electronic commerce mis 4108 planning e-commerce initiatives

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Electronic Commerce MIS 4108 Planning E-commerce Initiatives

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Electronic CommerceMIS 4108

Planning E-commerce Initiatives

Session Objectives The objectives of this session are:

To describe how to prepare a simple business plan

To describe how to develop objectives To analyse strategies used to fulfil objectives And to analyse methods used to manage e-

commerce initiatives

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Business Plans What is a business plan? Why should I create a

business plan? What are the sections of a

business plan?

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Planning E-commerce Initiatives 4

What is a Business Plan? A business plan is a document which

highlights (for the given year): A plan of how the company will be run The goals of the company The money required to meet those goals The strategy employed to meet those goals

(including marketing)

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Why Should I Create a Business Plan? A business plan forces a business to assess

the market place It forces a business to identify a clear

marketing strategy It also serves as a benchmark which the

companies performance can be measured against.

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The Sections of a Business Plan There are seven essential sections of a business

plan. These are the: Executive Summary Business Description Define Your Market Identify and Analyse Your Competition Design and Development Plan Operations and Management Plan Financial Statements

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Executive Summary The executive summary follows the title page of

the business plan The purpose of the executive summary is to

explain to the reader what the business wants The summary should be short and concise

(maybe half a page, typically no longer than a page) People do not have time to waste reading long

documents

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Executive Summary Cont’dThe key elements of an executive summary are: 1. The business concept

What is the business you are proposing, its products and the advantages over the competition

2. The financial features Highlight the forecasted sales, profits, cash flows and

return on investment

3. The financial requirements What are the start-up costs and the cost of expansion.

How will this money be used?

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Executive Summary Cont’d 4. Current business position

This includes any relevant information about the company, its formation date, its owners and key personnel

5. Major achievement Are there any developments which are

essential to the success of the business? These may include prototypes, patents or crucial contracts

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Business Description This section often begins with a short description of

the industry, its present outlook and future possibilities Include any products or developments that might affect

your business State whether the business is new or already in

existence; and the type of operation, e.g. is it retail, food service, manufacturing or service-oriented?

State who your customers will be and how your product will be distributed and advertised

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Business Description Cont’d Describe the product or service you intend

to market Show how your business will gain the

competitive edge Explain how the business will be profitable

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Define Your Market Define the entire market for your industry

in terms of size, structure, growth prospects, trends and sales potential

Define the specific market that you will be targeting (market segmentation)

Define your niche in this market

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Define Your Market Cont’d After defining your market you must:

Estimate your market share for the period of time the business plan covers

Position your business Price your product Determine the distribution strategy Create a promotion plan Estimate your sales potential

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Define Your Market Cont’d After researching the market, the

information gained should be used to: Identify objectives And develop strategies that will allow you to

fulfil these objectives This will be the focus of the next section

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Identify and Analyse Your Competition Determine who your competitors are What strategies are they using to sell their

products or service What are they strengths and weaknesses

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Design and Development Plan The design and development plan allows

investors to understand: The design of your product How it is produced How it will be marketing The development budget required to allow

the company to meet its goals

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Design and Development Plan Cont’d The sections included in the development plan

include: Product development Market development Organisational development

Each of these sections should be described from a funding point of view

Finally, identify measurable goals for the overall design and development plan

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Operations and Management Plan Describes how the business functions

It explains business logistics: The responsibilities of the management team The task assigned to each company division Capital and expense requirements related to the operation of

the business

And the financial tables The operating expense table The capital requirements table The cost of goods table

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Financial Statements The three common financial statements

are: The balance sheet

A statement of your assets, liabilities and equity The Income statement

Reflects when sales are made and expenses are incurred

The statement of cash flows shows The amount of cash required to meet obligations,

when it is required and from where it will come

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Planning E-commerce Initiatives A successful business

plan should include activities that: Identify objectives Link objectives to

business strategy

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Identifying Objectives Objectives businesses strife to achieve using e-

commerce include: Increase sales in existing markets Launching out into new markets Improve service to existing customers Identifying new vendors Coordinating more efficiently with existing vendors More effective recruiting

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Types of Objectives Vary with the size of the organisation, for

example: Small companies might want to build a Web site to

encourage customers to do business using existing channels. A site offering only product or service information is less

costly do design and implement

Larger companies that might want to build sites that offer transaction handling, bidding, communication and other capabilities have to pay much more

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SMART Objectives Objectives must be:

Specific Measurable Achievable Results-based Time-bound

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Linking Objectives to Business Strategy After identifying objectives a company

must: identify business strategies that will help to

realise these objectives e.g. a small company’s objective might be to

become a global player within a year and as a result one of its activities is to build a brand

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Linking Objectives to Business Strategy Cont’d Businesses can use downstream strategies

to improve the value that the business provides to customers

Or can pursue upstream strategies that focus on reducing cost or generating value by working with suppliers or inbound shipping and freight service providers

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Linking Objectives to Business Strategy Cont’d E-commerce can inspire businesses to partake in

activities such as: Build brands Enhance existing marketing programs Sell products and services Sell advertising Develop a better understanding of the customer’s

need Improve after sales support and service

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Linking Objectives to Business Strategy Cont’d E-commerce can inspire businesses to partake in

activities such as: Purchase products and services Manage supply chains Operate auctions Build virtual communities

However, these can not be done in an ad hoc manner. It is important to measure the benefit and cost of each activity

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Measuring Benefit Some benefits are tangible and easy to measure,

for example increase sales, decrease cost Others are intangible thus difficult to measure, for

example increased customer satisfaction Managers need to try to set objectives that are

measurable even for intangible benefits E.g. increased customer satisfaction might be

measured by counting the number of first-time customers who return to the Web site and buy

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Measuring Benefit Cont’dBuild brand Surveys or opinion polls

that measure brand awareness

Enhance existing marketing program

Change in per-unit sales volume

Improve customer service

Customer satisfaction surveys, quantity of customer complaints

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Measuring Benefit Cont’dReduce cost of after-sale support

Quantity and type (telephone, fax, e-mail) of support activities

Imply supplier chain operation

Cost, quality and on-time delivery of materials or services purchased

Hold auctions Quantity of auctions, bidders, sellers, items sold, registered participants, dollar value of items sold

Provide portals Number of visitors

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Managing Cost IT projects are often difficult to estimate

and control E.g. web development technologies change

rapidly, thus it is difficult for managers to estimate cost These cost include hardware and software

Even though hardware cost tend to decrease, new software often demands new hardware, thus increase cost

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Total Cost of Ownership The project budget must include

Hardware and software cost Costs of hiring, training and paying personnel

Web site designers, developers, content providers, operators and maintainers

Organisations tend to track cost by activity

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Total Cost of Ownership Cont’d The total cost of ownership (TCO) includes

Cost of hardware (servers, routers, firewalls and load balancing devices)

Cost of software (licenses for operating systems, Web server software, database software, and application software)

Cost of outsourced design work Salaries and benefits for employees Cost of maintaining the site once operational

A good TCO will include cost of future redesign

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Change Management Every project involves change Change management is the process of

helping employees cope with change Change management techniques include

Communicating the need for change Inclusion in the change decision process Inclusion in the planning for the change

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Change Management Cont’d If change is not properly managed,

employees feel Uncomfortable Inadequate Stressed which leads to reduced work

performance Unable to do the job properly Powerless

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Opportunity Cost Opportunity cost is the benefit that will be

lost if a company chooses not to initiate an e-commerce initiative

This is of great concern to management and accountants

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Web Site Costs The cost required for a large company to

build an entry-level e-commerce site is US$1 million 79% is labour cost 10% software cost 11% hardware cost

Source: International Data Corporation and Gartner Inc.

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Web Site Costs Cont’d The cost required for a large company to build a

site that is comparable to leading sites is US$2 - $5 million

To build a Web site that is noticeably better than competitors will cost a minimum of US$15 million

10 of the top 100 e-commerce sites spent over US$10 million for Web site development and implementation

Source: International Data Corporation and Gartner Inc

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Web Site Costs Cont’d A small company can put a Web site online for

US$5000 For a business with full transaction and payment

processing capabilities, it is difficult to keep it under US$10,000 per year

Construction of new Web sites for small businesses actually averages US$140,000

Minimum amount to open a complete e-commerce Web site is US$150,000

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Web Site Costs Cont’d Web site costs include

Start-up cost Ongoing costs (between 50% - 200% of

initial cost)

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Web Site Costs Cont’d The cost for a full portal magazine site

To build: US$2.4 million US$4.3 million per year to maintain with a

staff of 35 people The cost for a more limited site

To build: US$150,000 US$270,000 per year to maintain with a staff

of 2 people

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Web Site Costs Example Kmart (http://www.kmart.com/)

>US$140 million to create online retail website

Much of the site’s cost is hidden from the user Cost of customising middleware that connects the

Web site to Kmart’s vast inventory and logistics databases

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Web Site Costs: A Final Word The high cost of creating e-commerce Web sites

can serve as a discouragement to small businesses Smaller organisations can control costs by:

Using a combination of third party hosting services and packaged e-commerce software

Sign up for mall-style service providers This provides low initial cost and controls annual

TCO, however cost of related activities can not be ignored, e.g. creating and maintaining a product catalog

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Comparing Benefits to Costs

Identify benefits

Identify costs

Determine value of benefits

Determine value of costs

Compare valueof benefits to value of cost

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Return On Investment (ROI) Return on Investment techniques measure

the amount of income (return) that will be provided by a specific expenditure ROI requires that all costs are stated in a

dollar amount ROI focuses on benefits that can be predicted

Many benefits are often hidden ROI tends to emphasize short-term benefits

over long term benefits

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ROI Hidden Benefits Example CISCO systems created an on-line customer

forum to discuss product issues The intended benefits were to

Reduce customer service costs Increase customer satisfaction regarding the

availability of product information

Additional (hidden) benefit Cisco engineers were able to get feedback on new

products

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ROI Problems If managers rely only on ROI incorrect

decision may be made Due to biases towards short term cost and

benefits rather than long term

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Strategies For Developing E-commerce Web Sites 1994-1996 Static Brochures

Contact information Logos and or other branding Some product information Financial statements

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Strategies For Developing E-commerce Web Sites Cont’d 1996 – 1999 Transaction Processing

Static brochures plus Complete product catalog Shopping cart Secure payment processing Other information queries Shipment tracking

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Strategies For Developing E-commerce Web Sites Cont’d 1992 – Present Full Range of Automated

Business Processes Transaction processing, plus

Personalisation Interactive capabilities Frequently updated content Customer relationship Management tools

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Internal Development v. Outsourcing Definition:

Outsourcing is the hiring of outside support to do all or part of a project

E-commerce site development problems can not be avoided by outsourcing

Success depends on how well the e-commerce initiative is integrated into and supports business activities

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Internal Development v. Outsourcing Cont’d Using internal people to lead e-commerce

initiatives helps to ensure that the companies specific needs are addressed and that the plan fits the culture Outside consultants are seldom able to learn

enough about the culture (in the contract period) in order to accomplish all the objectives

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Internal Development v. Outsourcing Example Few companies are large enough or have

sufficient expertise to launch an e-commerce project without external help E.g. Wal-mart (with annual sales of $195

billion) in 2006 hired another company for outside support

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Internal Teams In determining which parts of an e-project

to outsource first create an internal team Include people:

With technical know-how about the Internet Creative thinkers Already successful employees

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Internal Teams Cont’d Do not select a technical wizard as project

leader if he/she does not have the necessary business skills Is not well-known and respected by the

operating function managers Is not creative

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Internal Teams Cont’d Set aside between 5-10% of a project’s

budget for quantifying the projects value and measuring

the achievement (e.g using metrics) More and more companies are realising the

importance of their staff’s knowledge about the business and its processes These resources do not appear in companies

financial statements

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Internal Teams Cont’d The internal team decides

Which part of the project to outsource Who the parts will be outsourced to Which partners the company needs to hire for

the project

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Types of Outsourcing There are three types of outsourcing

Early outsourcing E-commerce initiatives lend themselves more to

early outsourcing

Late Outsourcing Partial outsourcing

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Early Outsourcing The initial site design and development is

outsourced in order to launch it quickly An e-commerce site can rapidly become a source of

competitive advantage for a company Outsourcing team trains company information

system professionals in the technology and hands over the operation of the site

It is best for the company’s own information systems people to work closely with the outsourcing team and develop ideas for improvements as early as possible

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Late Outsourcing This is the more traditional way The company’s information system professionals

do the initial design and development work, implement the system and operate it until it becomes a stable part of the business

After the competitive advantage is gained, the system is outsourced, allowing the team to pursue new technology projects

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Partial Outsourcing The company identifies specific portions of

the project that can be completely designed, developed, implemented and operated by another firm that specialises in a particular function In both early and late outsourcing a single

group is responsible for the entire design, development and operation of a project

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Partial Outsourcing Cont’d E-commerce initiatives can benefit from

partial outsourcing Partial outsourcing is also called

component outsourcing

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Partial Outsourcing Example Many smaller Web sites outsource their email

handling and response functions Electronic payment systems

A company may use an external vendor to take care of payment processing When the customer is ready to pay, he/she is taken to

another site and then returned to the original site

The most common part of an e-commerce project that is outsourced is the web-hosting activity

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Selecting a Web Hosting Service The internal team should be responsible for

selecting the ISP to host the site For smaller e-commerce projects teams can

consult an ISP dictionary (for ISPs, web hosting services or ASPs (application service provider))

Larger companies should use consultants or other firms that rate service providers

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Selecting a Web Hosting Service Cont’d The most important factors to use when

evaluating a hosting service are: Functionality Reliability Bandwidth and server scalability Security Backup and disaster recovery Cost

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New Methods for implementing Partial Outsourcing In the past five years new ways of

implementing partial outsourcing have been creating Incubators Fast venturing

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Incubators A company that offers start-up companies a

physical location with offices, accounts and legal assistance, computers, and Internet connections at a very low monthly cost Some also offer seed money, management

advice an marketing assistance In exchange the company gives 10-50%

ownership of the company to the Incubator

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Incubators Cont’d When the company grows and can obtain

venture capital financing or can publicly offer stock, the Incubator sells all or part of its interest and re-invests in a new incubator candidate

Example: Idealab (www.idealab.com/) was one of the

first Internet incubators and helped www.carsdirect.com/home

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Internal Incubators Internal incubators are incubators that are

set up by a company (using internal staff), e.g. Kodak internal venturing program of the

1980s Most of these were unsuccessful because

employees found it difficult to maintain an entrepreneurial spirit when what ever they developed would be taken away and controlled by the parent company

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Internal Incubators Cont’d A new internal incubator model has emerged

where the resulting technology is left under the control of the team, who form a company

The parent company and the new company then become strategic partners

This new internal incubator model promises to be more successful than the traditional model

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Fast Venturing An existing company that wants to launch an e-

commerce initiative joins with external equity and operational partners that can offer the experience and skills that can scale up the project rapidly Equity partners are usually banks or venture

capitalist that can offer money or expertise Operational partners are firms, such as system

integrators, consultants and Web portals who have the experience in moving projects along and scaling up prototypes

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Fast Venturing Cont’dVenture sponsorDevelop ideas.

Staffs internal team.

Create prototype.

Provide all or most of the start-up funds.

Equity partnersReview and refine ideas.

Provide advice.

Evaluate prototype.

Provide contacts (including operational partners).

Operational partnersTurn ideas into a business plan.

Provide financial, technical and operations expertise.

Provide industry best practice knowledge.

Scale up prototype to an operating model.

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Managing E-Commerce Initiatives Project management Project portfolio

management Specific staffing Post-implementation

audits

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Managing Electronic Commerce Initiatives To manage complex e-commerce

implementations formal management techniques should be used: Project management Project portfolio management Specific staffing Post-implementation audits

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Project Management A collection of formal techniques for planning

and controlling the activities undertaken to achieve a specific goal

The project plan includes cost, schedule and performance

Applications such as Microsoft Project and Primavera Project Planner help with project planning

These type of projects (e-commerce projects) have a reputation for failing

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Project Portfolio Management A technique used to manage multiple

projects Each project is monitored as if it is an

investment in a financial portfolio Each project is assigned a rank based on its

importance to the strategic goals of the business and level of risk

E-commerce projects are viewed as investments in assets

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Staffing for E-Commerce The internal team must determine the staffing

needs for the e-commerce initiatives The general areas of staffing required are:

Business, project and account managers Application specialists Web programmers and graphic designers Content creators, managers or editors Customer service System, and database administration Network operations

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Business Manager Should be a member of the internal team Sets objectives for the project Responsible for implementing the elements of the

business plan and reaching the objectives set Develops proposal for plan revisions and funding Should have the required domain knowledge (e.g.

retail knowledge if a retail Web site is being built)

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Project Manager Specific training or skills in tracking costs

and accomplishing project goals Certification might be useful (e.g. Project

Management Institute) or MBA Skills in the use of project management

software

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Account Manager Keeps track of multiple Web sites in use by a

project Or keeps track of projects that will combine to

make a larger Web site The account manager supervises the location of

specific Web pages and related software installations as they are moved from test, to demonstration, to production

In smaller companies they handle the project and account management functions

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Application Specialist Maintain accounting, human resources, and

logistics software Must maintain e-commerce software, e.g.

catalogs, payment processing

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Other Roles Web programmers

Design and write code for Web site Web graphics designers

A person trained in art, layout, composition and understands how Web pages are constructed

Content creators Write original content

Content managers/editors Purchase existing material and adapt it

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Other Roles Cont’d Customer service personnel

Help design and implement customer relationship management activities, e.g. issue passwords, design customer interface features, handle customer e-mail and telephone requests for service and conduct telemarketing for the site Some companies hire a call centre to handle phone

calls and e-mail

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Other Roles Cont’d Systems administrator

Responsible for system reliability and security

Network operation staff Load estimation and monitoring, resolving network

problems and managing network operations

Database administration Support activities such as transaction processing,

order entry, inquiry management or shipment logistics

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Post-Implementation Audits A formal review of a project after it is up

and running Managers compare the the objectives,

performance specifications, cost estimates, and scheduled delivery dates plans with the actuals

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Post-Implementation Audits Cont’d The purpose is not to lay blame but to:

Provide project and business managers to raise questions about the objectives and use the feedback in other projects

The audit should result in a comprehensive report that analyses the project performance, the administration, organisational structure and the performance of the project team

Some audits contain a confidential section which evaluates the performance of individual team members – to help when choosing teams in future

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Group Assignment # 2 By reading this handout carefully, you are

requested to create a business plan for a particular business (Include the steps related to a business plan).

Is it possible to present your business on the web?

If so, you have to develop it as your final project of this course?

Planning E-commerce Initiatives 88

References[1] Tiffany, Laura, “Elements of a Business Plan”, March 2001. Online document

available at http://wwww.entrepreneur.com/article/print/0,2361,287355,00.html

[2] Online Women's Business Center, “Purpose Of The Marketing Plan”, May 1997.

http://www.onlinewbc.gov/docs/market/mk_plan_why.html

[3] Schneider, Gary, P., “Electronic Commerce: The second wave”, Thomson Course Technology, Fifth Annual Edition, 2004

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