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e-business strategy covers many issues the important of which is are you selling a product or service and the business patterns you are likely to use. Using established business patterns allows you to draw upon observed interactions between users, businesses, employees, and data. These interactions determine the strategy used to implement your site and are at the core of the Executive Assessment. Product Strategies Companies offering a tangible product offer product specifications, pictures and, secure online ordering. Transaction processing, information, communication at the point of sale, and interactivity are desirable ingredients for consumers. Strategy differs depending on whether you are selling to consumers, other businesses, or both. Business to Consumer (B2C) transactions require secure credit card, checking account, or savings account transactions. The options for payment include phone, fax, and secure online transactions. Business to Business (B2B) transactions may be more complex. Cost reduction is a common goal. Important questions to ask in the Assessment process are: Could you save money conducting RFQ, RFP, and bidding on line? Could you achieve greater efficiencies in tracking and controlling vendors and delivery? What are the bottlenecks in your business processes? Can web approaches make them more efficient? This category can include manufacturers and merchants who need to interact with suppliers. Service Strategies Service companies provide information for current and future clients. Customer service figures highly in the design process. e-Commerce opportunities are oriented towards improved service. Communications via web based call center, appointments on line, automatic responses, and customized pages each have an immediate effect on sales in your web site. As an example the Finance industry conveys information through the website, selectively allows download of financial documents, and provides efficient communications. Financial companies may stream data on rates and indicators. Databases and streaming sources can augment the standard information provided from a site. Secure areas provide private exclusive communications. Private areas provide private deal financing, offers, and communications. Newsletters can become a way to keep the financial community returning to your website for fresh content. Automated self-service options encourage return visits and ease maintenance requirements. Security companies can extend service through live cameras and secure client areas. Private camera access, recording and playback, and audio response to intruders can all be a part of a secure interface. Physical security can be scheduled and verified through these same interfaces. CRM functions include customer access to billing and accounting statements, and automated notifications of intrusions through mobile devices. The Healthcare industry can enhance patient response through CRM approaches. Automating the process of replying to client requests and updates. Private on line conferences and or more general e-mail communications bring patient and practitioner together. Information current, accurate, and germane to patient and doctors needs. are looking for. Lectures and demonstrations can help patients to learn about their illnesses and doctors learn about new treatment methodologies. Hospitality is based on service to the customer, member, or participant. Reservations, appointments, and specific information is important. Clubs, nonprofit and professional organizations focus on the exclusive needs of their memberships. CRM functions feature heavily in an implementation. A call center is an ideal way to automate access for dining and activity reservations from any location. The call center may be in a secure area. Chat rooms can facilitate communications on a topic in a secure way between groups within the organization. Non-profits need to inform, instruct, and solicit funds. Streaming videos, a call center, and automated access to documents are all important to the education and instructional focus. Donations should can be made through secure interfaces. These same priorities exist for political parties and politicians. Business Patterns Business patterns highlight the most commonly observed interactions between Users, Businesses, and Data. They are the fundamental building blocks of most e-business solutions, and describe the interaction between the participants in an e-business solution. i-Way Solutions uses four basic business patterns: Self-service, Collaboration, Information Aggregation, and Extended Enterprise. The patterns for e-business interaction include: User to Business (U2B) User to Online Buying (U2OB) Business-to-Business Integration (B2Bi) Business-to-Business e-Marketplace (eMP) User to Data (U2D) User to User (U2U) and Application Integration. The Self-service business pattern The Self-service business pattern, also known as the User-to-Business or U2B pattern, captures the essence of direct interactions between interested parties and a business. Interested parties include customers, business partners, stakeholders, employees, and all other individuals with whom the business intends to interact. Self-service Examples:
The Collaboration business pattern The Collaboration business pattern, which is also known as the User to User or U2U pattern, enables interaction and collaboration between users. This pattern can be observed in solutions that support small or extended teams who need to work together in order to achieve a joint goal. Collaboration Examples
The Information Aggregation business pattern The Information Aggregation business pattern, which is also known as the User to Data or U2D pattern, can be observed in e-business solutions that allow users to access and manipulate data that is aggregated from multiple sources. This Business pattern captures the process of taking large volumes of data, text, images, video, and so on, and using tools to extract useful information from them. These tools may personalize data to suit user preferences, distill summary information from large volumes of data, use algorithms to identify trends hidden in the data, or answer users' hypothetical "what-if" questions about potential business scenarios. Information Aggregation Examples:
The Extended Enterprise business pattern The Extended Enterprise business pattern, which is also known as the Business-to-Business pattern or B2B pattern, addresses the interactions and collaborations between business processes in separate enterprises. This pattern can be observed in solutions that implement programmatic interfaces to connect inter-enterprise applications. In other words, it does not cover applications that are directly invoked using a user interface by business partners across organizational boundaries. Cross Industry Examples Buy Side
Sell Side
Exchange Participation
Industry Specific Examples
Travel
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