From the Sloan Management Review comes a remarkable collection of articles written by highly regarded experts in the field of e-business. This second book in the MIT SMR series is aimed at those seeking to integrate e-business into their enterprises as a way of maintaining -- or establishing -- competitive advantage. Strategies for E-Business Success offers a roadmap of the fundamental principles and tools executives need.
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Written by the top thinkers in the field, this book is a collection of articles on e-business from MIT's "Sloan Management Review" which has published many of the internationally recognized leaders on e-business.
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Introduction (Erik Brynjolfsson and Glen L. Urban, Editors). PART ONE: STRATEGY. 1. Finding Sustainable Profitability in Electronic Commerce (John M. de Figueiredo). While many e-commerce retailers head toward commodity pricing, there are a few that are likely to profit on the Web. Only retailers who match market segment to correct strategy will win. Here's how. 2. Making Business Sense of the E-Opportunity (David Feeny). New Web technologies are offering companies unprecedented opportunities to rethink strategic business models, processes, and relationships. 3. Profits and the Internet: Seven Misconceptions (Subramanian Rangan and Ron Adner). Managers aiming to capitalize on the Internet to achieve growth need to understand the full implications of the strategies they choose. 4. Five Steps to a Dot-Com Strategy: How to Find Your Footing on the Web (N. Venkatraman). Vision, governance, resources, infrastructure, and alignment are the stepping stones to a successful Web strategy. Building on your current operations, experimenting with new approaches, and creating new business models all play a part. 5. Pathways to E-Business Leadership: Getting from Bricks to Clicks (Leslie P. Willcocks and Robert Plant). How do leading business-to-consumer corporations harness the Internet to acquire new customers and increase their market share? A new study of fifty-eight companies describes several strategies that work. 6. The Past and Future of Competitive Advantage (Clayton M. Christensen). Today's competitive advantage may become tomorrow's albatross unless strategists attune themselves to changes in underlying conditions. PART TWO: IMPLEMENTATION. MARKETING. 7. Placing Trust at the Center of Your Internet Strategy (Glen L. Urban, Fareena Sultan, and William J. Qualls). Consumers make Internet buying decisions on the basis of trust. How much trust your Web site needs to deliver depends on the nature of your products, competitive pressure from new infomediaries, and your ability to innovate. 8. How Do They Know Their Customers So Well? (Thomas H. Davenport, Jeanne G. Harris, and Ajay K. Kohli). Insightful companies mix rich customer data with their understanding of the people behind the transaction. COMMUNITY. 9. Building Stronger Brands Through On-Line Communities (Gil McWilliam). Consumer brand companies need new management skills, and brand managers must understand on-line behavior if they wish to develop strong, sustainable, and beneficial on-line communities around their brands. 10. Four Smart Ways to Run On-Line Communities (Ruth L. Williams and Joseph Cothrel). Kaiser Permanente, About.com, Sun Microsystems, and Ford have created four kinds of innovative on-line communities. Their experience shows not only how to manage communities, but also how to manage today's workforce. PART THREE: TECHNOLOGY. 11. Product-Development Practices That Work: How Internet Companies Build Software (Alan MacCormack). Now there is proof that the evolutionary approach to software development results in a speedier process and higher-quality products. 12. What Makes a Virtual Organization Work? (M. Lynne Markus, Brook Manville, and Carole E. Agres). Today's workforce increasingly consists of de facto volunteers. The open-source software movement-propelled in large part by volunteer programmers-suggests ways to motivate and direct knowledge workers. The Authors. Index.
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From the Sloan Management Review comes a remarkable collection of articles written by highly regarded experts in the field of e-business. This second book in the MIT SMR Management series is aimed at those seeking to integrate e-business into their enterprises as a way of maintaining-or establishing-competitive advantage. Strategies for E-Business Success offers a roadmap of the fundamental principles and tools executives need to * Build profitability and earn a solid rate of return on investment * Avoid being seduced by half-truths that can lead to critical strategic errors * Create a successful Web strategy * Concentrate on achieving market leadership rather than technology leadership * Achieve competitive advantage on the Internet * Build relationships of trust with their customers * Explore the best practices of companies that really know their customers * Understand the strategic value of Internet communities * Implement an evolutionary approach to the development of software solutions * Examine the organizational implications of an open-source world
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"...This book is a very useful change management guide for directors of Internet and other IT companies..." (Computer Bulletin, September 2002)
Introduction (Erik Brynjolfsson and Glen L. Urban, Editors). PART ONE: STRATEGY. 1. Finding Sustainable Profitability in Electronic Commerce (John M. de Figueiredo). While many e-commerce retailers head toward commodity pricing, there are a few that are likely to profit on the Web. Only retailers who match market segment to correct strategy will win. Here's how. 2. Making Business Sense of the E-Opportunity (David Feeny). New Web technologies are offering companies unprecedented opportunities to rethink strategic business models, processes, and relationships. 3. Profits and the Internet: Seven Misconceptions (Subramanian Rangan and Ron Adner). Managers aiming to capitalize on the Internet to achieve growth need to understand the full implications of the strategies they choose. 4. Five Steps to a Dot-Com Strategy: How to Find Your Footing on the Web (N. Venkatraman). Vision, governance, resources, infrastructure, and alignment are the stepping stones to a successful Web strategy. Building on your current operations, experimenting with new approaches, and creating new business models all play a part. 5. Pathways to E-Business Leadership: Getting from Bricks to Clicks (Leslie P. Willcocks and Robert Plant). How do leading business-to-consumer corporations harness the Internet to acquire new customers and increase their market share? A new study of fifty-eight companies describes several strategies that work. 6. The Past and Future of Competitive Advantage (Clayton M. Christensen). Today's competitive advantage may become tomorrow's albatross unless strategists attune themselves to changes in underlying conditions. PART TWO: IMPLEMENTATION. MARKETING. 7. Placing Trust at the Center of Your Internet Strategy (Glen L. Urban, Fareena Sultan, and William J. Qualls). Consumers make Internet buying decisions on the basis of trust. How much trust your Web site needs to deliver depends on the nature of your products, competitive pressure from new infomediaries, and your ability to innovate. 8. How Do They Know Their Customers So Well? (Thomas H. Davenport, Jeanne G. Harris, and Ajay K. Kohli). Insightful companies mix rich customer data with their understanding of the people behind the transaction. COMMUNITY. 9. Building Stronger Brands Through On-Line Communities (Gil McWilliam). Consumer brand companies need new management skills, and brand managers must understand on-line behavior if they wish to develop strong, sustainable, and beneficial on-line communities around their brands. 10. Four Smart Ways to Run On-Line Communities (Ruth L. Williams and Joseph Cothrel). Kaiser Permanente, About.com, Sun Microsystems, and Ford have created four kinds of innovative on-line communities. Their experience shows not only how to manage communities, but also how to manage today's workforce. PART THREE: TECHNOLOGY. 11. Product-Development Practices That Work: How Internet Companies Build Software (Alan MacCormack). Now there is proof that the evolutionary approach to software development results in a speedier process and higher-quality products. 12. What Makes a Virtual Organization Work? (M. Lynne Markus, Brook Manville, and Carole E. Agres). Today's workforce increasingly consists of de facto volunteers. The open-source software movement-propelled in large part by volunteer programmers-suggests ways to motivate and direct knowledge workers. The Authors. Index.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780787958480
Publisert
2001-12-14
Utgiver
Vendor
Jossey-Bass Inc.,U.S.
Vekt
472 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
151 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
352

Biographical note

Erik Brynjolfsson and Glen L. Urban are codirectors of the Center for eBusiness at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and professors at the MIT Sloan School of Business in Cambridge, Massachusetts.