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When you get down to the actual elements
of commerce and commercial transactions, things get slightly
more complicated because you have to deal with the details.
However, these details boil down to a finite number of steps.
The following list highlights all of the elements of a typical
commerce activity. In this case, the activity is the sale
of some product by a retailer to a customer:
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If you would like to sell something to
a customer, at the very core of the matter is the something
itself. You must have a product or service
to offer. The product can be anything from ball bearings
to back rubs. You may get your products directly from
a producer, or you might go through a distributor to get
them, or you may produce the products yourself. |
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You must also have a place
from which to sell your products. Place can sometimes
be very ephemeral -- for example a phone number might
be the place. If you are a customer in need of a massage,
if you call "Judy's Massages, Inc." on the telephone
to order a massage, and if Judy shows up at your office
to give you a massage, then the phone number is the place
where you purchased this service. For most physical products
we tend to think of the place as a store or shop of some
sort. But if you think about it a bit more you realize
that the place for any traditional mail order company
is the combination of an ad or a catalog and a phone number
or a mail box. |
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You need to figure out a way to get people
to come to your place. This process is known as marketing.
If no one knows that your place exists, you will never
sell anything. Locating your place in a busy shopping
center is one way to get traffic. Sending out a mail order
catalog is another. There is also advertising, word of
mouth and even the guy in a chicken suit who stands by
the road waving at passing cars. |
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You need a way to accept orders.
At Wal-Mart this is handled by the check out line. In
a mail order company the orders come in by mail or phone
and are processed by employees of the company. |
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You also need a way to accept money.
If you are at Wal-Mart you know that you can use cash,
check or credit cards to pay for products. Business-to-business
transactions often use purchase orders. Many businesses
do not require you to pay for the product or service at
the time of delivery, and some products and services are
delivered continuously (water, power, phone and pagers
are like this). That gets into the whole area of billing
and collections. |
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You need a way to deliver the product or
service, often known as fulfillment.
At a store like Wal-mart fulfillment is automatic. The
customer picks up the item of desire, pays for it and
walks out the door. In mail-order businesses the item
is packaged and mailed. Large items must be loaded onto
trucks or trains and shipped. |
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Sometimes customers do not like what they buy, so you
need a way to accept returns. You may
or may not charge certain fees for returns, and you may
or may not require the customer to get authorization before
returning anything. |
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Sometimes a product breaks, so you need a way to honor
warranty claims. For retailers this part of the transaction
is often handled by the producer. |
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Many products today are so complicated
that they require customer service and
technical support departments to help
customers use them. Computers are a good example of this
sort of product. On-going products like cell phone service
may also require on-going customer service because customers
want to change the service they receive over time. Traditional
items (for example, a head of lettuce), generally require
less support that modern electronic items. |
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| You find all of these elements in
any traditional mail order company. Whether the company is selling
books, consumer products, information in the form of reports
and papers, or services, all of these elements come into play.
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| In an e-commerce sales channel you
find all of these elements as well, but they change slightly.
You must have the following elements to conduct e-commerce:
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A product |
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A place to sell the product - in e-commerce,
a Web site displays the products in some way and acts
as the place |
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A way to get people to come to your Web
site |
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A way to accept orders - normally an on-line
form of some sort |
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A way to accept money - normally a merchant
account handling credit card payments. This piece requires
a secure ordering page and a connection to a bank. Or
you may use more traditional billing techniques either
online or through the mail. |
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A fulfillment facility to ship products
to customers (often outsource-able). In the case of software
and information, however, fulfillment can occur over the
Web through a file download mechanism. |
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A way to accept returns |
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A way to handle warranty claims if necessary
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A way to provide customer service (often
through email, on-line forms, on-line knowledge bases
and FAQs, et cetera) |
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| In addition, there is often a strong
desire to integrate other business functions or practices into
the e-commerce offering. An extremely simple example -- you
might want to be able to show the customer the exact status
of an order. |
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