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Creating the e-Business - Part 1: Success Determinants

 

ABC Company
 

E-business is more that just selling products and services online. E-business runs the gamete from e-commerce sales to inventory management. E-business also encompasses operations, marketing and finance. The reality is e-business touches, in some way, every department within an organization. This is what makes e-business so complex. This is also what makes e-business so powerful. Over the course of this ‘blog, we will paint a picture of the many facets of e-business and thoroughly examine each of these facets in order to help the reader comprehend the vast nature of this beast. The first step to creating a successful e-business is to form a strategic plan based on the long-term goals of the organization.

 

ABC Company has a vision to grow its business into new industries, new product markets and increase overall sales via the Internet. It has begun these efforts by creating a functional e-commerce site. This site has a goal of becoming the preferred source for engineers and purchasing agents for sourcing, procuring and applying cogs. ABC’s hope is that along with increased sales, the site will allow its customers to self-service themselves around 50% of the time, if they so choose. This will allow its sales and customer service personnel to spend more time researching and contacting new potential customers.

 

Success Determinants

In order for ABC to succeed in its efforts to increase sales, break into new markets and industries, and create an environment wherein customers can self-service their selves, ABC needs to accomplish some major objectives. First, it must work to integrate its core business functionality into the site. The site must answer the types of questions that a typical customer or potential customer would ask, and it must give the user the power to research products, procure products and check on their orders after the purchase. These are the main functions that customers demand in ABC’s sales and customer service personnel.

 

Another success factor would be to integrate the information received online into ABC’s customer resource management (CRM) software program. The information obtained from online users could then be transferred to the larger enterprise resource planning (ERP) system. The results from online leads and sales could thereby be measured, studied and refined. The information from these studies could be used to market the site differently, allocate more or less resources to the site, change the functionality or usability of the site, etc. This phase of information integration is a key determinant to the future success of the program. A further review of internal and external environments is necessary in order to move forward with creating a successful e-business.

 

The analysis in question would come in the form of a SWOTT analysis. SWOTT stands for strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats and trends. The SWOTT analysis forces the company to look at its internal vision and the external realities that await it. If ABC wants to enter new markets and new industries, it must first understand the competitive nature of these environments and the buying nature of the customers.

In Part 2 of this "lecture" we will discuss this fictional company's goals and determine what role e-business plays in those goals.


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The blog for e-marketing and e-business professionals

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e-business, e-marketing, marketing, Internet advertising, seo
Swott Analysis

The very first task to be accomplished as a Web manager is the creation of a plan. This plan must take into account the long-term goals and vision of the company. Then a strategic business plan can be based on these goals. As in Marketing, a Web Manager must perform a SWOTT analysis for their company. This analysis consists of finding out the company’s Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats and Trends. During this phase of the Web Management plan the competitive landscape should be examined thoroughly as well as the creation of trends analysis reports derived from the company’s Business Intelligence software and its Website analytics reports.
 
A brief company description should be laid out for examination before describing the company’s areas of interest and major goals. The strengths might consist of competitive advantages that the enterprise holds such as dominant software, increased market share, increased industry knowledge, advanced machinery, better leveraged buying power, deeper consumer or industry data, or heightened growth potential due to the industry’s business climate. Weaknesses to consider are not growing fast enough or growing too fast. It is hard to imagine growing too fast, but this phenomenon happens more often than one might think, and can lead to damaging results. When a company is growing too fast for its business model, it can overextend its finances to keep up. This could cause a company to be slow to react when challenged with environmental issues. Smaller companies could make faster changes and leave the company in question unable to make adjustments.
 
Hopefully one would find that a company has many opportunities on its horizon. Being a customer-centric organization is an opportunity. Being first movers in industry, machinery, business philosophies or technologies can bring significant competitive advantages. If a company has systems in place to capture end user trends and information, then it has a chance to grow its market share. In fact, a company that rushes to manage its knowledge assets will partake in increased business intelligence; and business intelligence is the tool that talented business professionals and decision-makers need.
 
A threat to be weary of is competition that is more focused than the company in question. Niche players in production practices, product deliverables, industries or technologies can illustrate their advantages readily. These companies, although not focused on business intelligence or bridging existing business units, are focusing their energies on technology enhancements that are threatening to leapfrog the company at hand. This scenario risks these companies eating away at said business’ critical client base.
 
The SWOTT analysis must also consist of a problem/resolution statement. A primary problem, either with the company or within the industry, must be highlighted and a statement presenting the opportunity for the company in question must be presented. This is followed by a conclusion in which the Web Manager wraps up for the decision-makers and tells them what they are doing right, what they are doing wrong, what areas they stand to gain the most, and what is coming down the pike in terms of industry trends.

The next goal is to create value to the customer.  We will discuss this next time.

Copyright | emarketingprofs | All Rights Reserved
Your Company. Your Website. Our Purpose

The blog for e-marketing and e-business professionals

Copyright | emarketingprofs | All Rights Reserved

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