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Unit 1: Introduction to E-Commerce and E-Business



               Table 1.1 depicts some examples of business processes that suit e-commerce and traditional commerce
               respectively.

                                     Table 1.1: Comparison of E-Commerce  and Traditional
                                          Commerce Based on Business Processes

                                 Electronic commerce               Traditional commerce
                         Sale/purchase of books or CDs     Sale/purchase of high fashion clothing
                         Online delivery of software       Sale/purchase of perishable food products
                         Advertising and promotion of travel services   Small denomination transactions
                         Online tracking of shipments      Sale of expensive jewelry and antiques


               Table 1.2 compares and contrasts traditional commerce and e-commerce. However, it is essential to
               know that currently many companies are  functioning with a mix of traditional commerce and e-
               commerce.

                                Gap, Toys-R-Us, Walmart, and Sears are some of the companies that are operating
                                with a mix of traditional commerce and e-commerce.


                                     Table 1.2: Comparison of Traditional Commerce and E-
                                              Commerce Based on Activity


                              Activity              Traditional commerce        E- commerce

                     Product information        Magazines, flyers         Web sites, online catalogs
                     Business communications    Regular mail, phone       E-mail
                     Check product availability   Phone, fax and letter   E-mail, Web sites, and
                                                                          extranets
                     Order generation           Printed forms             E-mail, Web sites
                     Product acknowledgements   Phone, fax                E-mail, Web sites, and EDI
                     Invoice generation         Printed forms             Web sites


               1.3   Media Convergence
               The electronic marketplace is turning into a reality as many companies are using their resources and
               talents through mergers with other companies. The term E-Commerce is now irreversibly linked with
               the idea of convergence of companies centered on information like content, storage, networks, business
               applications, and consumer devices.
               Convergence  means merging of consumer electronics, publishing, television, computers, and
               telecommunications for  the  purpose of enabling new forms of information-based commerce. The
               concept may be confusing for the public as the popular press uses the terms multimedia and cross-
               media interchangeably. Multimedia convergence refers to the conversion of data, voice, text, image,
               graphics, and full-motion video into digital content. Cross-media convergence applies to the integration
               of various industries, such as, entertainment,  publication, and communication media based on
               multimedia content. The two types of convergence are closely related to each other.






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