home
NEWS       BLOGS       FORUMS       NEWSLETTERS       RESEARCH       EVENTS       DIGITAL LIBRARY       CAREERS  
Network Computing Network Computing Powered by InformationWeek Business Technology Network

IMMERSE YOURSELF:

SOA

  |

Data Center

  |

802.11n

  |

Data Privacy

  |
APO  |

Virtualization

  |

NAC

  |

Security

  |

Network Mgmt

  |

Enterprise Apps

  |

Storage & Servers






The Nuts and Bolts of Business-to-Business E-Commerce

By Brian Walsh  With commercial interests fueling the rapid growth of the Internet, sooner or later your organization will have to jump on the electronic commerce bandwagon. Nine companies tell us how they succeeded in making the transition.

Electronic commerce has been at the epicenter of a mesh of trading partner relationships for more than 20 years. With e-commerce, electronic component manufacturers provide samples to their distributors. Photojournalists submit images to a stock house. Fast-food outlets combine their purchasing power. Health-care companies check eligibility and receive settlement. And the guy who sells stepladders to the giant home center uses e-comme rce because that's the only way the home center will buy anything.

The question is not when we will arrive in a computer-mediated market but, rather, when will your organization enter that market and what competition will it find when it gets there? Deftly combining a long history with the latest technology, e-commerce is the most popular application of the moment. Presales, encryption, customer support--they're all part of the mystique of electronic commerce. But the real lure is undoubtedly the money.

We're all in it for the money. Commercial interests are the largest segment of the Internet and will continue to fuel its growth. Think of all those documents with little dollar signs on them that companies deal with on a daily basis. Now imagine them all as bits flowing automatically in and out of their respective databases--no paper, no phone calls, no faxes. That was the promise of EDI (electronic data interchange) (see "Everything Old Is New Again," page 82).

Now it's called electronic commerce. R on Koskinen, marketing director for AT&T's SecureBuy service, explains: "Business-to-business e-commerce takes many different forms. So, as such, you can consider EDI business-to-business e-commerce. You can consider some types of message-enabled applications to be facilitated for business-to-business e-commerce. You can also look at Web-based catalogs that provide features of functions that are necessary for businesses to sell to other businesses as business-to-business e-commerce."

No matter how you slice it, your systems will have to exchange legal documents related to the transparent transfer of goods and services. The Internet provides ubiquitous, high-speed access to information. It offers a platform-independent means to exchange information with trading partners. Where EDI was primarily the exchange of documents between application subsystems, such as order entry or accounts payable, Internet-based e-commerce casts a wider net: Documents are exchan ged in real time; your customers or partners may be as likely to use their browsers to access your system as to use a local system; and transaction flow follows a matrix of user-to-application and application-to-application paths. EDI is faceless; no common user interface or mechanism addresses what the Web does so well: promotions links, editorial content, integration with internal systems and intensive personalization access. Customers can help themselves--and get fast responses to inquiries and access to complete information.

The "Internet Adoption Is Predictable," "E-Commerce from the Buyer's Point of View" and "E-Commerce from the Seller's Point of View" charts , in Acrobat format.


For the Side Bar on

Everything Old Is New Again

On Line Only
Role Definitions


Other Features

Push Plumbing
By Barry Nance

Related Links

Signed, Sealed & Delivered: CommerceNet Test Results
Will New Privacy Rule Impair Web Commerce?







Ready to take that job and shove it?

Function:

Keyword(s):

State:
SPONSOR
RECENT JOB POSTINGS
CAREER NEWS
Go beyond Google and get vertical. These specialized search sites will help you find the business information you need -- fast.

Ari Balogh was named to the post of chief technology officer as the companys for a "realignment" of employees.










InformationWeek U.S. IT Salary Survey 2008
Salaries for business technology professionals are falling. Here's what you need to know in order to make good hiring decisions and personal career choices. Download Today
 
ROLLING RIGHT ALONG
Follow key Network Computing Reviews from conception to completion. This Week: Holistic APM.



Network Computing Reports Emerging Enterprise Podcast Series: Secrets to Success








TechSearch


Microsite of the Week


Powerful Information at Your Fingertips



InformationWeek Business Technology Network
InformationWeekInformationWeek 500InformationWeek 500 ConferenceInformationWeek AnalyticsInformationWeek CIO
InformationWeek EventsInformationWeek ReportsInformationWeek MagazinebMightyByte and SwitchDark Reading
Digital LibraryIntelligent EnterpriseInternet EvolutionNetwork ComputingNo JitterPlug Into The Cloud
space
Techweb Events Network
InteropVoiceConWeb 2.0 ExpoWeb 2.0 SummitEnterprise 2.0 ConferenceMobile Business ExpoSoftware ConferenceCSI - Computer Security Institute
Black HatGTECEnergy CampMashup CampStartup Camp
space
Light Reading Communications Network
Light ReadingLight Reading EuropeUnstrungLight Reading's Cable Digital NewsConstantinopleInternet EvolutionPyramid Research
Heavy ReadingLight Reading Live!Light Reading InsiderEthernet ExpoOptical ExpoTeleco TVTower Technology Summit
space
Financial Technology Network
Advanced TradingBank Systems & TechnologyInsurance & TechnologyWall Street & TechnologyAccelerating Wall StreetBank Systems & Technology Executive SummitBuyside Trading SummitInsurance & Technology Executive Summit
space
Microsoft Technology Network
MSDN MagazineTechNetThe Architecture Journal
space


App Infrastructure   |   Messaging & Collaboration   |   Network & Systems Mgmt   |   Network Infrastructure   |   Security  |   Storage & Servers   |   Wireless   |   Enterprise Apps
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Site Map  |  Technology Marketing Solutions  |  Advertising Contacts  |   Briefing Centers
Copyright © 2008  United Business Media LLC  |  Privacy Statement  |  Terms of Service  |  Your California Privacy Rights