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chapter seven New Business


Models and
Strategies for
the Internet
Economy
We have plainly arrived at one of those moments when
everyone can see that things are about to change, but nobody
can say for sure how that change will actually play out. The
companies that mean to dominate the future must make a bet
on where the world is headedand hope they get there first.
Joseph Nocera, Business Journalist

If you are going to be in e-commerce, you have to build a


business that destroys the old brick-and-mortar model.
John B. McCoy, CEO, Bank One Corp.

There will be thousands of winners on the Internet. But there


will be only a very few really big winners.
Mary G. Meeker, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter

If we want to stay competitive, we need to be in e-commerce.


Jessica Chu, Marketing Manager, Aaeon Technology, Taiwan

Our strategy is to integrate the Internet into all of our core


businesses.
Thomas Middelhoff, CEO, Bertelsmann AG, Germany

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he impact of the Internet and the rapidly emerging e-commerce environment


is profound. As many have concluded, the advent of the Internet and online
networks changes everything. There can be no doubt that the Internet is a

driving force of historical and revolutionary proportions. The coming of e-commerce


has changed the character of the market, created new driving forces and key success
factors, and bred the formation of
new strategic groups. From an internal perspective, a companys
e-commerce capabilities or lack
thereof tilts the scales toward
competitively valuable resource
strengths or competitively threatening weaknesses. The creativeness with which a company
incorporates e-commerce practices holds enormous potential
for reconfiguring its value chain
and affecting its companys competitiveness. With every passing day, it becomes clearer that the Internet economy presents opportunities and threats that demand strategic response and that require
managers to craft bold new strategies.
This chapter examines the issues companies face in crafting strategies for competing in industries where the Internet and e-commerce are ruling forces. It covers the
high-velocity character of the whole e-commerce environment, the special competitive
features of e-commerce that a company must take into account, the new types of business models and strategies that dot-com companies are employing, and the offensive
and defensive strategies that traditional businesses are employing to make e-commerce
practices a central part of their operations.

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INTERNET TECHNOLOGY AND MARKET STRUCTURE


The Internet is an integrated network of banks of servers and high-speed computers,
digital switches and routers, telecommunications equipment and lines, and individual
users computers. The backbone of the Internet consists of telecommunications lines
(fiber optic lines, high-capacity telephone lines) criss-crossing countries, continents,
and the world that allow computers to transfer data in digital form at very high speed.
The bandwidth of the line determines the capacity or speed of the data transfer. These
lines are connected to computerlike digital switches that move traffic along the backbone lines; many of these switches act as routers, deciding which way to direct the traffic and how to handle the requests of users computers to send or obtain data based on
the destinations and line congestion. Users gain access to the network via a local area
network (LAN) server or an Internet service providers computerized switch that has
the capability to route traffic to and from end users directly connected to it. Many different types of specialized software are required to make the Internet function and infuse it with attractive e-commerce capabilities.

The Supply Side of the Internet Economy

The supply side of


the Internet economy consists of diverse kinds of
enterprises.

Projections called for an estimated 325 million people worldwide to be using the Internet regularly by year-end 2000about 150 million in North America, close to 100
million in Europe, 58 million in the Asia-Pacific region, 11 million in Latin America,
and over 7 million in the rest of the world.1 Associated with each of the technological
components and activities comprising the Internet infrastructure and value chain are a
diverse and growing number of firms and industries. The major groups of firms that
comprise the supply side of the Internet economy include:

The makers of specialized communications components and equipmentCisco


Systems is the worlds leading provider of switches and routers; other prominent
companies in this group include Lucent Technologies, Motorola, Broadcom, Texas
Instruments, PMC Sierra, and 3Com.
The providers of communications servicesThese companies develop and install
the communications networks that enable connectivity and traffic flow. They include
backbone providers, so-called last-mile providers, and Internet service providers.
Last-mile companies, which install and maintain the physical assets needed to connect users to the Internet, include local telephone companies, cable companies,
and wireless communications providers. Leading backbone providers include
WorldCom, AT&T, Qwest Communications, Deutsche Telekom, British Telecom,
Vodaphone AirTouch, Bell Atlantic, SBC Communications, and Global Crossing.
The suppliers of computer components and computer hardwareThese companies
make PCs, workstations, servers, and peripheral equipment as well as the internal
devices that drive them. Examples of companies in this category include Intel, Sun
Microsystems, Seagate Technology, IBM, Iomega, Fujitsu, NEC, Matsushita/
Panasonic, Acer, Philips Electronics, Toshiba, Gateway, and Hewlett-Packard.
The developers of specialized softwareThese companies write the programs that
enable commercial transactions; these programs include encryption software, order/payment processing software, shopping cart software that tracks purchases,
browser software, software to enable banner ads and Web page design, and software

Reported in Business Week, October 7, 1999, p. 77.

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227

that governs the functioning of cable modems, wireless devices, PCs, workstations,
and LANs. DoubleClick is a developer of specialized software that collects bits of
demographic information residing on the PCs of Web surfers and, then, using criteria provided by advertisers, delivers targeted ads to the Web pages popping up on
Web surfers screens; DoubleClicks software also provides its advertising clients
with reports on the frequency with which surfers click particular ads and their profiles. 1ClickCharge, part of CMGI, develops payment software that allows online retailers to charge consumers a few cents per click for product reviews, music, or
articles online. An entrepreneurial start-up named Blaxxun develops software for
building three-dimensional Web sites, an attractive feature for some retailers. Engage Technologies, also a start-up, specializes in software that tracks Web traffic
from site to site, enabling the creation of anonymous user profiles of Web surfers
information that guides users in targeting their online marketing strategies. Critical
Path, another start-up, develops and markets software that allows Web sites to offer
e-mail service. Other important developers of software and e-commerce systems include Microsoft, IBM, SAP, Commerce One, Seibel Systems, Ariba, Oracle, Inktomi, Baan, Sun Microsystems, Macromedia, and Novell.
E-commerce enterprisesThis category of businesses includes (1) business-tobusiness merchants (Cisco, Intel, and Dell Computer conduct most of their business with corporate customers online; General Electric does all of its business with
its suppliers online); (2) business-to-consumer merchants like Emusic.com, eBay,
CarParts.com, Furniture.com, MotherNature.com, Priceline.com, Buy.com, and
Charles Schwab; (3) media companies such as Disney, Nintendo, Electronic Arts,
and Sony that provide online entertainment; and (4) content providers like America Online, Yahoo!, Briefing.com, The Motley Fool, and iVillage.

Not surprisingly, some companies have staked out business positions in more than
one of the above categories. CMGI, part holding company and part venture capitalist,
consists of a portfolio of 52 Internet enterprises; among others, it owns or has equity
interests in 9 content companies, 12 companies that provide software and other tools
for facilitating e-commerce, and 12 e-commerce retailers. Softbank Corporation, a
Japanese conglomerate headed by Masayoshi Son, is a venture capital enterprise with
stakes in 100-plus high-tech enterprises whose offerings include e-commerce software,
Web publishing, e-retailing, online brokerage, Web portals, assorted e-commerce services, and media and content providers. Softbank has ownership interests in Yahoo!,
E*Trade, E-Loan, Critical Path, TheStreet.com, and several other U.S.-based enterprises, but the company is focusing most of its energies on commercializing the Internet in Japan, other parts of Asia, and Europe.

Estimates are that


the volume of business done via the
Internet will grow
to $1.3 trillion by
2003. In 1999, three
companiesDell
Computer, Intel,
and Cisco Systemswere doing
about $100 million
of business daily on
the Internet.

STRATEGY-SHAPING CHARACTERISTICS OF THE


E-COMMERCE ENVIRONMENT
To understand the strategies and business models that work in the new age of
e-commerce, we first need to understand how growing use of the Internet by businesses and consumers reshapes the economic landscape and alters traditional industry
boundaries. The following features stand out:

The Internet makes it feasible for companies everywhere to compete in global


markets. This is true especially for companies whose products are of good caliber
and can be shipped economically. In retailing, the Internet opens up a much bigger

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geographic market than a traditional brick-and-mortar retailer could otherwise


reach. In the brick-and-mortar world, a consumer electronics store in Tuscaloosa,
Alabama, does not compete intensively with similar stores in Birmingham 60
miles away; in the virtual world of the Internet, however, it competes with electronics retailers hundreds of miles away (whose actual locations are unknown and
irrelevant). Thus, e-commerce escalates rivalry among sellers in different geographic areas to a whole new level. National boundaries mean much less in an
e-commerce worldfor example, someone putting an item up for bid on eBays
auction site can connect with a buyer in Europe or Latin America, and eBay provides detailed instructions for shipping auctioned goods internationally. Growing
numbers of transportation providers can handle shipments to any part of the world.
However, one of the barriers to using the Internet to sell globally is the need for
multilingual Web sites (although this is somewhat less necessary for selling to
business enterprises since English tends to be the business language of the world).
Furthermore, buyers in different countries seem to have differences preferences
for the look, feel, and functioning of Web sitessome people like lots of bells and
whistles while others prefer simplicity. To meet the challenges of language barriers and respond to varying Web site preferences, many companies operate multiple Web sites, sometimes one for each country or region of the world.
Competition in an industry is greatly intensified by the new e-commerce strategic
initiatives of existing rivals and by the entry of new, enterprising e-commerce rivals. Not only is the Internet an important new distribution channel that allows sellers to reach vast numbers of buyers relatively inexpensively but the use of online
systems afforded by the Internet also holds considerable potential for improving
business efficiency and lowering operating costs. Hence, innovative use of the Internet adds a valuable weapon to the competitive arsenal of rival sellers, giving
them yet another way to jockey for market position and maneuver for competitive
advantage. Many existing companies are launching Web site initiatives, sometimes
for offensive reasons and sometimes for defensive reasons. At the same time, new
companies are being formed by the thousands to enter the Internet economy and
compete in market arenas heretofore difficult to enter. The outcome in most industries is a market environment with heightened rivalry among competing sellers.
Entry barriers into the e-commerce world are relatively low. Many of the activities comprising the value chains of e-commerce businesses can be outsourced. The
software necessary for establishing a Web site is readily available (if entrepreneurs
do not wish to develop their own), and the costs of using a Web hosting company
to manage the servers and maintain the site are relatively modestfor example, a
bank can establish a new Internet banking site for under $50,000. There are now
companies specializing in providing all sorts of services for dot-com companies
from Web page design and maintenance to answering e-mail inquiries to handling
warehousing and shipping. Companies operating server farms now provide a
round-the-clock server access and Web site maintenance at economical rates to enterprises who want to do business online but do not want to operate the site themselves. Manufacturing and assembly can be contracted out to others as well.
Perhaps the biggest entry barriers are the sometimes significant outlays required to
create brand awareness and to draw traffic to a companys Web site. Even so, there
are a number of e-commerce businesses that entrepreneurs can start and operate
out of their homes. Relatively low entry barriers explain why there are already
hundreds of thousands of newly formed e-commerce firms, with perhaps millions

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more to spring up around the world in years to come.2 In many markets and industries, entry barriers are low enough to make additional entry both credible and
likely.
Online buyers gain bargaining power because they confront far fewer obstacles to
comparing the products, prices, and shipping times of rival vendors. Vendor Web
sites are only a few clicks apart and are open for business 24 hours a day, every
day of the year, giving buyers unprecedented ability to compare offerings and find
the best value. Using online networks, a multinational manufacturers geographically scattered purchasing groups can easily pool their orders with parts and components suppliers and bargain for volume discounts. Likewise, it is feasible for
wholesalers to use online systems to research the products, prices, and features of
competing manufacturers and for retailers to shop around and bargain for the best
deals from manufacturers and distributors who supply them. Individual consumers
can readily get reviews of products, compare the features and prices of rival
brands, and put up bids for how much they are willing to pay for items. The Internet eliminates the geographic protection of distance that has traditionally given
small-town businesses the advantage of being the only source within reasonable
driving distance. Using the Internet, buyers can readily negotiate car purchases
with dealers hundreds of miles away, order from Furniture.com, purchase music
CDs at EMusic.com, or borrow money at E-Loan or Mortgage.com. Buyers of all
typesmanufacturers, wholesalers, retailers, and individualscan join a buying
group to pool their purchasing power and approach vendors for better terms than
could be gotten individually. Purchasing agents are banding together at Web sites
operated by Wells Fargo and Chase Manhattan to pool corporate purchases to get
better deals or special treatment. PurchasingCenter.com operates a buying pool for
industrial goods such as drill bits and motors. (Sellers are not entirely disadvantaged by buying pools, however, because they gain quick access to large, welldefined pools of buyers, allowing them to save on selling and marketing costs.)
The Internet makes it feasible for companies to reach beyond their borders to find
the best suppliers and, further, to collaborate closely with them to achieve efficiency gains and cost savings. While a number of companies have relied on foreign suppliers for low-cost components and assembly for some years, in an
e-commerce environment companies can use the Internet to integrate foreign suppliers into their supply chain networks more tightly, boosting savings and speeding new products to market. All companies can extend their geographic search for
suppliers and can collaborate electronically with chosen suppliers to streamline ordering and shipping of parts and components, improve just-in-time deliveries,
work in parallel on the designs for new products, and communicate speedily and
efficiently. But the chief point here is that new competitive pressures can spring
from the e-commerce relationships between companies and their supplierscompanies not only gain added bargaining power over their suppliers but efficient online collaboration with chosen suppliers can also be a basis for gaining an edge
over rivals.
Internet and PC technologies are advancing rapidly, often in uncertain and unexpected directions. For example, a few years ago, both Intel and Microsoft were

For a discussion of how e-commerce is attracting entrepreneurs and capital, see Gary Hamel, Bringing
Silicon Valley Inside, Harvard Business Review 77, no. 5 (SeptemberOctober 1998), pp. 7084.

229

Growing use of
the Internet and
e-commerce technology can produce
important shifts in
one or more of an
industrys five competitive forces.

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focusing all their energies on expanding the role of the personal computer as a
multifunctional appliance in both businesses and households. Both companies
misjudged the technological and business significance of the Internet and had to
initiate crash programs to redirect their efforts. Also, a few years ago, investors
considered Iomega one of hottest growth stocks because of the potential for
Iomegas Zip drives and high-capacity Zip disks to displace the standard 3.5-inch
floppy disk. Iomega signed up numerous PC makers to include its Zip drive as an
option on PCs. Its business model called for keeping prices attractively low on Zip
drives to gain greater market penetration while making money on the sale of Zip
disks, which retailed for about $10 each. Just as the Zip drive was gaining a solid
foothold in the market, the makers of computer hard drives unexpectedly hit upon
ways to greatly increase hard drive capacity (to unheard of levels10 to 25 gigabytes) and, at the same time, lower hard drive production costs dramatically. PC
makers and PC users quickly shifted to PCs with bigger hard drives and bypassed
significant use of Iomegas Zip drives and Zip disks. Iomegas stock price declined
steadily, and the company has fallen on hard times.
The Internet results in much faster diffusion of new technology and new ideas
across the world. Companies in emerging countries and elsewhere can use the Internet to monitor the latest technological developments and to stay abreast of what
is transpiring in the markets of Europe, Japan, and North America and what the
leading companies in these areas are doing. Distance and location matter less in a
connected world; indeed, the Internet is a globalizing force that promotes the formation of a world community and, from a business perspective, reduces the importance of national boundaries.
The e-commerce environment demands that companies move swiftlyin Internet
time or at Internet speed. Just a few years ago, companies that were nimble
and operated with short response times could expect to have a competitive advantage over slower-moving rivals. In the exploding e-commerce world, speed is a
condition of survival. New developments on first one front and then another occur
daily. Market and competitive conditions change very quickly. Late-movers are
doomed.
E-commerce technology opens up a host of opportunities for reconfiguring industry and company value chains. For instance, using the Internet to link the orders of
customers with the suppliers of components enables just-in-time delivery to manufacturers, slicing inventory costs and allowing production to match demandfor
both components and finished goods. It also allows more accurate demand forecasting. Tight supply chain management starting with customer orders and going
all the way back to components production, coupled with the use of enterprise resource planning (ERP) software and manufacturing execution system (MES) software, can make custom manufacturing just as cheap as mass production, and
sometimes cheaper. It can also greatly reduce production times and labor costs.
J. D. Edwards, a specialist in ERP software, teamed with Camstar Systems, a specialist in MES software, to cut Lexmarks production time for computer printers
from four hours to 24 minutes. Many of the worlds leading motor vehicle producers are moving rapidly to incorporate e-procurement technologies into their
supply chain systems in preparation for customized mass production. Another example of how the use of e-commerce systems alters manufacturing and industry
value chains to increase efficiency, reduce costs, and streamline the production
process is provided in Illustration Capsule 29.

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illustration capsule

231

29

How the Internet Can Revamp Manufacturing Economics


and Industry Value Chains
In years past, companies like Compaq Computer and
Hewlett-Packard made PCs for their corporate and business customers by guesstimating which models and options customers would prefer, making variously equipped
models in quantity, and shipping them to resellers. Resellers maintained inventories of a wide selection of PC
models, as well as parts to reconfigure the models in stock
to buyer specifications, and also handled marketing and
servicing. However, pressured by the lower-cost economics of Dell Computers build-to-order and sell-direct business model, many PC makers have been forced to revamp
their value chain approach.

Recently, Compaq and Hewlett-Packard entered into


arrangements with Ingram Micro, the largest PC distributor
and reseller and also an assembler of PCs, and Solectron
Corp., a contract manufacturer of PCs, to supply custom
PCs to their corporate customers. The new value chain
model the partners worked out is depicted below:
This new value chain model was expected to cut production costs substantially and reduce the amount of time a
PC sat in inventory from as much as several months to a
matter of hours.

Online systems automatically


provide PC maker with order
information at time of order entry.

A company places an order


with Ingram Micro at
Ingram's Web site.
Step
1

Corporate
customer

Ingram
Micro

Step
2

PC
Company
(Compaq
computer or
H-P)

Special software supplied by a third party analyzes


the order and sends it via the Web to the Ingram or
Solectron factory best suited for the order. If some
parts are not
in stock, the
Ingram
software
and
automatically
Step
Solectron
places orders
3
plants
with suppliers.
Factories custom-build the
PCs, keep customers updated
as to the progress, and ship
the PCs to the customer (or to
the reseller, who arranges for
Using online systems, the PC
delivery and installation).
company and the factory
collaborate as needed on product
design and introduction of nextgeneration models.
Source: Business Week, March 22, 1999, pp. EB-15 and EB-18; and information supplied by Ingram Micro, Inc., and Solectron Corp.

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All of the different value chain activities associated with procuring items from
suppliers and collaborating with them can be streamlined and tightened. With software from Commerce One, Oracle, SAP, Ariba, and others, company procurement
personnel canwith only a few mouse clickscheck materials inventories against
incoming customer orders, check suppliers stocks, check the latest prices for parts
and components at auction Web sites, and check FedEx delivery schedules, all
within one seamless system. Electronic data interchange software permits the relevant details of incoming customer orders to be instantly shared with the suppliers
of needed parts and components and arrangements made for just-in-time deliveries.
The instant communications features of the Internet, combined with all the
real-time data-sharing and information availability, have the further effect of
breaking down the need for corporate bureaucracies and reducing overhead costs.
The whole back-office data management process (order processing, invoicing,
customer accounting, and so on) can be handled fast, accurately, and with less paperwork and fewer personnel.
Radical impacts are also occurring in the distribution portion of industry value
chains. In Chapter 5, Figure 5.2 showed how software developers can use the Internet to create a low-cost value chain system for marketing and delivering their
software online, thus bypassing the costs and markups of traditional software distributors and retailers. Online retailers also have other cost-saving advantages over
traditional brick-and-mortar retailers. For instance, as of 1999 Amazon.com had
invested about $56 million in fixed assets to achieve sales of $1.2 billion (equal to
the sales of about 235 Barnes & Noble bookstores), whereas Barnes & Noble had
invested about $462 million in 1,000-plus stores and was paying additional sums
in rent and leasing fees.3
All told, the impact of e-commerce technology on industry and company
value chains is profound, paving the way for fundamental changes in the ways
business is conducted both internally and with suppliers and customers.
The Internet can be an economical means of delivering customer service. The Internet provides innovative opportunities for handling customer service activities.
Companies are discovering ways to deliver service online, thus curtailing the need
to keep company personnel at the facilities of major customers, reducing staffing
levels at telephone call centers, and cutting the time required for service technicians to respond to customer faxes and e-mail messages. For example, using specially designed software, Dell Computer can take a digital reading of a customers
troubled computer system, pinpoint the problem, and send repairs over the Internetall without human intervention.4 Direct online customer support systems
may well prove less expensive and just as effective in a number of industries.
The capital for funding potentially profitable e-commerce businesses is readily
available. In the brick-and-mortar world, getting the capital for a new business can
sometimes be difficult. In the Internet age, e-commerce businesses have found it
relatively easy to raise hundreds of millions, even billions, of dollars to fund a
promising new venture.5 More capital was raised through initial public offerings
(IPOs) of stock in the 1990s than in all previous decades combined.6 Investor excitement about the business potential of the Internet has created a climate where

As reported in Business Week, October 4, 1999, p. 90.


As reported in Business Week, March 22, 1999, p. EB-31.
5
See Hamel, Bringing Silicon Valley Inside, pp. 7783.
6
According to a study cited on CNBC, January 6, 2000.
4

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venture capitalists are quite willing to fund start-up enterprises provided they have
a promising technology or idea, an attractive business model, and a well thoughtout strategic plan. Furthermore, Internet IPOs are commonplace and their stock
prices have been quickly bid up in many instances, putting such companies in a
strong position to raise additional equity capital or to make acquisitions. But beginning in 2000, investors in start-up enterprises began pressuring dot-com executives to prove their business models were capable of producing near-term
profitability; the stock prices of companies with sizable losses and little prospect
of near-term profitability were sliding and start-up companies looking for capital
infusions were experiencing much tougher scrutiny from potential investors.
The needed e-commerce resource in short supply is human talentin the form of
both technological expertise and managerial know-how. While some e-commerce
companies have their competitive advantage lodged in patented technology or
unique physical assets or brand-name awareness, many are pursuing competitive
advantage based on the expertise and intellectual capital of their personnel and on
their organizational competencies and capabilities. Two of the most valuable competitive assets a company can have are dominating depth in a particular technology and a workforce with exceptional know-how and experience that gives a firm
uniquely strong skills and competitive capabilities. E-commerce firms are thus
competing aggressively for talent and intellectual capital; individuals with attractive qualifications and know-how can command premium compensation, including equity ownership or lucrative stock options in start-up enterprises.

233

If an e-commerce
venture has merit, it
will attract both
money and capital
immediately. Capital requirements
have not proved a
significant barrier
to entering the
e-commerce arena.

This listing should make clear that growing use of e-commerce technology can
produce important shifts in an industrys competitive forcesintensified rivalry,
greater entry threats, a blurring of traditional industry and geographic boundaries,
shifts in the balance of bargaining power both between sellers and their suppliers and
between sellers and their customers, and incentives for all kinds of sellersupplier and
sellercustomer collaboration. Internet technology and newly emerging products and
services that enable e-commerce further have the effects of altering industry value
chains, spawning substantial opportunities for increasing efficiency and reducing costs,
and affecting a companys resource strengths and weaknesses. Moreover, the pace of
technological change is rapid and its direction is often uncertain. Market developments
occur swiftly, compelling companies to make decisions at Internet speed or risk getting
left behind in the dust.

E-COMMERCE BUSINESS MODELS AND STRATEGIES


Advances in Internet and e-commerce technology are creating industries of the future
and giving birth to a host of new business opportunities. There are new opportunities
to put a globally connected Internet infrastructure in placebuilding out the telecommunications system, installing millions of servers, providing high-speed Internet
connections to literally billions of businesses and households, and developing the
software and networks to create a wired global economy. Others relate to exploiting
the business opportunities associated with day-to-day transactions in a globally wired
e-commerce environmentbusiness-to-business sales and e-procurement, businessto-consumer sales, e-retailing (or e-tailing), providing content, and providing services to users.
The rush of new and existing enterprises to exploit the opportunities presented by
the Internet economy is giving rise to innovative business models and radically different

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The rush to capture


the opportunities
presented by the
new Internet economy is prompting
entrepreneurial
companies to employ innovative
new business models and radically different approaches
to competitive
strategy.

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approaches to competitive strategy and market positioning. It is also causing companies


whose present businesses are threatened in one way or another by e-commerce business
approaches to adapt their business models and strategies to the new environment. It is
worth looking at the specific strategy elements comprising the newly emerging business
models.

Business Models and Strategies for Communications


Equipment Suppliers
Most all of the companies making Internet-related communications equipment use a
traditional business modelselling their manufactured products to customers at prices
that are attractively above costs and produce a good return on investment. Perhaps the
biggest strategic problem a number of these equipment makers face is that there are
competing technologies for building various components of the Internet infrastructure
and creating a globally wired economy. Other things being equal, the low-cost technological solution typically wins out. But other things are seldom equal. Often, competing technologies have materially different performance pluses and minuses, with the
trade-offs sufficiently unclear that industry participants disagree about which of the
competing technologies represent the best option. In other cases, the competing technologies are incompatible, preventing users of one from interfacing with users of the
other. If installing and maintaining parallel technological systems is prohibitively expensive, progress is slowed (and business risks are increased) until consensus emerges
around one as the industry standard. Theres a natural tendency for those with vested
interests in a particular technological approach to maneuver to make their favored
technological solution the industry standard. Technology rivals have several strategy
options for trying to win the battle for technological dominance:

Invest aggressively in R&D to win the technological race against rivals; spending
can be aimed at improving performance features, curing performance weaknesses,
and reducing the costs of installing and maintaining the companys technological
approach.
Form strategic alliances with suppliers, potential customers, and those with complementary technologies to build consensus for favored technological approaches
and industry standards.
Acquire other companies with complementary technological expertise to broaden
and deepen the companys technological base and thereby drive advances in the
companys technology faster than rivals are able to advance theirs.
Hedge the companys bets by investing sufficient resources in mastering one or
more of the competing technologies; the company can then shift to the technological approach that wins out.

A fierce competitive battle involving many of these same strategic issues is


presently under way among rivals in wireless communications technologies. In the
United States, there are two different technological approaches to mobile telecommunications, with some companies racing ahead with one approach and their rivals racing
for market dominance with the other. The lack of a uniform technology standard is resulting in slower growth of mobile telephone communications in the United States relative to Europe and Japan. The standard used in Europe is different from the two
competing U.S. technologies, and Japanese standard technology is different yet again.
The four different wireless technologies in play around the world pose formidable

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technological and competitive challenges for all the various market participants in establishing mobile systems capable of connecting all users irrespective of location.
Cisco Systems, the worlds largest provider of Internet hardware and technology,
is providing start-up phone companies in Europe with the latest Internet technology at
subsidized prices in a strategic offensive aimed at developing high-quality voice transmission over the Internet. If Ciscos Internet telephony effort proves successful, Europes largest local telephone companies would be induced to purchase significantly
larger amounts of Cisco equipment. And Cisco would be able to siphon revenues and
market share away from the European suppliers of traditional telephone equipment
Alcatel, Siemens, and Ericcson.
Another recent technological development allows telephone calls to be routed over
the Internet rather than through existing telephone lines; gateways can be installed
that link phone systems to the Internet. The result is much cheaper rates for international phone calls and significant new competition for the worlds telephone monopolies that have charged very hefty fees for handling cross-border calls.

Business Models and Strategies for Communications


Services Suppliers
The companies in the communications services section of the Internet value chain have
business models based on profitably selling their services for a feewhere the fee can
be based on either a flat rate per month or volume of use. Since their role is to provide
connectivity, Internet service providers are obliged to invest heavily in extending lines
and installing equipment so as to have the capacity to provide the desired point-topoint service and handle the traffic load along their lines and systems. Investment requirements are particularly heavy for backbone providers, creating sizable up-front
expenditures and heavy fixed costs. Profits come later, after the backbone has been installed and the volume of use reaches breakeven and beyond. Here, companies are racing to establish their networks ahead of rivals and to get in a position to sign up
customers for their services.
Recently, fierce competition has emerged among last-mile providersthe companies that want to sell high-speed Internet access to households, small businesses, and
large commercial enterprises. While local telephone companies like Bell Atlantic, Bell
South, SBC Communications, and U.S. West (now part of Qwest Communications)
have monopolized the market for last-mile services, their strategy to provide highspeed (broadband) Internet connections using new digital signal line (DSL) technology
is meeting head-on competition from the providers of wireless broadband services and
cable TV providers touting cable Internet service. AT&T is launching a three-pronged
attack to enter the last-mile competition. One thrust involves a wireless strategygiving away broadband mobile phones with Internet connection capability, selling
monthly subscriptions for wireless access, eliminating roaming charges and longdistance charges, and promoting flat-rate per minute charges. A second thrust is to get
the permission of regulators to compete with local telephone companies in providing
local telephone service via cable connections. The third thrust involves acquiring cable TV companies (TCI and MediaOne) and promoting high-speed Internet access via
cable modems that deliver data over 100 times faster than standard 56-kilobit modems.
AT&Ts strategy is to bundle local telephone service, long distance service, cable TV
service, and Internet access into a single package, available for a single monthly fee for
all four services. Other cable companies like Time Warner are also moving to develop

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last-mile products and services. The last-mile market is attracting attention primarily
because it is viewed as such a potentially lucrative marketmonthly subscriptions and
fees for all four last-mile services could easily exceed $100 per month per household
and several hundred dollars more for small business customers.
Name recognition and advertising have recently emerged as important elements of
strategy in the just-starting battle for market share among last-mile providers. To gain
attention in the race to provide high-speed Internet access, Covada small Silicon
Valley company in the business of providing high-speed Internet access using DSL
technologylaunched a $40 million year-long coast-to-coast advertising campaign in
late 1999 to win a place in the ranks of the leading last-mile providers; at the time,
Covad had annual sales of only $20 million. Within weeks, other rivals launched advertising initiatives of their own.

Business Models and Strategies for Computer


Hardware Suppliers
Like the makers of Internet-related communications equipment, the suppliers of PC
components and PC hardware use a traditional business modelmake money by selling the companys products at prices above costs. Again, technology is advancing at
such a rapid pace in PC components that companies in this industry must stay on the
cutting edge of technology, investing in R&D and being quick to imitate the technological advances and product innovations that rivals are able to come up with. Competitive
success hinges on staying abreast or ahead of rivals in introducing next-generation products. A company can expect to command a premium price for its product only if it can
demonstrate product superiority. Otherwise, it has to be prepared to compete on the basis of price, striving to outperform rivals by means of lower costs. More and more PC
components are becoming commodities, with minimal differentiation among rivals. The
same is true in PC hardware. Hence, strategies keyed to low cost are the most reliable
for achieving competitive advantage, although best-cost provider strategies can work
well when some buyers are willing to pay for upscale features and above-average levels of customer service and technical support.

Business Models and Strategies for Specialized


E-Commerce Software Developers
The developers of e-commerce software create programming applications that enable all
kinds of e-commerce activities. Their business model involves making money by investing resources (principally, the efforts of talented programmers) in designing and developing specialized software, then marketing and selling the software to other companies
(e-commerce retailers, Internet service providers, content providers, and others) at what
they hope will prove to be profitable prices. Since most software costs are incurred up
front in the programming phase and thus are largely fixed, profitability hinges on volumeonce sales reach the break-even volume, a big fraction of the additional revenue
goes to the bottom line. To combat the falloff in revenues that occurs with approaching
market saturation, developers upgrade the program and offer next-generation versions.
However, some software developers that market transaction-based software have
adopted a business model whereby they collect a small fee for every transaction their
software performs rather than sell their software outright at a set price per copy. Such
a pricing approach provides them with a continuing revenue stream. The fee-pertransaction model is particularly appealing when theres a potential for the software

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to perform millions of transactions and the number of Web sites requiring such software is relatively small (thus limiting the potential number of copies that can be sold).
The size of the transactions fee that a developer can charge is a function of competitionwhether competing software is available and whether the software developers
own product is decidedly superior to alternative products. Buyers may not object
strongly to a fee-per-transaction arrangement because it lowers their front-end costs
for the software and they end up paying only for services rendered. Inktomi is the
worlds leading search-technology provider, supplying software for conducting
searches, compiling directories of subject categories, doing comparison shopping, and
delivering Web pages faster. Inktomi sells its search engine software to companies
and Web portals, collecting a fee of about half-a-cent per Web page retrieved from
each query.
Recently, software providers have launched strategies to convince PC users to rent
the software they want by logging on to a Web site, connecting to a server with the
desired programs, and paying a user fee, thus avoiding having to buy software, install it
on their computers, and run applications from hard disks. The idea of software rental or
leasing has appeal to some business users because it allows them to outsource information technology (IT) and pay IT providers a fixed fee per PC for software use and support; this can prove cheaper than having their own IT departments perform all the
necessary functions in-house at costs that often overrun budgeted amounts. It can also appeal to home users who want to try out a new application or use certain applications only
occasionally; pay-per-use can also make good economic sense for game and entertainment programs and educational programs for children. For about $3, customers can log
on to Arepa.coms PlayNow site and run a program as often and as long as they like for
a 48-hour period.
MP3.com has shaken up the music industry with its software technology that allows Web users to compress a song in digital form, download it to their computer
drive, and then copy it to a recordable disk; its business model involves signing up
artists to record songs and albums, then selling downloadable single songs for 99 cents
and albums for $8. MP3 also distributes the songs of aspiring bands for free. MP3s
technology has the potential to cut into the market shares of the five largest studios
(which account for 80 percent of the music on radio and in stores) and to redefine how
music is produced and distributed.

Business Models and Strategies for


E-Commerce Retailers
Two categories of Web merchants stand outthose that sell primarily to businesses
(referred to as business-to-business merchants) and those that sell to consumers
(business-to-consumer merchants). Several business models are in play here. The
simplest, and perhaps most revolutionary, is to sell products at cost (or below) and
make money by selling advertising to other merchandisers who value the audience attracted to the Web site. Buy.com, for example, sells a wide variety of items at very
low prices to attract a big audience, hoping to make money by selling ads on its Web
site; the bigger the audience that Buy.com is able to attract, the bigger the fees it can
charge advertisers. A few online merchants are willing to sell items at break-even
prices or less but collect information on buyers that can be sold to other merchandisers. Car-shopping services make money not only from advertising but also by referring customers to car dealers and, further, by selling related items such as car
insurance and auto accessories.

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Other merchants use the mostly traditional model of purchasing goods from manufacturers and distributors, marketing them to buyers at their Web store, and filling orders from stocks held in inventory in their warehousetheir innovation is one of
simply using the Internet as the sales site instead of brick-and-mortar retail outlets. Still
other e-tailers operate only a Web site for marketing and selling, using contract manufacturers to make the products, and outsourcing the distribution and delivery functions
to warehousing and shipping specialists. Buy.com obtains the products it sells from
name-brand manufacturers and uses outsiders to stock and ship what it sells; all it does
is operate an online superstore consisting of some 30,000 items.
Once an e-tailer settles on a basic business model, it can use any of the following
strategy elements to undergird its competitive success:

Spend heavily on advertising to build widespread brand awareness, draw traffic,


and start the process of developing customer loyalty. Extravagant advertising campaigns incorporating TV, print media, radio, and online banners have become standard in launching retailing Web sites. A number of enterprises have spent amounts
for advertising that were substantially in excess of current revenues, believing that
it was worth incurring substantial short-term losses in order to establish name
recognition, draw traffic to their Web site, and develop loyalty.
Add new product lines to help generate high and growing levels of traffic at the
companys Web site. Expanding a companys product lines, acquiring other Internet
retailers with complementary offerings, or entering into alliances and joint marketing agreements with other enterprises desirous of boosting Internet sales all can
help draw new visitors and boost traffic at the companys Web site. Amazon.com
has diversified its product offerings beyond books to include music, online auctions, electronics products, toys, video games, and home improvement products. It
has also allowed small specialty-item e-tailers to market their products on its Web
site. In late 1999, Amazon offered approximately 18 million items at its site.
Be a first-mover or at worst an early-mover. Theres a strong belief among Internet entrepreneurs that being a first-mover or fast-follower significantly enhances a
companys chances of being the biggest and best known online retailer for a particular category of goods, thus improving a firms prospects for dominating its
market niche and warding off challenges from newcomers.
Pay considerable attention to creating an attractive Web site and generating buzz.
Web pages need to be interesting and easy-to-read, with lots of eye appeal. Moreover, the site has to be cleverly marketed. Unless Web surfers hear about the site, like
what they see on their first visit, and are intrigued enough to return again and again,
a companys Web site will likely not generate the desired traffic and revenues.
Keep the Web site innovative, fresh, and entertaining. This means constantly
adding new features and capabilities, enhancing the look and feel of the site,
heightening viewer interest with audio and live video, and expanding selection and
product offerings. Engaging, entertaining features add value to the experience of
spending time at the site and are therefore strong competitive assets. Creating a
strong sense of community among users and visitorsas eBay has done with its
online auctionscan also.

On the Internet, shelf space is unlimited. The one-stop shopping strategy (like
that of Amazon.com, described above) has the appealing economics of helping spread
many one-time costs over a wide number of items and a larger customer base; it can
also help an online retailer establish itself as a household name and facilitate marketing
an ever-greater selection of goods to frequent visitors to the site. In contrast, some

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e-tailers such as eToys have adopted classic focus strategiesbuilding a Web site
aimed at a sharply defined target audience shopping for a particular product or product
category. Focusers seek to build customer loyalty based on attractively low prices, better value, wide selection, convenient service, nifty options, or some other differentiating attribute. They pay special attention to the details that will please their target
audience; eToys, for example, gives customers the option of having each selection giftwrapped separately and affixed with an appropriate To/From tag; it also has removed
its name from the outside of shipping cartons to lessen the clamor from children to
open arriving boxes immediately.

Brick-and-Click Strategies: An Alternative to Pure


Brick-and-Mortar and Pure Dot-com Strategies.
Many traditional retailers, threatened by Internet retailing, have rushed to open their
own online shopping sites. Toys R Us, for example, has launched a Web site to combat eToys and several other online toy merchants. Merrill Lynch and Paine Webber
have begun offering customers the option of trading online to prevent commissionsensitive customers from moving their accounts to cheaper online brokerages such as
Charles Schwab, E*Trade, and Waterhouse. Wal-Mart has launched a Web site. Such
brick-and-click strategies give customers the option of either shopping in stores or
online and can be an effective way of combating competition from pure online retailers, especially when customer ability to see and touch a product is an important condition for going forward with the decision to purchase. Illustration Capsule 30 explains
why a brick-and-click strategy can be highly attractive and competitively powerful.

Business Models and Strategies for E-Commerce


Services Suppliers
The Internet economy is giving birth to a host of opportunities to provide services to
e-commerce enterprises. For example, one of the key strategic issues that e-commerce
retailers must resolve is how best to handle warehousing and delivery activities. A
number of companies are springing up that specialize in warehousing and order shipment for e-commerce retailers. Bechtel Group is investing $1 billion to develop logistics systems, warehousing, and delivery capabilities to support online grocery retailer
Webvan Group; Webvans strategy is to create a Web site where consumers can shop
for supermarket items and obtain next-day deliverywithin a 30-minute time window
selected by customers. Illustration Capsule 31 reports how Fingerhut is reinventing its
business by exploiting the opportunities to provide warehousing, packaging, and shipping services to e-commerce retailers.
While the Internet allows companies to connect directly with their suppliers, many
companies are finding it valuable to use the services of Internet middlemen to efficiently sort through all the various supplier choices. The middlemenvariously referred to as infomediaries or e-marketsuse the instant communications capability
of the Internet to match buyers and sellers. Altra Energy Technologies allows buyers of
natural gas to shop for sellers online instead of trying to contact prospective sellers to
check on prices and availability via fax or telephone.7 Using Altras online e-market,
7

Business Week, October 4, 1999, p. 98.

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illustration capsule

30

Office Depots Brick-and-Click Strategy


Office Depot was in the first wave of retailers to adopt an
e-commerce strategy. In 1996 it began allowing business
customers to use the Internet to place orders, thus avoiding having to make a call, generate a purchase order, and
pay an invoice while still getting same-day or next-day
delivery.
Office Depot built its Internet business around its existing network of 750 retail stores, 30 warehouses, 2,000
delivery trucks, $1.3 billion in inventories, and phoneorder sales department, which handled large business customers. It already had a solid brand name and enough
purchasing power with its suppliers to counter discountminded e-commerce rivals trying to attract buyers on the
basis of super-low prices. Office Depots incremental investment to enter the e-commerce arena was almost zero
since all it needed to add was a Web site where customers
could see pictures and descriptions of the items it carried,
their prices, and in-stock availability; marketing costs have
been less than $10 million.
Office Depot set up customized Web pages for 37,000
corporate and educational customers. Sites were designed
that allowed the customers employees varying degrees of
freedom to buy suppliesa clerk might be able to order
only copying paper, toner cartridges, computer disks, and
paper clips up to a preset dollar limit per order, while a vice
president might have carte blanche to order any item Office
Depot sold. Office Depots online prices were the same as
its store prices; the companys strategy was to promote

Web sales on the basis of service, convenience, and lower


customer costs for order processing and inventories. Customers reported that using the Web site cut their costs of issuing purchase orders and paying invoices by up to 80
percent, plus Office Depots same-day or next-day delivery
capability gave them the ability to reduce the amount of office supplies they kept in inventory. Starting in 1998, Office Depot launched Web sales to small businesses and
individuals at OfficeDepot.com.
Web site sales cost Office Depot less than $1 per
$100 of goods ordered, compared to about $2 for phone
orders. And since Web sales eliminate the need for Office
Depot customer service representatives having to key in
transactions, order-entry errors are now virtually zero and
returns have been cut by 50 percent. Billing is handled
electronically.
In 1999, Office Depots Web sales accounted for
about $300 million in sales and an estimated $30 million in
profits. Corporate Web sales were 20 percent of the companys sales to corporations and were expected to rise to
over 30 percent of total corporate sales in 2000.
Office Depots Web rivalsOfficesupplies.com and
Atyouroffice.comhad not captured as much as 5 percent
of the office supply sales on the Web. The leaders in Web
sales of office supplies were Office Depot, Staples, and
OfficeMaxthe same companies whose brick-and-mortar
superstores were dominating the traditional retail market
for office supplies.

Source: Why Office Depot Loves the Net, Business Week, September 27, 1999, pp. EB-66, EB-68; and Fortune, November 8, 1999, p. 17.

buyers can shop anonymously with thousands of sellers, comparing prices and avoiding
the potential of price gouging from sellers when they learn of a buyers perhaps urgent
need for supplies. The convenience and efficiency of online buying and selling of natural gas has proved so popular that Altras e-market site has emerged as the leading
place to trade natural gas liquids, handling about $12 billion in trades, equal to a 40 percent market share. Altra makes its money by charging a small commission on each
trade.
Priceline.com creates an e-market for the buyers and sellers of airline tickets, hotel rooms, cars, mortgages, and other items. Airline ticket buyers submit a guaranteed
offer (typically the lowest price they think they can get away with) to Priceline. Priceline compares the bids to confidential discounted fares on unsold seats supplied to it by
participating airlines. If Priceline can buy a ticket from an airline and resell it to the
buyer, it executes the transaction.
Springstreet, a San Franciscobased company, provides a free listing of some 6
million apartment rentals available in the United States, along with quotes on furniture,

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illustration capsule

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31

Fingerhuts Strategy to Provide Order-Fulfillment Services


to E-tailers
While it is a fairly simple matter for Internet entrepreneurs
to build a Web site and open a cyberstore, delivering the
goods to buyers in a cost-efficient manner is a more complicated task. Traditional brick-and-mortar retailers that
have set up Web sites have found it difficult to pack and
ship the ordered goods efficiently and promptly (to meet the
holiday gift deadlines of online shoppers, for instance). A
number of delivery companies are vying for the shipping
business of customersFedEx, UPS, Airborne Express,
and start-ups iShip and Tandatabut others are focusing on
handling the warehousing, order-picking, and packaging activities needed to get the goods in the hands of shippers.
Fingerhut is a longtime catalog company that stumbled into the opportunity to serve the warehousing and
packaging needs of e-commerce retailers. In the early
1990s, Fingerhut, anticipating a surge in sales from growing popularity of home-shopping TV channels, built a new
distribution center in Tennessee. When much of the centers capacity went unused because of lower-thanexpected TV sales, Fingerhut began offering its services to
e-commerce retailers. A manager at the center observed
that employees who picked orders from the shelves would
be more efficient if they didnt have to travel all over the
warehouse to fill each order separately. A computer program was written to group customer orders for particular
items so that employees could obtain all the needed items
while they were on a particular aisle of the warehouse.
Equipment was put in place to sort the collected items into
individual orders.
Since then, Fingerhut has further refined its logistics
and packing systems. As orders come in via fax, telephone,
and the Internet, Fingerhuts mainframe computers in

Minnesota group the orders into similar goods and forward


the results to warehouse personnel. The goods are retrieved
from warehouse shelves, at which point a computer scans
the dimensions of every item to determine the smallest
possible box that can be used for shippingsince eliminating air space in packages increases the number of packages that a truck can carry. Packers put the items in the
boxes, affix preprinted labels, put the boxes on conveyors
that route them to the appropriate bay at the shipping dock
for loading onto trucks. Red lasers scan each package on
the conveyor to determine if the weight of the box matches
the specifications on the label; if not, the box is automatically diverted to an inspection station, where personnel
check whether an item was incorrectly omitted or added.
Fingerhut uses a dedicated fleet of trucks to haul packages
to local post offices, saving on postage costs.
Impressed by Fingerhuts capabilities and the manner
in which it was reinventing its business strategy, Federated
Department Stores acquired Fingerhut for $1.7 billion in
early 1999. Fingerhut immediately took on responsibilities
for shipping the online orders for all of Federateds department store chainsMacys, Bloomingdales, Richs, and
several others.
Going into 2000, Fingerhut was shipping all the online orders for over a dozen retailers other than Federated,
including eToys, Pier 1, Levi Strauss, and Wal-Mart, plus
handling its own catalog orders and the online orders of
several dot-com affiliates in which it had ownership interests. It operated 4.5 million square feet of warehouse
space. In late 1999, Fingerhuts CEO stated, Our business
is now the Internet. Fast-forward two years, and well be
one of the big five players doing retailing there.

Source: The Wall Street Journal, September 3, 1999, pp. B1, B3; and Fortune, November 8, 1999, p. 117.

moving-truck rentals, and loan possibilities. It makes money by selling ads on its site,
and collecting transaction fees and commissions from about 35 partners linked to its
Web site, including truck rental companies, car insurance companies, and credit card
companies.
Visa, American Express, and MasterCard provide credit card services to
e-commerce firmsthe Internet represents a potentially huge money-making opportunity for credit card companies because credit cards are the standard mode of payment
for online business-to-consumer transactions. Exodus Communications, Dell Computer, and Micron Technology offer Web hosting services to business customers. DowJones (the owner of The Wall Street Journal), McGraw-Hill (the parent of Business

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Week and Standard & Poors), Quote.com, Briefing.com, Bloomberg, The Motley Fool,
and numerous other enterprises are providers of financial and business news to electronic brokerage firms, America Online, the Microsoft Network (MSN), and various
Web portals. Some information providers charge a fee for their service, while others do
not in hopes of building awareness and goodwill among users and attracting subscribers for their more complete print versions. Greenfield Online is an Internet marketing research firm that gathers data on the behavior of a proprietary panel of over 1
million Internet users across the world; using its database, it can perform surveys of either prospective or actual users of particular products for clients, help them identify
which of several ad alternatives communicates best, and guide clients in enhancing
their Web sites. Greenfields competitive advantage is being able to provide clients
with timely and inexpensive empirical information compared to traditional marketing
research firms that rely on telephone and mail surveys.
These examples are indicative of how companies are employing focus strategies
and zeroing in on particular market niches, pursuing competitive advantage based on
first-mover mastery of a particular technology, product superiority, unique product attributes, convenience and ease of use, speed, or more value for the money. As with
other e-commerce businesses, there is competitive value in being first to market with
an innovative product or service and trying to become the dominant market leader in a
particular niche.

Business Models and Strategies for Media


Companies and Content Providers
Media companies use intellectual capital to develop music, games, video, and text.
Some companies charge subscription fees, like the Interactive Edition of The Wall
Street Journal; others rely on a pay-per-use business model to generate revenues and
profits. It is relatively inexpensive to produce digital content, so it is possible to realize a profit at a fairly modest volume of sales. Because a big fraction of Internet users
are unwilling to pay for such content, the primary customers of media companies tend
to be what are now called content providers.
Content providers like Yahoo! are mainly information aggregators and portals.
Their business model is built around creating content that attracts users and then selling advertising to companies wanting to get a message to users of the contentthe
same model used by newspapers and the major TV networks. The bigger the number
of viewers/readers/users (often referred to as eyeballs), the easier it is to sell advertising and the higher the rate that can be charged. Companies like Charles Schwab and
America Online buy information from media companies, provide the information free,
and then use the attraction of the information provided to sell subscriptions (AOL) or
services (Charles Schwab and other online stock brokerages). However, content
providers are increasingly offering site visitors an assortment of purchasing opportunities in an effort to boost revenues and profits through collecting transactions fees.
Two key success factors for content providers are to create a sense of community and
to deliver convenience and entertainment value as well as information. The strategy of
Web portals like Yahoo!, Excite, and AltaVista to increase audience size involves going beyond search engine capability to include news, weather, stock quotes, stock portfolio tracking, e-mail, online calendars and address books, chat rooms, personalized
Web pages, and shopping opportunities.

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243

Excite@Home paid $780 million to acquire Bluemountain.com, the dominant


leader in electronic greeting cards; at the Bluemountain.com Web site visitors can select a greeting card online, add a personal message, and e-mail the greeting directly to
the recipient at no charge; cards are available in eight languages. The free e-greeting
service attracted an average of 9 million unique users per month in 1999, giving Bluemountain.com a 65 percent share of the electronic-greeting-card market and an audience of loyal users that ranked third in size behind Amazon.com and eBay. Hallmark
and American Greetings also offer free e-greeting services. Excite@Homes strategy
in acquiring Bluemountain.com included:

Selling advertising at the Bluemountain.com site.


Offering users of the Bluemountain.com site a range of new servicese-mail, online calendars and address books, and purchasing opportunities.
Using the site to promote and cross-sell both its @Home broadband Internet
access service and the products marketed at its Excite Web portal and search engine site.

Cross-selling products available through Internet or traditional distribution channels is


a strategy that is being used with increasing frequency by e-commerce enterprises
seeking to grow Web site revenues and profits.

INTERNET STRATEGIES FOR TRADITIONAL BUSINESSES


With each passing day, it becomes clearer that the Internet has forever altered the way
that companies and customers learn about each other, communicate, and transact business. Few businesses, if any, can escape the need to integrate use of the Internet into
their operations. The only strategic issues are: how and to what extent Internet technology will be made a core part of a traditional companys business. While it is too
early to be definitive about what strategies will and will not work for traditional businesses, the following e-commerce initiatives are becoming common:

Using Internet technology to communicate and collaborate closely with suppliers


and distribution channel alliesSuch efforts entail installing information systems
to gather real-time data from wholesale and retail customers sales and using the information to create a tight supply chain network all the way back to suppliers of
parts and components. The benefits include streamlined communications and significant reductions in inventories and other operating costs.
Revamping company and industry value chainsCompanies will change how
some activities are performed and will eliminate or bypass others.
Making greater use of build-to-order manufacturing and assemblyThe motor
vehicle industry offers a prime opportunity for this.
Building systems to pick and pack products that are shipped individuallySuch
systems are important for business-to-consumer companies that launch Web sites
for online shopping.
Using the Internet to give both existing and potential customers another choice of
how to interact with the companyTraditional companies can benefit from allowing customers to choose how to communicate with the company, shop for
product information, make purchases, or resolve customer service problems.

In the years to
come, companies
now on the fringes
of the Internet
economy will make
the use of Internet
technology such a
core part of their
business that the
distinction between
e-businesses and
traditional businesses will become
nonexistent.

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Adopting the Internet as an integral distribution channel for accessing new buyers and geographic marketsHowever, the struggle that many traditional companies are having with a combination click-and-mortar strategy is the nettlesome
issue of undermining their existing dealer networks if they initiate a big push for
online sales. The partnerships that many manufacturers have forged with wholesale and retail dealers are central to their marketing and sales strategies; a manufacturer that aggressively pursues online sales to consumers is signaling weaker
strategic commitment to its dealers and a willingness to cannibalize their sales and
growth potential in order to protect its own flanks. Needless to say, taking advantage of online sales opportunities without making traditional dealers angry can be
a very tricky road to negotiate.
Gathering real-time data on customer tastes and buying habits, doing real-time
market research, and using the results to respond more precisely to customer
needs and wantsThe behavior of Web surfers is a veritable gold mine of
information.

KEY SUCCESS FACTORS IN E-COMMERCE


The preceding discussion indicates that fundamentally new business models and
strategies are emerging to create value for customers and build shareholder wealth.
E-commerce enterprises are building elaborate networks of suppliers, distributors,
service providers, and customers who communicate, exchange data, and transact business via the Internet and other electronic media in ways that produce value for customers and for one another. The networks they are constructing are both integrated (to
create tight value chain links) and fluid (to respond to fast-changing conditions). At
this early stage in the evolution of the Internet economy, competing successfully
seems to revolve around several key factors:
A crucial key to
e-commerce success is business
model innovation.

The market has


transitioned from a
state where large
businesses beat
small businesses to
a state where fast
businesses beat
slow businesses.

An innovative business modelOne of the factors that sets e-commerce enterprises apart from traditional businesses is their use of new and different business
models. This newness is only partly attributable to the creative nature of Internet
entrepreneurs. The fact is that Internet technology is conducive to doing business
in radically different and innovative waysthe rules of business in an Internet
world are different from traditional business rules.
The capability to adjust the companys business model and strategy quickly in response to changing conditions and emerging opportunitiesOperating at Internet speed is essential because the pace of technological and market change is so
fast. Rapidly evolving business models and strategies are thus the norm, not the
exception.
Focusing on a limited number of competencies and performing a relatively specialized number of value chain activitiesThe remaining value chain activities
can be delegated to outside specialists. Outsourcing enhances organizational speed
and flexibility, and it allows an enterprise to concentrate on what it can do best.
Hence, there is merit in outsourcing many activities from specialistsdesigning
and managing Web sites, manufacturing, warehousing, and shipping are prime
examples.
Staying on the cutting edge of technologyAt this stage in the development of
e-commerce, technological change is a dominant and pervasive driving force. No

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e-commerce enterprise can hope to succeed for long without moving first or early
to incorporate state-of-the-art technology. Technological expertise has to be developed and maintained internally, provided by suppliers, or accessed via new acquisitions or strategic partnerships.
Using innovative marketing techniques that are efficient in reaching the targeted
audience and effective in stimulating purchases or whatever other actions are
needed to produce a profitable revenue streamCompetition for eyeballs is already fierce and will grow even more so as the number of e-commerce enterprises
risesa 1999 study conducted by the University of Texas found that 2,000
e-commerce sites were being added every month. Marketing campaigns that just
result in page views alone are seldom sufficient; the best marketing test is the ratio at which page views are converted into revenues and profits (the look-to-buy
ratio). For example, in mid-1999 the traffic at Charles Schwabs Web site averaged
6 million page views per day and generated an estimated $4.7 million in revenues;
in contrast, Yahoo!s site traffic averaged 385 million page views daily but generated only about $1.7 million in revenues.
Engineering an electronic value chain that enables differentiation or lower costs
or better value for the moneyStriving for sustainable competitive advantage is
just as essential in e-commerce as in traditional markets. This means employing
strategies and value chain approaches that hold potential for low-cost leadership,
competitively valuable differentiating attributes, or a best-cost provider advantage. If a firm is positioning itself as a low-cost provider, then it must possess
cost advantages in those activities it performs, and it must outsource the remaining activities to low-cost specialists. If an e-commerce company is going to
differentiate itself on the basis of superior customer service, then it needs to concentrate on having an easy-to-use Web site, an array of functions and conveniences for customers to use at the Web site, adequate Web reps, and logistical
capabilities to deliver products in the time frame promised. If it is going to deliver more value for the money, then it must manage value chain activities in a
manner calculated to yield a cost advantage in providing customers with upscale
product attributes.

key points
The Internet is an integrated network of banks of servers and high-speed computers,
digital switches and routers, telecommunications equipment and lines, and individual
users computers. The major groups of e-commerce firms that comprise the supply side
of the Internet economy include the makers of specialized communications components and equipment, providers of communications services, suppliers of computer
components and computer hardware, developers of specialized software, and an assortment of e-commerce enterprisesbusiness-to-business merchants, business-toconsumer-merchants, media companies, and content providers.
Growing use of e-commerce technology produces important shifts in an industrys competitive forcesintensifying rivalry, posing greater entry threats, shifting
the balance of bargaining power both between sellers and their suppliers and between
sellers and their customers, and providing a new basis for all kinds of sellersupplier
and sellercustomer collaboration. The Internet and e-commerce further have the

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effects of altering industry value chains and affecting a companys resource strengths
and weaknesses. Technology, market conditions, and competitive pressures change
rapidly, often in unexpected directions. The e-commerce world is a high-velocity environment in which companies are compelled to move quickly and late-movers are
left in the dust.
The rush to capture the opportunities presented by the Internet economy is prompting entrepreneurial companies to employ innovative new business models for making
money and radically different approaches to competitive strategy. A crucial key to
e-commerce success is business model innovation. The business models and strategies
of various types of participants in the Internet economy vary rather significantly. The
manufacturers of Internet-related communications equipment, PC hardware, and PC
components use a fairly traditional business model: selling their manufactured products to customers at prices that are attractively above costs. Suppliers of communications services have business models based on profitably selling their services for a
feewhere the fee can be based on a flat rate per month or on volume of use. The
business model of many developers of e-commerce software involves making money
by investing resources (principally, the efforts of talented programmers) in designing
and developing specialized software, then marketing and selling the software to other
companies (e-commerce retailers, Internet service providers, content providers, and
others) at what they hope will prove to be a profitable price per copy. However, some
software developers that market transaction-based software have adopted a business
model whereby they sell their software based on a small fee for every transaction
rather than a set price per copy.
E-commerce retailers are utilizing perhaps the most revolutionary and unorthodox
business model. A number of e-tailers sell products at cost (or below) and make
money by selling advertising on the merchants Web site. Other merchants apply the
traditional model of purchasing goods from manufacturers and distributors, marketing
them to buyers at their Web store, and filling orders from stocks held in inventory in
their warehouse. Still others operate only a Web site for marketing and selling, outsourcing the distribution and delivery functions to warehousing and shipping specialists. Theres also a variety of business models in play among the different providers of
e-commerce services.
There are several important factors underlying the competitive success of
e-commerce enterprises: (1) use of an innovative business model, (2) the capability to
adjust the companys business model and strategy quickly in response to changing conditions and emerging opportunities, (3) focusing on a limited number of competencies
and performing a relatively specialized number of value chain activities, (4) staying on
the cutting edge of technology, (5) using innovative marketing techniques that are efficient in reaching the targeted audience and effective in stimulating purchases or
whatever other actions are needed to produce a profitable revenue stream, and (6) engineering an electronic value chain that enables differentiation or lower costs or better
value for the money.

suggested readings
Evans, Philip and Thomas S. Wurster. Getting Real about Virtual Commerce. Harvard Business Review 77, no. 6 (NovemberDecember 1999), pp. 8494.
Ghosh, Shikhar. Making Business Sense of the Internet. Harvard Business Review 76, no. 2
(MarchApril 1998), pp. 12635.

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Griffith, David A., and Jonathan W. Palmer. Leveraging the Web for Corporate Success. Business Horizons 42, no. 1 (JanuaryFebruary 1999), pp. 310.
Gulati, Ranjay, and Jason Garino. Get the Right Mix of Bricks and Clicks. Harvard Business
Review 78, no. 3 (MayJune 2000), pp. 10714.
Hamel, Gary. Bringing Silicon Valley Inside. Harvard Business Review 77, no. 5 (SeptemberOctober 1999), pp. 7084.
Kaplan, Steven, and Mohanbir Sawhney. E-Hubs: The New B2B Marketplaces. Harvard
Business Review 78, no. 3 (MayJune, 2000), pp. 97103.
Rosenoer, Johnathan; Douglas Armstrong; and J. Russell Gates. The Clickable Corporation:
Successful Strategies for Capturing the Internet Advantage. New York: Free Press, 1999.
Tapscott, Don; David Ticoll; and Alex Lowy. Digital Capital: Harnessing the Power of Business Webs. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 2000.
Timmers, Paul. Business Models for Electronic Markets, Electronic Markets (www.
electronicmarkets.org/netacademy/publications.nsf/all_pk949) 8, no. 2 (July 1998).

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