquiring Storefronts  Selecting a Development Option  Customers  Merchandising  Sales service  Promotion  Transaction processing  Marketing data and analysis  Branding 53 Electronic Commerce Prentice Hall © 2006