Louis Gerstner, the former CEO of IBM, in his book, 'Who says Elephants can't dance' attributes the term "e-Business" to IBM's marketing and Internet teams in 1996.
Electronic business methods enable companies to link their internal and external data processing systems more efficiently and flexibly, to work more closely with suppliers and partners, and to better satisfy the needs and expectations of their customers.
In practice, e-business is more than just e-commerce. While e-business refers to more strategic focus with an emphasis on the functions that occur using electronic capabilities, e-commerce is a subset of an overall e-business strategy. E-commerce seeks to add revenue streams using the World Wide Web or the Internet to build and enhance relationships with clients and partners and to improve efficiency using the Empty Vessel strategy. Often, e-commerce involves the application of knowledge management systems.
E-business involves business processes spanning the entire value chain: electronic purchasing and supply chain management, processing orders electronically, handling customer service, and cooperating with business partners. Special technical standards for e-business facilitate the exchange of data between companies. E-business software solutions allow the integration of intra and inter firm business processes. E-business can be conducted using the Web, the Internet, intranets, extranets, or some combination of these.
Subsets
Applications can be divided into three categories:
Internal business systems:
- customer relationship management
- enterprise resource planning
- document management systems
- human resources management
- Enterprise communication and collaboration:
- VoIP
- content management system
- voice mail
- Web conferencing
- Digital work flows (or business process management)
electronic commerce - business-to-business electronic commerce (B2B) or business-to-consumer electronic commerce (B2C):
- internet shop
- supply chain management
- online marketing
When organizations go online, they have to decide which e-business models best suit their goals. A business model is defined as the organization of product, service and information flows, and the source of revenues and benefits for suppliers and customers. The concept of e-business model is the same but used in the online presence. The following is a list of the currently most adopted e-business models:
- E-shops
- E-procurement
- E-malls
- E-auctions
- Virtual Communities
- Collaboration Platforms
- Third-party Marketplaces
- Value-chain Integrators
- Value-chain Service Providers
- Information Brokerage
Roughly dividing the world into providers/producers and consumers/clients one can classify e-businesses into the following categories:
- business-to-business (B2B)
- business-to-consumer (B2C)
- business-to-employee (B2E)
- business-to-government (B2G)
- government-to-business (G2B)
- government-to-government (G2G)
- government-to-citizen (G2C)
- consumer-to-consumer (C2C)
- consumer-to-business (C2B)
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