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E-Business 2.0 : Roadmap for Success
E-Business 2.0 : Roadmap for Success
Author: Kalakota, Ravi / Robinson, Marcia
Edition/Copyright: 2ND 01
ISBN: 0-201-72165-1
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Longman, Inc.
Type: Paperback
Used Print:  $56.25
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Author Bio
Preface
Summary
Table of Contents
 
  Author Bio

Kalakota, Ravi :

Dr. Ravi Kalakota is a professor, strategist, speaker, and author. He is the co-founder and CEO of hsupply.com. He is also on the boards of several companies, including a venture incubator, isherpa.net, which is facilitating the creation of the next generation of m-commerce companies. A leading authority on e-commerce strategy, he has consulted extensively with Fortune 1000 companies, and has written two books considered by Amazon.com to be "e-commerce classics."

Robinson, Marcia : e-Business Strategies

Marcia Robinson is founder and President of e-Business Strategies, a boutique strategy consulting company. She has extensive experience in the service delivery and customer side of e-business for the financial services industry, in particular for SunTrust Bank in Atlanta. Previously, she held management positions at Electronic Data Systems (EDS) and Frontier Corporation.

 
  Preface

e-Commerce is changing the shape of competition, the dynamics of the customer relationship, the speed of fulfillment, and the nature of leadership. In the face of change, is your management

  • Willing to cannibalize its existing channels with a risky, untested new one?
  • Creating a click-and-mortar service infrastructure that gives customers the same experience through all the channels?
  • Digitizing the supply chain and linking up with competitors to reduce costs further?

Managers and companies everywhere are at a crossroad. With so many ways to go, which road will lead to success? What roadblocks will need to be navigated? Which business models, management strategies, and tactics will ensure success? What will the characteristics of the next generation of business applications be, and which vendors will lead in delivering them? To whom can managers turn for help? If you're losing sleep over these questions, you've picked up the right book. We'll help you find the road to take to learn the fundamentals of business built on a digital foundation. If these questions are not of paramount importance to you, get used to mediocre business performance.

In these days of frequent and rapid change, skill in designing and changing complex "digital corporations" is a significant advantage. This advantage is highlighted throughout the book. To achieve an edge, management must be able to create complex service models built on technology--"e-service" designs. Simple designs offer no advantage and are easily copied. This book is about the discipline needed to create complex infrastructure choices, which are central to any modern firm. This book, based on several years of researching, consulting, managing, and growing e-business start-ups, tackles two nagging questions.

  • Why are some companies relentlessly successful at e-commerce while others flounder? What are the successful businesses doing differently to solve customer problems or pain?
  • How are successful companies, both old and new, moving from traditional applications to the new breed of integrated, e-business application architectures?

Through detailed case studies and analysis, this book examines the e-business blueprint, offering step-by-step guidance in choosing and implementing the right application strategies to survive the e-commerce onslaught and to succeed. The thesis of the book is that durable application frameworks can guide you through the e-business chaos. Business models change. Technology changes. But application infrastructure design principles endure.

What This Book Is About
Managers of established companies are struggling to comprehend this new phenomenon: e-commerce. But already, the next wave--e-business--is reaching shore. Intensified competition and new e-commerce opportunities are pressing traditional companies to build e-business models that are flexible, fast moving, and customer focused. In other words, the core of the enterprise itself is undergoing a metamorphosis from e-commerce to e-business.

e-Business is the complex fusion of business processes, enterprise applications, and organizational structure necessary to create a high-performance business model. The message is simple: Without a transition to an e-business foundation, e-commerce cannot be executed effectively. Considering the inevitability of moving toward an e-business foundation, senior management is being galvanized into tactical action. Those who fail will pay a high price.

One point deserves emphasis: Choosing to pursue e-business is not easy. e-Business is not a slogan. It is not a public relations campaign. It cannot be grafted onto or integrated into a company's normal business-as-usual operating philosophy. Going "e" is a central act that shapes every subsequent plan and decision a company makes, coloring the entire organization, from its competencies to its culture. e-Business, in effect, defines what a company does and, therefore, what it is.

If they seriously want to develop effective strategies for competing in the new economy, managers must understand the fundamental structure of the next-generation e-corporation built on an interconnected web of enterprise applications. We wrote this book to provide a master blueprint for building an innovative e-corporation that can survive and thrive in the digital world.

What Makes This Book Different
Many books have been written about how the old economic rules of scale, scope, efficiency, market share, and vertical integration are no longer sufficient. New rules must be applied, and that requires new organizational capabilities. Managers everywhere understand the urgency; they're itching to get going and to make change happen.

Unfortunately, first-generation e-commerce strategy books were long on vision but short on detail. It's easy to talk about the e-commerce future, but the real management challenge is to make it happen in a systematic way without derailing existing business. What does this mean to top management? If customers are moving online, the whole information technology (IT) investment paradigm must shift toward creating an integrated e-business model.

The focus of this book is practical: helping senior management plan for and manage e-business investments. The first step is to design a comprehensive e-commerce strategy and then to evaluate prospective line-of-business application framework investments on the basis of how well the technology or application advances the strategy. Companies often make the mistake of focusing first on e-commerce applications and only then trying to bend a strategy around this outline. To succeed, managers must have a strong e-business strategy in place before considering specific e-commerce application investments. Otherwise, most e-commerce efforts are doomed to fail.

But what do these internal e-business architectures and investments look like? The answer is the focus of this book, the first to look at the problem of structural migration: how to transform an old company into a new agile e-corporation. This book provides a unique view of the next-generation, integrated enterprise and the line-of-business application investments necessary to compete. We highlight the critical elements--business processes, back-office and front-office applications, and strategy--that managers need to be successful in the digital economy.

In other words, corporations involved in e-commerce must rethink their visions of the future. Understanding how to lead one's company into the e-commerce arena requires a new point of view about integration and the business design. We offer step-by-step navigation of the uncharted e-business terrain. Executives and consultants everywhere need this guide to navigate the information economy.

Who Should Read This Book
Many managers are so focused on the details of e-business that they fail to see the vast structural change in how the application infrastructure is being put together. Virtually every business discipline is affected by e-commerce and e-business application architectural efforts. Management needs to learn that the real challenge surrounding e-business is the task of making it happen. This book focuses on the business architecture that managers must build in order to achieve e-business success.

For firms in mature industries, such as automotive, insurance, and retail, that are trying to move in new directions, this book offers critical insights. For market leaders, such as Home Depot and FedEx, this book offers insights for sustaining their leadership. For entrepreneurs managing start-ups, this book highlights the key issues on which those businesses will succeed or fail. Its timeliness and insights into the changes in organizational practice make this book appealing to a broad management market:

  • Senior management and strategic planners charged with developing business strategies
  • Consultants helping corporate executives shape their companies' competitive future
  • Information technology managers leading their teams with strategic decisions

This book is a must-read for all managers, consultants, entrepreneurs, and business school students who have been discussing and reading about e-commerce and who are interested in knowing how they can capitalize on the next wave of business innovation.

How This Book Is Organized
We start by dissecting the critical practices of companies that have pursued an e-business operating model to reach the top. We then extract examples of the sharpest thinking in business today. What emerges is a clear picture of the kinds of companies that will be tomorrow's stars and the strategies that will help them retain the market leader moniker.

The first five chapters describe a new e-business design composed of building blocks called enterprise applications. Market leaders are developing intricate e-models resting on a set of intertwined enterprise apps--customer relationship solutions, enterprise resource planning systems, order management solutions, or supply chain solutions--and then building their strategies around that set. Each enterprise app demands a distinct strategic fusion of customer-centric processes, information systems, management systems, and culture.

Most managers are apprehensive about tackling strategic fusion issues because they represent such a formidable task, one that transcends the organizational structure and line-of-business considerations. This book offers a way to structure this widespread strategy problem, slice it into manageable pieces, and create actionable plans that can be executed quickly.

Chapters 6 through 11 explore the various e-business design elements in the new e-corporation. The goal is to identify clear, rational, strategic design choices that are responsive to evolving customer needs. Each chapter ends with a Memo to the CEO that provides a set of normative questions that must be answered convincingly if the building blocks of strategic integration are to be constructed effectively and profitably.

The last three chapters are prescriptive, focusing on the challenges of becoming digital by describing the design process and explaining how to undertake it. In today's business environment, the stakes are high and failure is swift and ruthless. How an organization mobilizes itself into constructive action will determine its survival and ultimate success. In these chapters, we describe in great detail how the choice of an e-business strategy and application infrastructure must be made, we provide help in identifying the right choices, and we detail the means for implementing it. We do everything but make the choice for you. That's your job.

Acknowledgments
Because this book contains information on many companies struggling with their e-business initiatives, we would like to thank them all for their hard work as they continue to tackle this tough issue.

We have learned much through our consulting engagements and extend thanks to the many people we have talked to: in particular, David Dingott, Frances Frei, Kemal Koeksal, Alex Lowy, Shirish Netke, S. P. Reddy, Kirk Reiss, Mohan Sawhney, Don Tapscott, David Ticoll, Nagesh Vempaty, Richard Welke and Peter Zencke.

Thanks to the many people at Addison-Wesley who made this book possible: in particular, our editor, Mary O'Brien. Many thanks to our reviewers, who took time out of their busy schedules to read through the manuscript page by page and indicate areas that needed attention. To Lorna Gentry and Keith Gribble, thank you for your patience and expertise in editing and improving our book. We appreciate the long hours and honest feedback that made this book much better.

Thanks to our family and friends: in particular, Bill and Judy Robinson, whom we miss every day; Shelley Cicero and Roby Robinson, who brighten our day; and Lynn Lorenc, who always makes us smile.

Ravi Kalakota
[email protected]
www.ebstrategy.com

Marcia M. Robinson
[email protected]
www.ebstrategy.com

 
  Summary

To survive and succeed in today's complex business world, all companies--from established industry leaders to feisty upstarts--must develop a strategy that allows them to take maximum advantage of the latest trends in technology. Successful companies have implemented focused e-business strategies to build cutting-edge enterprises that serve and retain customers, manage suppliers, and integrate selling chains better than ever before. Others, unfortunately, are lured into ill-fated ventures by the ever-changing roster of buzzwords, fads and analogies.

A timely follow-up to the best-seller on this crucial topic, e-Business 2.0 reveals how managers are rewiring the enterprise to take maximum advantage of e-business. Ravi Kalakota and Marcia Robinson present an innovative application framework that guides the migration from a traditional business model to an e-business model. Drawing on their extensive personal experience working with leading businesses, they provide a clear picture of the benefits and challenges that e-business companies face and identify the fundamental design principles for building a successful e-business blueprint.

This new edition incorporates the latest strategies and techniques gained from the experiences of the first generation of e-businesses. In addition to updated information on application framework design, the book now features more detail on strategy and e-business execution. e-Business 2.0 shows how e-commerce has evolved into e-business and identifies the 20 key e-business trends that are shaping today's economy. It then addresses core application frameworks--customer relationship management, selling chain management, enterprise resource planning, supply chain management, e-procurement, and business intelligence--and shows how each forms the foundation of an e-business strategy.

 
  Table of Contents

Foreword.

New Business Models and the Creation of Wealth.


Preface.

What This Book Is About.
Acknowledgments.


1. Moving from E-Commerce to E-Business.

Are You Ready?
Linking Today's Business with Tomorrow's Technology.
Defining e-Business: Structural Transformation.
Challenging Traditional Definitions of Value.
Engineering the End-to-End Value Stream: e-Business Webs.
Harvesting the Partnerships: e-Business Core Competencies.
Creating the New Technoenterprise: Integrate, Integrate, Integrate.
Needed: A New Generation of e-Business Leaders.
Memo to the CEO.


2. Spotting E-Business Trends.

Trends Driving e-Business.
Customer-Oriented Trends.
e-Service Trends.
Organizational Trends.
Employee Megatrends.
Enterprise Technology Trends.
General Technology Trends.
What These 20 Trends Have in Common.
Memo to the CEO.


3. Digitizing the Business: E-Business Patterns.

e-Business Patterns: The Structural Foundation.
The e-Channel Pattern.
The Click-and-Brick Pattern.
The e-Portal Pattern.
The e-Market Maker Pattern.
The Pure-E "Digital Products" Pattern.
Memo to the CEO.


4. Thinking E-Business Design: More than Technology.

The Race to Create Novel e-Business Designs.
Step 1: Self-Diagnosis.
Step 2: Reverse the Value Chain.
Step 3: Choose a Focus.
Step 4: Execute Flawlessly.
Lessons from e-Business Design.
Memo to the CEO.


5. Constructing the E-Business Architecture: Enterprise Apps.

Trends Driving e-Business Architecture.
Problems Caused by Lack of Integration.
The New Era of Cross-Functional Integrated Apps.
e-Business Architecture = Integrated Application Frameworks.
Memo to the CEO.


6. Integrating Processes to Build Relationships: Customer Relationship Management.

The Basics of Customer Relationship Management.
The New CRM Architecture: Organizing around the Customer.
Integration Requirements of the Next-Generation CRM Infrastructure.
Next-Generation CRM Trends.
A Roadmap for Managers.
Memo to the CEO.


7. Transforming Customer Contact Into Revenue: Selling-Chain Management.

The Basics of Selling-Chain Management.
Business Forces Driving the Need for Selling-Chain Management.
Technology Forces Driving the Need for Selling-Chain Management.
The Universal Business Problem: Managing the Order Acquisition Process.
Elements of Selling-Chain Infrastructure.
Case Studies in Selling-Chain Management.
Memo to the CEO.


8. Building the E-Business Backbone: Enterprise Resource Planning.

The Basics of Enterprise Resource Planning.
ERP Decision = Enterprise Architecture Planning.
ERP Use in the Real World: Three Case Studies.
ERP Implementation: Catching the Bull by the Horns.
ERP Architecture and Toolkit Evolution.
Memo to the CEO.


9. Implementing Supply Chain Management and E-Fulfillment.

The Basics of Supply Chain Management.
Internet-Enabled SCM.
e-Supply Chain Fusion.
Management Issues in e-Supply Chain Fusion.
The Continuing Evolution of e-Supply Chains.
A Roadmap for Managers.
Memo to the CEO.


10. Demystifying E-Procurement: Buy-Side, Sell-Side, Net Markets, and Trading Exchanges.

Evolution of e-Procurement Models.
Evolution of Procurement Processes.
e-Procurement Infrastructure: Integrating Ordering, Fulfillment, and Payment.
e-Procurement Analysis and Administration Applications.
Marketplace Enablers.
A Roadmap for e-Procurement Managers.
Memo to the CEO.


11. Business Intelligence: The Next Generation of Knowledge Management.

Evolution of Knowledge Management (KM) Applications.
Elements of Business Intelligence Applications.
Business Intelligence Applications in the Real World.
Technical Elements of the Business Intelligence Framework.
Core Technologies: Data Warehousing.
A Roadmap for Managers.
Memo to the CEO.


12. Developing the E-Business Design: Strategy Formulation.

Roadmap to Moving Your Company into e-Business.
Case Study of e-Business Design in Action: E*TRADE.
Memo to the CEO.


13. Translating E-Business Strategy into Action: E-Blueprint Formulation.

Setting the Stage for e-Blueprint Planning.
Basic Phases of e-Blueprint Planning.
Communicate, Communicate, Communicate.
The Serious Business of e-Business Blueprint Planning.
Memo to the CEO.


14. Mobilizing the Organization: Tactical Execution.

Roadmap to Tactical Execution.
Tactical e-Project Management.
e-Development Process.
Infostructure Management.
Adoption Management.
Measurement for Learning and Improvement.
Memo to the CEO.


Endnotes.
Index.

 

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