Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover Page
- Title
- Copyright
- Brief contents
- Contents
- Preface
- About the authors
- Author’s acknowledgements
- Part 1 Introduction
- 1 Introduction to digital business
- Learning outcomes
- Management issues
- Links to other chapters
- Introduction
- What is digital business management?
- Innovation in digital business and revenue models
- Digital revenue models
- What is the difference between a digital business and an e-commerce business?
- Mobile commerce
- Intranets and extranets
- Different types of sell-side e-commerce
- Digital marketing
- The impact of digital communications on traditional businesses
- Inbound marketing
- Context – The 7Ds of digital marketing
- Case study 1.1: The Uber business model
- Options for organisations to reach a digital audience
- Owned, earned and paid media options
- The six key types of digital media channels
- From Web 2.0 to Web 3.0
- Supply chain management
- Business or consumer models of e-commerce transactions
- Dot Gov defined
- Digital business opportunities
- Drivers of digital technology adoption
- Cost/efficiency drivers
- Competitiveness drivers
- Barriers to the adoption of technology by digital business stakeholders
- Evaluating an organisation’s digital business capabilities
- Drivers of consumer technology adoption
- Barriers to consumer digital adoption
- Case study 1.2: Buffer: From idea to paying business customers in 7 weeks
- Summary
- Exercises
- References
- Web links
- 2 Opportunity analysis for digital business and e-commerce
- Learning outcomes
- Management issues
- Links to other chapters
- Introduction
- Business and revenue models for e-commerce
- Digital marketplace analysis
- Case study 2.1: How Boden grew from an eight-product menswear catalogue to an international brand with over £300 million in sales
- Strategic agility and direct-to-consumer e-commerce
- Case study 2.2: Consumer brands Unilever and P&G demonstrates strategic agility
- A process for digital marketplace analysis
- 1 Customer segments
- 2 Search intermediaries
- Case study 2.3: Macy’s – using omnichannel growth strategies to improve customer experience
- 3 Intermediaries, influencers and media sites
- 4 Destination sites
- Location of trading in the marketplace
- Review of marketplace channel structures
- Location of trading in the marketplace
- The importance of omnichannel marketplace models
- Commercial arrangement for transactions
- Different types of online intermediary and influencers
- The importance of search engines
- Business models for e-commerce
- Revenue models
- Online publisher and intermediary revenue models
- Calculating revenue for an online business
- Digital start-up or digitally native business
- Assessing digital businesses
- Valuing tech start-ups
- Case study 2.4: i-to-i – a global marketplace for a start-up company
- Summary
- Exercises
- References
- Web links
- 3 E-commerce management
- Learning outcomes
- Management issues
- Links to other chapters
- An introduction to e-commerce
- What is e-commerce?
- Digitally enabled transactions
- What is the difference between e-commerce and digital business?
- What are the main types of e-commerce?
- B2C e-commerce
- B2B e-commerce
- C2C e-commerce
- The importance of Mobile
- Social e-commerce
- Local e-commerce
- The evolution of e-commerce
- Emerging themes for the 2020s
- Strategy for e-commerce
- Considerations for e-commerce strategy
- The main B2C and B2B e-commerce models
- B2B-specific operating models
- Starting to develop e-commerce platforms
- Ideation
- Handling development as a management issue
- Choosing e-commerce platforms or environments
- The evolution of headless e-commerce
- Payment systems
- B2C and retail e-commerce
- Projections and Issues for B2C and retail e-commerce
- Common B2C e-commerce business models
- Single channel e-commerce
- Catalogue evolvers
- Multi-channel e-commerce
- Brand direct-to-consumer (D2C)
- Omni-channel experience
- B2C Service models in e-commerce
- Unique features around personal finance, FinTech and financial services
- Unique features of online travel agents (OTAs)
- Features of on-demand and local B2C e-commerce
- B2B e-commerce
- Projections for B2B e-commerce
- The connection between B2B e-commerce and the B2B procurement process
- Key issues in B2B marketplaces
- The case for content as an e-commerce proposition
- The unique nature of content e-commerce
- Entertainment as an e-commerce proposition
- Marketplaces and communities for e-commerce
- Social networks as e-commerce platforms
- Social networks as e-commerce platforms
- How marketplaces work
- The unique nature of auction as a transaction business
- Case study 3.1: Páramo
- Security issues in e-commerce
- What are the unique issues in e-commerce security?
- The main threats to security in e-commerce
- Practical development of e-commerce platforms
- E-commerce user experience basics
- The issue of navigation
- Categorisation
- Calls to action (CTAs)
- The importance of copy and content
- Key elements of best practice
- The importance of making the e-commerce platform responsive
- Building confidence among potential customers
- Recommendation approaches, cross-selling and upselling
- Approaches to review systems
- Dealing with product availability
- Transparency of fees and prices
- Fulfilment choices and information
- Payment choices
- Being found – search
- Key components of product visibility in search
- The URL
- The title tag
- The meta description
- The product name as a H1 header
- Product description
- Optimised product imagery
- Links to other product pages and categories
- Summary
- Exercises
- References
- Web links
- 4 Key issues in the digital environment
- Learning outcomes
- Management issues
- Links to other chapters
- Introduction
- Social factors
- Case study 4.1: Social media and the changing face of celebrity influencers
- Legal and ethical factors
- Economic factors
- Political factors
- Technology factors
- Cultural factors
- Factors affecting e-commerce buying behaviour
- Understanding users’ access requirements
- Reviewing emerging digital technologies and media platforms
- Virtual reality, augmented reality and metaverses
- Web3, blockchain and cryptocurrencies
- Privacy and trust in e-commerce
- Privacy legislation
- Why personal data is valuable for digital business
- Privacy legislation in Europe and the UK
- Regulations on privacy and electronic communications in other countries
- Viral email marketing
- Other e-commerce legislation
- 1 Marketing your e-commerce business
- 2 Forming an electronic contract (contract law and distance-selling law)
- 3 Making and accepting payment
- 4 Authenticating contracts concluded over the Internet
- 5 Email risks
- 6 Protecting intellectual property (IP)
- 7 Advertising on the Internet
- 8 Data protection
- Environmental and green issues related to Internet usage
- Taxation of E-commerce sales
- Freedom-restrictive legislation
- Economic and competitive factors
- Localisation
- The implications of e-commerce for international B2B trading
- Internet governance
- Technological innovation and technology assessment
- Approaches to identifying emerging technology
- Summary
- Exercises
- References
- Web links
- Part 2 Strategy and applications
- 5 Digital business strategy
- Learning outcomes
- Management issues
- Links to other chapters
- Introduction
- Drivers of digital business strategy development
- What is digital business strategy?
- The imperative for digital business strategy
- Digital channel strategies
- Platform strategy
- Strategy process models for digital business
- Strategic analysis
- Resource and process analysis
- Stage models of digital business development
- Application portfolio analysis
- Organisational and IS SWOT analysis
- Human and financial resources
- Competitive environment analysis
- Demand analysis
- Assessing competitive threats
- Competitive threats
- Sell-side threats
- Buy-side threats
- Competitor analysis
- Resource-advantage mapping
- Strategic objectives
- Defining vision and mission
- VMOST
- How can digital business create business value?
- Case study 5.1: Arriva Bus redesigns its m-ticket app and boosts revenue by over 17%
- Objective setting
- The online revenue contribution
- Conversion modelling for sell-side e-commerce
- Case study 5.2: Setting the Internet revenue contribution at Sandvik Steel
- The balanced scorecard approach to objective setting
- Strategy definition
- Selection of digital business strategy options
- Decision 1: Digital business channel priorities
- The diversification of digital platforms
- Decision 2: Market and product development strategies
- Decision 3: Positioning and differentiation strategies
- Decision 4: Business, service and revenue models
- Decision 5: Marketplace restructuring
- Decision 6: Supply chain management capabilities
- Case study 5.3: Zappos innovates in the digital marketplace
- Decision 7: Internal knowledge management capabilities
- Decision 8: Organisational resourcing and capabilities
- Strategy implementation
- Failed digital business strategies
- Digital business strategy implementation success factors for SMEs
- Case study 5.4: Boo hoo – learning from the largest European dot.com failure
- Aligning and impacting digital business strategies
- Elements of information systems (IS) strategy
- Investment appraisal
- Decisions about which business applications to invest in
- Summary
- Exercises
- References
- Web links
- 6 Digital supply chain management
- Learning outcomes
- Management issues
- Links to other chapters
- Introduction
- Case study 6.1: Fast-fashion retailer Zara uses its supply chain to achieve competitive advantage
- The benefits and challenges of digital supply chain management
- What is supply chain management and e-procurement?
- A simple model of a supply chain
- What is logistics?
- Push and pull supply chain models
- The value chain
- Restructuring the internal value chain
- The value stream
- Value chain analysis
- Value networks
- Options for restructuring the supply chain
- Using digital business to restructure the supply chain
- Technology options and standards for supply chain management
- Case study 6.2: Argos uses e-supply chain management to improve customer convenience
- IS-supported upstream supply chain management
- RFID and the Internet of Things
- IS-supported downstream supply chain management
- Outbound logistics management
- IS infrastructure for supply chain management
- Supply chain management implementation
- Data standardisation and exchange
- The supply chain management strategy process
- Goal-setting and performance management for eSCM
- Managing partnerships
- Managing global distribution
- Case study 6.3: RFID – keeping track starts its move to a faster track
- What is e-procurement?
- Understanding the procurement process
- Types of procurement
- Participants in different types of e-procurement
- Drivers of e-procurement
- Examples of the benefits of e-procurement
- Case study 6.4: Honeywell improves efficiency through SCM and e-procurement
- Estimating e-procurement costs
- The impact of cost savings on profitability
- Barriers and risks of e-procurement adoption
- Implementing e-procurement
- Integrating company systems with supplier systems
- B2B marketplaces
- Types of marketplace
- The future of e-procurement
- Summary
- Exercises
- References
- Web links
- 7 Digital marketing strategy
- Learning outcomes
- Management issues
- Links to other chapters
- Introduction
- Chapter structure
- What is digital marketing?
- Marketing defined
- Inbound marketing
- Content marketing
- Digital marketing planning
- Is a separate digital marketing plan required?
- Situation analysis
- Internal digital marketing audit of performance
- Customer demand analysis
- Qualitative customer research
- Competitor analysis
- Intermediary or influencer analysis
- Objective setting
- Case study 7.1: L’Oréal increases its digital contribution
- Strategy
- Market and product positioning
- Target market strategies
- Content strategy
- Characteristics of digital media communications
- 1 Interactivity
- 2 Intelligence
- 3 Individualisation
- 4 Integration
- 5 Industry restructuring
- 6 Independence of location
- Tactics
- Product
- Case study 7.2: How fashion retailer Zalando has used a strategic approach to AI to improve marketing communications
- Price
- Place
- Promotion
- People, process and physical evidence
- Digital branding
- Brand identity
- The importance of brand online
- Actions
- Control
- Summary
- Exercises
- References
- Web links
- 8 Digital communications
- Learning outcomes
- Management issues
- Links to other chapters
- Introduction
- How is this chapter structured?
- Goals and measures for assessing digital communications effectiveness
- Terminology for measuring digital media
- 0 Volume measures including impressions, clicks, visitor session and unique visitors
- 1 Quality measures including conversion rates to action and bounce rate
- 2 Media cost measures including cost-per-click and cost-per-thousand
- 3 Acquisition cost measures including cost-per-action or acquisition
- 4 Return on investment (ROI) or value measures
- 5 Branding measures
- 6 Lifetime value-based ROI measures
- The online buying process
- Differences in buyer behaviour in target markets
- Differences between B2C and B2B buyer behaviour
- Influences on purchase
- Customer acquisition management
- The characteristics of interactive marketing communications
- 1 From push to pull
- 2 From monologue to dialogue
- 3 From one-to-many to one-to-some and one-to-one
- 4 From one-to-many to many-to-many communications
- 5 From ‘lean-back’ to ‘lean-forward’
- 6 The medium changes the nature of standard marketing communications tools such as advertising
- 7 Increase in communications intermediaries
- 8 Integration remains important
- Assessing marketing communications effectiveness
- Digital marketing communications channels
- 1 Search engine marketing (SEM)
- 2 Digital PR
- Assessing influence
- 3 Social media marketing
- 4 Online partnerships
- 5 Digital advertising
- 6 Email marketing
- Offline marketing communications
- Opt-in email
- Case study 8.1: Smart Insights: Which marketing channels are most effective for B2B services?
- Techniques for managing customer activity and value
- Lifetime-value modelling
- Excelling in e-commerce service quality
- Improving online service quality
- Tangibles
- Reliability
- Responsiveness
- Assurance
- Empathy
- Sense, Respond, Adjust – delivering relevant delivering communications through monitoring customer behaviour
- Recency, Frequency, Monetary value (RFM) analysis
- Technology solutions for CRM
- Types of CRM applications
- Integration with back-office systems
- The choice of single-vendor solutions or a more fragmented choice
- Data quality
- Case study 8.2: Tesco.com increases product range and uses triggered communications to support CRM
- Summary
- Exercises
- References
- Web links
- Part 3 Implementation
- 9 Digital experience and service design
- Learning outcomes
- Management issues
- Links to other chapters
- Introduction
- Frameworks defining effective digital experiences
- Online service quality frameworks
- Tangibles
- Reliability and responsiveness
- Assurance
- Multichannel customer service preferences
- Empathy
- Conversion rate optimisation (CRO, merchandising and personalisation
- Conversion rate optimisation (CRO)
- A/B or AB testing
- Website personalisation
- Online retail merchandising
- Customer experience frameworks
- Benchmark evaluations of customer experiences
- Net promoter score
- Usability for desktop and mobile customer experiences
- Evaluating designs
- Persona and scenario analysis
- Stages in use-case analysis
- Mobile design requirements and techniques
- Are mobile apps relevant for all businesses?
- Information architecture
- Card sorting
- Blueprints
- Wireframes
- Customer orientation
- Page design
- Content design
- Accessibility for e-commerce
- Case study 9.1: Providing a better online user experience in a B2B market
- Performance for e-commerce
- The availability of the website
- Payment systems for e-commerce
- Security design for e-commerce
- Securing e-commerce transactions
- Principles of secure systems
- Approaches to developing secure systems
- Digital certificates
- Digital signatures
- The public-key infrastructure (PKI) and certificate authorities (CAs)
- Virtual private networks
- Current approaches to e-commerce security
- Secure Sockets Layer protocol (SSL)
- Certificate authorities (CAs)
- Big Data, AI and machine learning for e-commerce
- Artificial Intelligence for marketing
- Big Data and data warehouses
- IoT and M2M interactions
- Virtual reality, augmented reality and the metaverse
- Customer relationship management for e-commerce
- Marketing applications of CRM
- Benefits of CRM
- Customer engagement strategy
- Permission marketing
- Case study 9.2: How Warby Parker disrupted the eyewear industry
- Summary
- Exercises
- References
- Web links
- 10 Managing digital transformation
- Learning outcomes
- Management issues
- Links to other chapters
- Introduction
- Definitions of digital transformation
- Characteristics of digital transformation
- Drivers of digital transformation
- Impacts of digital transformation
- Transformed areas
- Why is digital business transformation not just about technology?
- The applications portfolio – a precursor to digital business transformation
- The scope of digital transformation
- Case study 10.1: Using digital transformation to solve the problem of counterfeit drugs in Africa
- Digital transformation strategy
- Essential components of a digital transformation
- Case study 10.2: Digital transformation in the NHS
- The opportunities provided by Digital
- Customer experience and service design
- Business and organisational processes
- Business models
- The framework of digital transformation
- The process of review
- What the digital opportunity is
- How sure the organisation is of the opportunity
- The level of digital skills the leadership team possesses
- The level of digital maturity the organisation believes it has
- Case study 10.3: How Pfizer has evolved its digital maturity
- The process of strategy
- The process of resourcing and planning
- The design of the transformation
- A programme for change
- The process of deployment
- The process of living with, and evaluating digital transformation
- Key issues in digital transformation
- The six stages of digital transformation
- Value stream mapping
- Digital transformation excellence
- What are the key challenges to overcome?
- Growth hacking and strategic agility
- Use of scrum, an agile methodology, in digital marketing
- Scrum meetings
- The growth hacking process
- Stage 1: Product market fit
- Stage 2: Growth hacking
- Twenty traction channels to test
- Data analysis
- Adopting digital technologies
- Data and analytics in digital transformation
- How can data be used to transform a business?
- Automated processes
- Integrated digital technologies
- Change management for digital transformation
- Adaptive change
- Transformational change
- The in-between
- Monitoring and governance of digital transformation
- Digitising core legacy systems
- The project management of digital transformation
- Evaluating the success of digital transformation
- Case study 10.4: Walmart’s digital transformation
- Summary
- Exercises
- References
- Web links
- Glossary
- Index
- Publisher’s acknowledgements
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.