This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -Electronic Marketing.
This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -E-Commerce It talks about E-Environment.
The document discusses the evolution of the internet and infrastructure requirements for e-business. It traces the early concepts of networked computing from Licklider in the 1960s to the development of ARPANET and eventually the commercialization of the internet in the 1990s. It also outlines the key components of infrastructure needed to support e-business, including applications, communications, data management, IT management, security, architecture/standards, channel management, research and development, and education.
The Search for Advantage: Levels of E-Business Adoption by Different FirmsRay Welling
The document summarizes research on levels of e-business adoption among different types of firms. It presents hypotheses about how industry, size, gender, and job title relate to adoption rates. The researcher tested the hypotheses through an online survey of Australian managers. Most hypotheses were partially supported, except retailers and wholesalers had lower adoption than expected, and women were found to adopt e-business at a higher rate than men. Future research should examine additional factors influencing adoption and incorporate measures of business performance.
The document summarizes a presentation given at a Microsoft event in the UK. It discusses the state of the UK IT market, including key trends and economic impacts. It also covers emerging technologies, policy issues, and how attendees can get involved in influencing technology policy through an organization called Voices for Innovation.
This document discusses green marketing and the IT industry. It provides background on the current green movement and how it has spread to business practices and online communications through Web 2.0 technologies. It then analyzes green claims and initiatives within the IT industry, noting a lack of services providing useful carbon reporting or metrics to businesses. Reasons for this gap are explored, such as a lack of clear standards and cautiousness following the dot-com bubble. A secondary research study is proposed to examine green advertising claims by software companies online.
The Evolution of VoIP-A look into how VoIP has proliferated into the global d...Bradley Susser
This paper doesn’t dispute the fact that customers will continue to benefit significantly from VoIP as
quality of service has improved while costs have continued to come down considerably rather our
objective is to focus more on the viability of providers that encompass this sector of the market. We
aim to first describe how VoIP has proliferated into the global dominant platform it is today, the
infrastructure and definition of VoIP, VoIP’s classification schemes, the growth of technologies
leveraging the VoIP platform while disrupting traditional carriers business models, covering the topic of
VoIP security, explaining the different regulatory frameworks around the globe and finally concluding
with an opinion on the competitive landscape.
IJCER (www.ijceronline.com) International Journal of computational Engineeri...ijceronline
This document discusses a web service management system (WSMS) called WebSenior that aims to provide e-government services to senior citizens. It focuses on key components like service composition, optimization, and privacy preservation. Service composition automatically selects and integrates individual web services. Service optimization selects services and composite services to generate execution plans based on quality of service models. The paper also discusses related work and proposes that WebSenior provides an integrated framework for seamless cooperation between government agencies to deliver customized senior citizen services. It analyzes the components of WebSenior and how they contribute to providing dynamic, optimized, and private services for citizens.
The document discusses models for the stages of growth in integrating social media and web technologies into business activities. It summarizes Earl's model of six stages from external communications to transformation. It also describes a social enterprise model with stages from external communications to social enterprise/Enterprise 2.0. Finally, it discusses how social enterprises and sustainable communications can evolve together from external communications to enterprise-wide as companies mature through the stages of social business.
This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -E-Commerce It talks about E-Environment.
The document discusses the evolution of the internet and infrastructure requirements for e-business. It traces the early concepts of networked computing from Licklider in the 1960s to the development of ARPANET and eventually the commercialization of the internet in the 1990s. It also outlines the key components of infrastructure needed to support e-business, including applications, communications, data management, IT management, security, architecture/standards, channel management, research and development, and education.
The Search for Advantage: Levels of E-Business Adoption by Different FirmsRay Welling
The document summarizes research on levels of e-business adoption among different types of firms. It presents hypotheses about how industry, size, gender, and job title relate to adoption rates. The researcher tested the hypotheses through an online survey of Australian managers. Most hypotheses were partially supported, except retailers and wholesalers had lower adoption than expected, and women were found to adopt e-business at a higher rate than men. Future research should examine additional factors influencing adoption and incorporate measures of business performance.
The document summarizes a presentation given at a Microsoft event in the UK. It discusses the state of the UK IT market, including key trends and economic impacts. It also covers emerging technologies, policy issues, and how attendees can get involved in influencing technology policy through an organization called Voices for Innovation.
This document discusses green marketing and the IT industry. It provides background on the current green movement and how it has spread to business practices and online communications through Web 2.0 technologies. It then analyzes green claims and initiatives within the IT industry, noting a lack of services providing useful carbon reporting or metrics to businesses. Reasons for this gap are explored, such as a lack of clear standards and cautiousness following the dot-com bubble. A secondary research study is proposed to examine green advertising claims by software companies online.
The Evolution of VoIP-A look into how VoIP has proliferated into the global d...Bradley Susser
This paper doesn’t dispute the fact that customers will continue to benefit significantly from VoIP as
quality of service has improved while costs have continued to come down considerably rather our
objective is to focus more on the viability of providers that encompass this sector of the market. We
aim to first describe how VoIP has proliferated into the global dominant platform it is today, the
infrastructure and definition of VoIP, VoIP’s classification schemes, the growth of technologies
leveraging the VoIP platform while disrupting traditional carriers business models, covering the topic of
VoIP security, explaining the different regulatory frameworks around the globe and finally concluding
with an opinion on the competitive landscape.
IJCER (www.ijceronline.com) International Journal of computational Engineeri...ijceronline
This document discusses a web service management system (WSMS) called WebSenior that aims to provide e-government services to senior citizens. It focuses on key components like service composition, optimization, and privacy preservation. Service composition automatically selects and integrates individual web services. Service optimization selects services and composite services to generate execution plans based on quality of service models. The paper also discusses related work and proposes that WebSenior provides an integrated framework for seamless cooperation between government agencies to deliver customized senior citizen services. It analyzes the components of WebSenior and how they contribute to providing dynamic, optimized, and private services for citizens.
The document discusses models for the stages of growth in integrating social media and web technologies into business activities. It summarizes Earl's model of six stages from external communications to transformation. It also describes a social enterprise model with stages from external communications to social enterprise/Enterprise 2.0. Finally, it discusses how social enterprises and sustainable communications can evolve together from external communications to enterprise-wide as companies mature through the stages of social business.
DELOITTE DBRIEFS Stay tuned in Join us for these upcoming webcastsFranco Ferrario
The document announces upcoming webcasts from Deloitte for technology executives on various topics. The first webcast on January 16th will discuss wearable computing technology and its implications for business including design principles, security concerns, and business use cases. The second webcast on February 6th will cover sovereign computing and how it may impact enterprise security and how organizations can address issues. The final webcast on March 6th will discuss managing technical debt in organizations and how to identify and address common drivers of technical debt.
The document announces upcoming webcasts from Deloitte for technology executives on various topics. The first webcast on January 16th will discuss wearable computing technology and its implications for business including design principles, security and privacy concerns, and use cases in industries like healthcare. The second webcast on February 6th will cover sovereign computing and how it may impact enterprise security and how organizations can address issues. The final webcast on March 6th will discuss technical debt in IT departments, how to identify and manage it to reduce costs and enable innovation.
Increasing trust towards government e-servicesAna Meskovska
This document summarizes a presentation on increasing trust in government e-services. It was presented by four students from the E-business department of the Faculty of Economics at Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Macedonia. The presentation discusses the challenges of low trust in e-government services and proposes a business process reengineering approach with a customer-centric focus to increase adoption. This would involve redesigning services from a user perspective, integrating organizational and technical aspects, and empowering citizens in service design, policymaking and governance. The benefits of improved e-services are highlighted through increased transparency, cost savings and reduced potential for corruption.
This document summarizes a study examining whether individual employment law undermines or enhances the role of trade unions in Ireland. The study finds that while unions believe collective bargaining is superior to individual rights, they recognize benefits of employment law. Unions use employment law to support vulnerable workers given restrictions on collective action in individual disputes. However, employment law individualizes employment relationships compared to Sweden's strong collectivist system. The increasing use of individual rights in Ireland contrasts with Sweden's emphasis on collective bargaining and resolution of disputes.
Cd Anderson Portfolio Internet Solutionscdanderson
1) Internet Solutions (IS) is South Africa's leading internet provider and offers connectivity, communications, cloud, and carrier services across Africa and the Middle East.
2) IS manages over 4 major service areas including connectivity, communications, cloud, and carrier services. It aims to expand these services and connect more businesses and individuals across the continent.
3) Managing Director Derek Wilcocks discusses IS's focus on strong leadership and people. Under his leadership, IS has expanded services, attracted more enterprise clients, and formed new partnerships to deliver advanced technologies like cloud computing and security solutions.
Future of work employability and digital skills nov 2020Future Agenda
Future of Work, Employability and Digital Skills
As the world of work changes, how will organisations, society and individuals adapt to ensure that the current and the next generation will be able to acquire the skills necessary for future jobs? Building on previous Future Agenda research that focussed on key policy areas primarily in the Asian market and, more recently, an updated outlook on the future of work and skills development developed in partnership with the University of Bristol, School of Management, we are very pleased to be starting a new phase of research. As well as an analysis of the future of work, this will specifically explore the shifting nature of employability and how and where digital skills will have impact.
Over the next few months, expert views from across Europe will be shared in order to develop a richer understanding of key issues and how they vary across different jurisdictions. As with all Future Agenda projects, the aim is to challenge assumptions, identify emerging trends and build an informed assessment of the changes ahead and their implications for policy and action.
If you would like to be involved and add your views into the mix, please get in touch.
Telemedicine, Wi-Fi, and green computing provide new communication methods internally and externally for companies. Recent news events in these areas include new methods that will impact future networks through topology, equipment, and customer expectations.
This presentation explores the new ways we are working and the implications for business and for workers. Each theme has 4 trends and each trend is supported by 4 examples, supporting statistics and implications defined by PSFK Labs team.
What are libraries doing to promote the use of electronic resources? This combination session will use a thorough literature review and a systematic plan to identify which are the most commonly used techniques and marketing strategy, and propose a suite of methods for evaluating and marketing electronic reference resources.
Singapore Airlines; Internet and Electronic Marketing ProjectVaneet Sood
Its a detailed project to analyze and study Singapore Airlines website and its effort to increase its UI for customers. From the study it can easily be concluded that its Website aids various uses including Marketing and Promoting besides e-commerce and ticket booking.
Presented at the 2010 Electronic Resources & Libraries Conference. --
Marie Kennedy, Loyola Marymount University; Jia Mi, The College of New Jersey
--
Abstract: What are libraries doing to promote the use of electronic resources? This combination session will use a thorough literature review and a systematic plan to identify which are the most commonly used techniques and marketing strategy, and propose a suite of methods for evaluating and marketing electronic reference resources.
The document provides an overview of operating systems with three main points:
1) An operating system acts as an interface between hardware and users, allowing for convenient and efficient usage of resources through parallel processing and protection of information.
2) Operating systems include components like scheduling, memory management, and protection of resources from malicious users through privileged modes.
3) A key function of operating systems is managing the storage hierarchy through caching to make the best use of fast but expensive memory and slower cheaper storage.
Thecarvakaphilosophy 110628012341-phpapp02Vimarsh Padha
The document summarizes the Carvaka philosophy, an Indian school of thought that was materialist and rejected notions of an afterlife, God, or soul. The Carvakas believed that perception is the only source of valid knowledge and that pleasure is the highest goal in life. They viewed the world as composed of basic material elements and rejected ideas that couldn't be directly perceived, such as the existence of God or an immortal soul. While criticized for their views, the Carvakas made contributions to philosophical debates around knowledge and ethics.
Leading indicators in_the_indian_economyVimarsh Padha
The document discusses various leading economic indicators of the Indian economy. It describes indicators such as GDP, inflation, interest rates, credit levels, foreign exchange reserves, FDI trends, rainfall levels, stock market performance, and more. It provides data on indicators like GDP composition and growth rates. The document emphasizes that monitoring leading indicators can help forecast the performance of the Indian economic cycle. It also discusses characteristics of ideal leading indicators and illustrates an example.
Quantum was a large manufacturer of storage devices that was implementing an ERP system called WARP to replace its nine legacy systems. It faced challenges from a recent acquisition that increased complexity. The document discussed a phased versus big-bang approach to ERP implementation. A phased approach implements modules gradually over time by location, while a big-bang cuts over everything at once. Factors like organizational size and the implementation scope impact the choice. The document sought to determine which approach Quantum should take and discuss benefits.
This document discusses the three sectors of production: primary, secondary, and tertiary. The primary sector involves extracting or growing natural resources. The secondary sector involves manufacturing goods from raw materials. The tertiary sector provides services. Over time, employment has shifted from the primary and secondary sectors to the growing tertiary sector as consumer demand and technology have changed how goods and services are produced.
This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -E-Commerce It talks about (Analysis and Design.
This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -E-Commerce It talks about Change management.
The document introduces the lecturer, C. Matt Graham, for a class on Management Information Systems (MIS). It provides Graham's background and research interests. It then asks what MIS is and answers that MIS deals with developing and using information systems to help businesses achieve their goals and objectives. The document emphasizes that MIS is not about computer science or programming, but rather how information technology can be applied to solve business problems.
This document discusses the three sectors of production: primary, secondary, and tertiary. The primary sector involves extracting or growing natural resources. The secondary sector involves manufacturing goods from raw materials or capital goods. The tertiary sector provides services to businesses and consumers. Over time, employment has shifted from the primary and secondary sectors to the tertiary sector as consumer demand and technology have changed how businesses operate.
DELOITTE DBRIEFS Stay tuned in Join us for these upcoming webcastsFranco Ferrario
The document announces upcoming webcasts from Deloitte for technology executives on various topics. The first webcast on January 16th will discuss wearable computing technology and its implications for business including design principles, security concerns, and business use cases. The second webcast on February 6th will cover sovereign computing and how it may impact enterprise security and how organizations can address issues. The final webcast on March 6th will discuss managing technical debt in organizations and how to identify and address common drivers of technical debt.
The document announces upcoming webcasts from Deloitte for technology executives on various topics. The first webcast on January 16th will discuss wearable computing technology and its implications for business including design principles, security and privacy concerns, and use cases in industries like healthcare. The second webcast on February 6th will cover sovereign computing and how it may impact enterprise security and how organizations can address issues. The final webcast on March 6th will discuss technical debt in IT departments, how to identify and manage it to reduce costs and enable innovation.
Increasing trust towards government e-servicesAna Meskovska
This document summarizes a presentation on increasing trust in government e-services. It was presented by four students from the E-business department of the Faculty of Economics at Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Macedonia. The presentation discusses the challenges of low trust in e-government services and proposes a business process reengineering approach with a customer-centric focus to increase adoption. This would involve redesigning services from a user perspective, integrating organizational and technical aspects, and empowering citizens in service design, policymaking and governance. The benefits of improved e-services are highlighted through increased transparency, cost savings and reduced potential for corruption.
This document summarizes a study examining whether individual employment law undermines or enhances the role of trade unions in Ireland. The study finds that while unions believe collective bargaining is superior to individual rights, they recognize benefits of employment law. Unions use employment law to support vulnerable workers given restrictions on collective action in individual disputes. However, employment law individualizes employment relationships compared to Sweden's strong collectivist system. The increasing use of individual rights in Ireland contrasts with Sweden's emphasis on collective bargaining and resolution of disputes.
Cd Anderson Portfolio Internet Solutionscdanderson
1) Internet Solutions (IS) is South Africa's leading internet provider and offers connectivity, communications, cloud, and carrier services across Africa and the Middle East.
2) IS manages over 4 major service areas including connectivity, communications, cloud, and carrier services. It aims to expand these services and connect more businesses and individuals across the continent.
3) Managing Director Derek Wilcocks discusses IS's focus on strong leadership and people. Under his leadership, IS has expanded services, attracted more enterprise clients, and formed new partnerships to deliver advanced technologies like cloud computing and security solutions.
Future of work employability and digital skills nov 2020Future Agenda
Future of Work, Employability and Digital Skills
As the world of work changes, how will organisations, society and individuals adapt to ensure that the current and the next generation will be able to acquire the skills necessary for future jobs? Building on previous Future Agenda research that focussed on key policy areas primarily in the Asian market and, more recently, an updated outlook on the future of work and skills development developed in partnership with the University of Bristol, School of Management, we are very pleased to be starting a new phase of research. As well as an analysis of the future of work, this will specifically explore the shifting nature of employability and how and where digital skills will have impact.
Over the next few months, expert views from across Europe will be shared in order to develop a richer understanding of key issues and how they vary across different jurisdictions. As with all Future Agenda projects, the aim is to challenge assumptions, identify emerging trends and build an informed assessment of the changes ahead and their implications for policy and action.
If you would like to be involved and add your views into the mix, please get in touch.
Telemedicine, Wi-Fi, and green computing provide new communication methods internally and externally for companies. Recent news events in these areas include new methods that will impact future networks through topology, equipment, and customer expectations.
This presentation explores the new ways we are working and the implications for business and for workers. Each theme has 4 trends and each trend is supported by 4 examples, supporting statistics and implications defined by PSFK Labs team.
What are libraries doing to promote the use of electronic resources? This combination session will use a thorough literature review and a systematic plan to identify which are the most commonly used techniques and marketing strategy, and propose a suite of methods for evaluating and marketing electronic reference resources.
Singapore Airlines; Internet and Electronic Marketing ProjectVaneet Sood
Its a detailed project to analyze and study Singapore Airlines website and its effort to increase its UI for customers. From the study it can easily be concluded that its Website aids various uses including Marketing and Promoting besides e-commerce and ticket booking.
Presented at the 2010 Electronic Resources & Libraries Conference. --
Marie Kennedy, Loyola Marymount University; Jia Mi, The College of New Jersey
--
Abstract: What are libraries doing to promote the use of electronic resources? This combination session will use a thorough literature review and a systematic plan to identify which are the most commonly used techniques and marketing strategy, and propose a suite of methods for evaluating and marketing electronic reference resources.
The document provides an overview of operating systems with three main points:
1) An operating system acts as an interface between hardware and users, allowing for convenient and efficient usage of resources through parallel processing and protection of information.
2) Operating systems include components like scheduling, memory management, and protection of resources from malicious users through privileged modes.
3) A key function of operating systems is managing the storage hierarchy through caching to make the best use of fast but expensive memory and slower cheaper storage.
Thecarvakaphilosophy 110628012341-phpapp02Vimarsh Padha
The document summarizes the Carvaka philosophy, an Indian school of thought that was materialist and rejected notions of an afterlife, God, or soul. The Carvakas believed that perception is the only source of valid knowledge and that pleasure is the highest goal in life. They viewed the world as composed of basic material elements and rejected ideas that couldn't be directly perceived, such as the existence of God or an immortal soul. While criticized for their views, the Carvakas made contributions to philosophical debates around knowledge and ethics.
Leading indicators in_the_indian_economyVimarsh Padha
The document discusses various leading economic indicators of the Indian economy. It describes indicators such as GDP, inflation, interest rates, credit levels, foreign exchange reserves, FDI trends, rainfall levels, stock market performance, and more. It provides data on indicators like GDP composition and growth rates. The document emphasizes that monitoring leading indicators can help forecast the performance of the Indian economic cycle. It also discusses characteristics of ideal leading indicators and illustrates an example.
Quantum was a large manufacturer of storage devices that was implementing an ERP system called WARP to replace its nine legacy systems. It faced challenges from a recent acquisition that increased complexity. The document discussed a phased versus big-bang approach to ERP implementation. A phased approach implements modules gradually over time by location, while a big-bang cuts over everything at once. Factors like organizational size and the implementation scope impact the choice. The document sought to determine which approach Quantum should take and discuss benefits.
This document discusses the three sectors of production: primary, secondary, and tertiary. The primary sector involves extracting or growing natural resources. The secondary sector involves manufacturing goods from raw materials. The tertiary sector provides services. Over time, employment has shifted from the primary and secondary sectors to the growing tertiary sector as consumer demand and technology have changed how goods and services are produced.
This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -E-Commerce It talks about (Analysis and Design.
This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -E-Commerce It talks about Change management.
The document introduces the lecturer, C. Matt Graham, for a class on Management Information Systems (MIS). It provides Graham's background and research interests. It then asks what MIS is and answers that MIS deals with developing and using information systems to help businesses achieve their goals and objectives. The document emphasizes that MIS is not about computer science or programming, but rather how information technology can be applied to solve business problems.
This document discusses the three sectors of production: primary, secondary, and tertiary. The primary sector involves extracting or growing natural resources. The secondary sector involves manufacturing goods from raw materials or capital goods. The tertiary sector provides services to businesses and consumers. Over time, employment has shifted from the primary and secondary sectors to the tertiary sector as consumer demand and technology have changed how businesses operate.
The document provides information about the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. It discusses that the IMF and World Bank were established at the Bretton Woods conference in 1944 to support post-war reconstruction and international economic cooperation. The IMF aims to facilitate global monetary exchange and provide temporary financial assistance. It has 188 member nations and oversees issues like exchange rates and international trade. The World Bank seeks to promote economic development in poorer countries by providing long-term financing for projects and special assistance to the poorest nations. Both organizations are membership-based and work to reduce poverty globally.
This v is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -E-Commerce It talks about Introduction to E-commerce.
This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -E-Commerce It talks about E-Commerce Infrastructure.
This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -E-Commerce It talks about M-Commerce.
This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -Supply-Chain Management.
This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -E-Commerce It talks about CRM.
Electronic commerce (e-commerce) involves the buying and selling of goods and services over the internet. It includes business-to-business (B2B), business-to-consumer (B2C), and consumer-to-consumer (C2C) transactions. E-commerce has grown significantly since the 1990s with the rise of the internet and World Wide Web. It provides benefits like lower costs, greater convenience, and access to a global market, but also limitations such as the inability to physically examine products. Emerging models include mobile commerce, online marketplaces, and social commerce.
E-commerce refers to the buying and selling of goods or services over the Internet. There are several types including business-to-business (B2B), business-to-consumer (B2C), consumer-to-consumer (C2C), and consumer-to-business (C2B). The document traces the history of e-commerce from the 1970s to today and discusses how the Internet has enabled global e-commerce opportunities and challenges. Key issues for multinational companies include understanding cultural differences that impact adoption rates, building consumer trust, and designing websites that are culturally sensitive.
This document provides an introduction to e-commerce, including its meaning and key features. E-commerce refers to conducting business electronically, including buying and selling online. It began with electronic data interchange between businesses but has expanded to include business-to-consumer transactions via the internet. The document discusses how e-commerce benefits businesses through improved communication, data exchange, and transaction capabilities compared to traditional methods. It also provides several definitions of e-commerce from different perspectives.
E business and the it revolution-how to benefitSKALI Group
The document discusses the history and development of the internet and e-business. It explains that the internet started as a research project funded by the US Department of Defense. It then outlines how the internet was adopted rapidly once opened to the public, surpassing other technologies. The document also discusses how e-business has changed how businesses operate and consumers live, through more online interactions, mobile access, and digital transactions. Finally, it provides some examples of e-business models and strategies for companies to utilize e-business.
Copy of the benefits and barriers of e business1nam126
E-business can provide significant benefits to the healthcare industry by improving quality of care, reducing costs, speeding up information sharing, and enhancing care delivery. To implement e-business, healthcare organizations should first diagnose operational pain points, prioritize the processes causing the most issues, examine risks and returns on investment, and then execute e-business solutions that will provide the greatest benefits.
This document discusses the implications of e-commerce on traditional marketing and business. It defines e-commerce as conducting business over the internet, noting that it has the potential to significantly alter traditional economic activities and business organization. The key benefits of e-commerce are outlined as affecting business organizations, consumers, and society. For businesses, e-commerce allows access to international markets at reduced operational costs. Consumers benefit from 24/7 access, more choices, easier price comparisons, and improved delivery tracking. Society gains from more flexible work practices and online services like tax filing. Challenges for Indian e-commerce are also mentioned, such as infrastructural difficulties and low computer literacy in many rural areas.
The document is a chapter from a student's project report on e-commerce. It discusses the architectural framework for electronic commerce applications. The framework consists of six layers: 1) applications, 2) brokerage and data management services, 3) interface layers, 4) secure messaging, 5) middleware, and 6) network infrastructure and communication services. The layers work together to integrate information from different systems and enable the development of e-commerce applications.
E commerce lecture-1 - muhammad imran memonizmemon
This document discusses e-commerce and e-business. It defines e-commerce as any business transaction conducted electronically, often over the internet, while e-business refers more broadly to using technology to enhance business processes. The document outlines different models of e-commerce transactions, including business-to-consumer, consumer-to-consumer, and business-to-business. It also lists some advantages of e-commerce such as access to global markets and lower distribution costs.
The document discusses security solutions for electronic business (e-business). It outlines several key security concerns for e-businesses, including protecting access and data integrity, using encryption, implementing digital certificates, and employing digital signatures. It then describes various security solutions to address these concerns, such as using antivirus software, firewalls, intrusion detection systems, public/private key encryption, and digital certificates verified by certificate authorities. Overall, the document emphasizes the importance of data security and authentication for e-businesses operating online.
This document provides an overview of electronic commerce (e-commerce). It defines e-commerce and discusses its various categories and frameworks. The document outlines 10 learning objectives related to understanding e-commerce models, transactions, Web 2.0 applications, the digital world/economy, e-commerce business models, and the benefits, limitations and impacts of e-commerce. It also discusses legal and ethical issues in e-commerce such as privacy, intellectual property, and computer crimes.
This document discusses e-business and compares it to e-commerce. E-business refers broadly to using technology to support business activities like managing inventory, production and customer relationships. It includes e-commerce, which specifically involves online buying and selling. The document traces the evolution of e-business from 1997 to today and discusses e-business models. It also outlines the impacts, advantages and challenges of e-business, such as worldwide presence, cost reductions, security issues and leveraging existing systems.
The document discusses the topic of electronic commerce and is structured as a project report submitted by a student named Mohit Bairwa. It contains 8 chapters that cover introductions to e-commerce concepts, the relationship between e-commerce and the world wide web, the architectural framework for e-commerce applications, technologies that power the web, network security and firewalls, examples of e-commerce companies, and a pictorial representation and conclusion of e-commerce. The student acknowledges help from their college and professor in completing the project report.
This document provides an overview of e-commerce, including:
1. Key drivers of e-commerce like technological, political, social, and economic factors.
2. Different business models for business-to-consumer and business-to-business e-commerce.
3. Essential e-commerce processes like access control & security, profiling & personalization, search management, and content & catalog management.
4. Benefits and limitations of e-commerce for organizations, consumers, and society.
5. Electronic payment processes and their benefits and drawbacks.
This document provides an overview of e-commerce, including:
1. Key drivers of e-commerce like technological, political, social, and economic factors.
2. Different e-commerce business models like business-to-consumer and business-to-business.
3. Benefits and limitations of e-commerce for organizations, consumers, and society.
4. Essential e-commerce processes like access control, profiling, search management, and electronic payments.
This document provides an overview of electronic commerce and discusses its various components. It describes the six layers that make up the architectural framework for electronic commerce: 1) applications services, 2) brokerage and data management, 3) interface and support layers, 4) secure messaging and document interchange, 5) middleware services, and 6) network infrastructure. Each layer is discussed in one to two paragraphs to explain its purpose and role in enabling electronic commerce.
- Electronic commerce has fundamentally changed human life through powerful concepts like online shopping and digital payments. It has removed many limitations of traditional business models.
- There are different types of e-commerce like B2B (business to business), B2C (business to consumer), C2C (consumer to consumer), and M-commerce (mobile commerce). B2B e-commerce in particular has grown rapidly by enabling efficient online transactions between businesses.
- E-commerce relies on technologies like the internet, databases, online payment systems, and security systems to facilitate the online exchange of goods and services. It has transformed business processes and created new opportunities for companies in many industries.
Free eCommerce tutorials and course. What is eCommerce and benefits and advantages. How to use mobile ecommerce to promote and Increasing ecommerce business.
This document provides the syllabus for the course "E-Commerce and Governance (IT-721)" taught at Technocrats Institute of Technology in Bhopal, India. The syllabus covers 5 units: (1) Introduction to e-commerce including models, history and legal environment, (2) Electronic payment systems, (3) E-government and models, (4) E-readiness and applications, and (5) E-government security. The course aims to provide students an understanding of e-commerce and e-governance concepts, applications, benefits and issues.
This document is a project report submitted by Divya Rajguru, a third year BCA student at Dezyne E'cole College in Ajmer, India on the topic of electronic commerce. It consists of an introduction and 8 chapters that discuss topics like the definition of e-commerce, the role of the world wide web, architectural frameworks for e-commerce, underlying technologies, network security, e-commerce companies, and a pictorial representation of the e-buying methodology. The student thanks their college and project guide for their assistance in completing this report.
This document discusses an academic project on electronic commerce submitted by Rahul Mathur, a third-year student of Bachelor of Computer Applications. It contains an acknowledgement and outlines the various chapters of the project report, including introductions to electronic commerce and the world wide web, the architectural framework for electronic commerce, and technology behind the web. It provides an overview of the changing retail industry and drivers for electronic commerce adoption.
2. The Short History of E-Business
The Internet was created only 30 years ago
Electronic mail was introduced in 1972
In the mid-eighties, desktop operating systems (PCs) surfaced
and the modern day Internet began to take shape
In 1990, the first World Wide Web software was developed by
Tim Berners-Lee
In the early „90s commercial dial-up services were introduced
3. The Short History of E-Business
In 1992, the real e-business economy began
By 1993, over 100 countries had an online presence
Within the year, commercial users outnumbered academic users
for the first time
By the mid-nineties, e-commerce became attractive to business
In 1997, virtually every major company, organization,
government and news service had a presence on the Web
2004 10/11/2012
Joel Reedy and Shauna Schullo
4. The Short History of E-Business
Vertical companies such as Amazon.com took the next step and
actually started performing business on the Web
Some would call the first wave of e-business “brochureware”
In the next wave, supply chain issues started to be addressed
5. How are B2B Firms Taking to the Web?
Common objectives, performance metrics, and work cultures are
changing
A transition to e-business has a much better environment for
success
E-business is driving nearly 30% of all business partners and
value chain interactions among large organizations
Exponential growth is expected as the e-business model extends
to all areas of the marketplace
6. How are B2B Firms Taking to the Web?
E-business grew at a steady pace of less than 25% annually among
pioneers
The number of organizations using e-business is nearly doubling
each year
Compared to the growth of e-commerce, e-business is being
implemented at a far faster rate
B2B will encompass about $5 trillion in economic activity in 2005
Only half the companies surveyed by META Group perceived e-
business to have a significant impact on their industries to date
7. What Might E-B2B Bring the American
Economy?
Experts forecast that in the e-commerce sector e-business-to-
business will dominate e-business-to-consumer revenues by
approximately 90% in the year 2003
The total world wide value of goods and services purchased by
business through e-commerce solutions will reach 5.8 trillion by
2006, with e-marketplaces capturing the largest share of the
market
8. Conversion from Traditional Business Practices
to an E-Business Proposition
The notion that e-business is the same as e-commerce is not
holding true
Both feature online communications and performance
E-business is the business portion of e-commerce
It is growing more complex to organize
Its confusing terminologies and unfounded expectations are
hindering proper e-business and e-marketing implementation
9. Conversion from Traditional Business Practices
to an E-Business Proposition
E-commerce
Deals with using the Internet, digital communications, and IT
applications to enable the buying/selling process
E-business
Involves the continuous optimization of an organization‟s value
proposition and value-chain positions through the adoption of digital
technology and the use of the Internet as the primary
communications medium
10. Conversion from Traditional Business Practices
to an E-Business Proposition
There are two approaches to making the transition to e-business
Take an evolutionary approach
Use new technology to enhance your current business model
Take a transformational approach
Reconfigure your business and value propositions with the
technology to reconfigure and reinvent your business