By Lori Enos E-Commerce Times
06/22/01 10:35 PM PT
Companies hoping to parlay e-tail success should realize that, as one analyst said, 'B2B
and B2C are not even broadly the same.'
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By many accounts, the future of e-commerce has less to do with selling CDs and books
online to consumers, than it does with selling transformers and rivets
via the Internet to other businesses.
Ninety percent of all e-commerce conducted in 1999
involved online business-to-business (B2B) deals, according to the U.S. Department of
Commerce. Additionally, a study by Gartner found that
B2B e-commerce revenues reached US$433 billion in
2000, a 189 percent increase over the $145 billion in revenues raked in by
B2B e-commerce in 1999.
Yet despite the importance of B2B in the e-commerce picture, several myths and
misperceptions still exist, according to analysts. In a two-part series, the
E-Commerce Times aims to dispel the seven deadly myths of B2B.
Myth No. 1: Follow the Money
B2B is not about how much revenue can be generated online, according to analysts, but
rather about making connections with business partners.
"The idea of pure online sales as something onto itself has a very limited potential,"
Jupiter Media Metrix analyst Jonathan Gibs told the
E-Commerce Times. "Most B2B works toward relationship building."
Gartner research director Lauren Shu agreed, telling the E-Commerce Times that
"B2B is more about the process than a single transaction." She added that implementing a
B2B strategy is a decision that "reaches though the entire organization" and
will affect every department.
Gibs said that the B2B process could include buyers and sellers collaborating on designs,
supply chain management and work flow management. A study released in June by
Forrester Research supports this view, saying that firms
must master dynamic collaboration -- the sharing of
information not only across the enterprise but outside the enterprise -- to achieve their
next big B2B breakthrough.
Myth No. 2: B2B Follows B2C
Companies hoping to translate business-to-consumer (B2C) e-tail success would do well to
realize that, according to Gibs, "B2B and B2C are not even broadly the same."
Gibs pointed out that B2C e-tailers sell goods on a first-come, first-serve basis, but
most B2B is done through negotiated contracts that allow the
seller to anticipate and plan for buyer demands.
"The nature of B2B is radically different than B2C," Shu said. "It is a much deeper and
longer term process than B2C."
One e-tailer preparing to test the B2B waters is
Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN). The Internet behemoth
recently announced that it will open a new division
later this year catering to corporations, libraries and other institutional buyers.
One potential problem Amazon faces is that selling on credit means shipping orders before
they are paid for, which could affect the company's cash flow.
"Depending on the size of the order, it could add to Amazon's problems," Gibs said.
Myth No. 3: B2B Is for All
Some companies jump on the B2B bandwagon without analyzing whether
buying and selling online is right for their business.
"Thinking we have to do something 'e' now, just because everyone else is doing it," is a
mistake, according to Shu, adding that some companies "jump in without thinking it
through."
Although all companies could benefit by using tools that automate business processes, B2B
is generally "not for everyone," Shu said.
Myth No. 4: B2B Is Simple
"Early on, the perception was that integrating supply chains was reasonably quick and
easy," Forrester analyst Lucine King told the E-Commerce Times.
Covisint, the
e-marketplace backed by the major automakers, is
a prime example of the
difficulties inherent in B2B e-commerce.
When Covisint was first announced in February 2000, its founding partners -- General
Motors, Ford and DaimlerChrysler -- expected it to be live within 30 days and predicted
that it would eventually handle $750 billion in annual purchasing. However, more than a
year later, the online auto marketplace is not fully operational.