E-Business to the Power of 12
The Principles of .competition
Seiten
2000
FT.com (Verlag)
978-0-273-65021-8 (ISBN)
FT.com (Verlag)
978-0-273-65021-8 (ISBN)
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Soon the majority of business will be e-business. 12 e-principles simplifies e-commerce into a manageable 12-step business process.
The Principles of .competition
"The changes wrought by the digital revolution already reach far. On a more fundamental level the information revolution is forcing companies to reconsider all aspects of their activities. People at all levels are finding that their working lives are changing drastically." FT, 1 October
Ignoring the net could cost the life of your company. The distinction between e and business is blurring posthaste. Soon the majority of business will be e-business, and any forward looking professional needs to know how the market is shaping up and how it can be and is being exploited. No longer simply the domain of IT departments, e-commerce has gone mainstream. And there is a gold rush on to capitalise on it.
Yet this gold rush is countered by a fear of the unknown and a lack of experience. Professionals need this vast arena to be broken down and distilled into the business as opposed to technolgical language.
The 12 Ecommandments delivers an exploration guide. It simplifies e-commerce into a manageable 12-step business process. A 12-step business process that will become as fundamental as the four P's of marketing. A 12-step business process that will turn e-visions into realities.
The 12 Principles
The first principle: Learning
The second principle: Planning business strategy
The third principle: Evaluation of system software
The fourth principle: Networking infrastructure
The fifth principle: Security
The sixth principle: Payment
The seventh principle: Buying
The eighth principle: Supplier portals
The ninth principle: Inventory and logistics
The tenth principle: The internet as ideal selling mechanism
The eleventh principle: Customer portals
The twelfth principle: Personalization
The Principles of .competition
"The changes wrought by the digital revolution already reach far. On a more fundamental level the information revolution is forcing companies to reconsider all aspects of their activities. People at all levels are finding that their working lives are changing drastically." FT, 1 October
Ignoring the net could cost the life of your company. The distinction between e and business is blurring posthaste. Soon the majority of business will be e-business, and any forward looking professional needs to know how the market is shaping up and how it can be and is being exploited. No longer simply the domain of IT departments, e-commerce has gone mainstream. And there is a gold rush on to capitalise on it.
Yet this gold rush is countered by a fear of the unknown and a lack of experience. Professionals need this vast arena to be broken down and distilled into the business as opposed to technolgical language.
The 12 Ecommandments delivers an exploration guide. It simplifies e-commerce into a manageable 12-step business process. A 12-step business process that will become as fundamental as the four P's of marketing. A 12-step business process that will turn e-visions into realities.
The 12 Principles
The first principle: Learning
The second principle: Planning business strategy
The third principle: Evaluation of system software
The fourth principle: Networking infrastructure
The fifth principle: Security
The sixth principle: Payment
The seventh principle: Buying
The eighth principle: Supplier portals
The ninth principle: Inventory and logistics
The tenth principle: The internet as ideal selling mechanism
The eleventh principle: Customer portals
The twelfth principle: Personalization
Thomas Power: Author of the recent Financial Times report From "Supply Chain to Value Chain", Thomas Power is co-author of "The E-Business Advantage", which stressed the importance of adapting your business to the new electronic economy and to the flexible and pragmatic approach that it demands. "The Battle of the Portals" examines the onset of global marketplaces, how information can change consumer behavior and challenge traditional distribution channels. A former Managing Director of the TDS Group, Thomas Power left to create The Ecademy, an Ecommerce learning Institute. Widely recognised for his experience, vision, energy and drive, Thomas has worked with Amstrad, Microsoft and Mercedes-Benz.
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 19.12.2000 |
---|---|
Reihe/Serie | Financial Times Series |
Verlagsort | Harlow |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 171 x 209 mm |
Gewicht | 530 g |
Themenwelt | Informatik ► Netzwerke ► Mail Server |
Mathematik / Informatik ► Informatik ► Web / Internet | |
Wirtschaft ► Allgemeines / Lexika | |
Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Marketing / Vertrieb | |
ISBN-10 | 0-273-65021-1 / 0273650211 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-273-65021-8 / 9780273650218 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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