Search

Results 41-60 of 419 for Paul A. Greenberg.

E-Commerce: Deepening the Digital Divide

Aside from its obvious commercial potential, the greatest promise of e-commerce has always been its potential to be an all-inclusive forum. All of the interpersonal exchanges that seem to slight certain ethnic or minority groups offline were supposed to be less of a problem when doing business el...

E-tailers Get By With a Little Help From Friends

The latest best friends in the world of multichannel sales are Amazon.com and Circuit City. The news that the e-tail leader and the electronics giant are joining forces should come as no surprise to observers of the dot-com landscape. Powerful alliances are what it's all about, especially now th...

Online Insurance: Who Needs It?

Throughout these pioneer days of e-commerce, the greatest challenge facing the industry has been creating and sustaining consumer need. Do consumers need to buy houses, cars and groceries on the Internet? If not now, will they need to do so in the future? Possibly. However, we have learned that n...

The Online Need for Speed, Indeed

Demand for instant gratification and results seems to be casting a spell over e-commerce. Technically, we refer to it as a "broadband" dilemma, but it's all about short attention spans and uneven fast access across the country. As to who will win this race -- cable companies or telecom companies ...

States and Feds Draw E-Tax Battle Lines

You may never have heard of one Jim Geringer, but as governor of the great state of Wyoming, he is making some serious noise about taxing Internet purchases. Joining a chorus of government voices from coast to coast, Geringer is prone to sweeping pronouncements about the potential of e-commerce...

Priceline: Writing E-Commerce History

Several months ago, industry observers were writing the epitaph for name-your-own-price e-tailer Priceline.com. Here we are less than a year later, and Priceline just turned a profit. Almost unheard of in the current new economy, Priceline actually made some real money. Okay, it only works out t...

Digital Music – What Napster Coined

Perhaps the most ironic development in the ongoing struggle of music file-sharing service Napster is that the site spawned an entire industry of digital music. Because Napster has found itself more focused on litigation than on doing business, its archrivals in the recording industry have stepped...

E-tailers Could Alter Marketing a Teens-y Bit

E-commerce is suffering from a severe case of nearsightedness. As a result of their strenuous efforts to survive in a volatile economy, e-tailers are only able to see what's right in front of them. It's not easy being the novelty act when even the headliners are in a slump. There is, however, a...

Coming Together on E-Privacy

If we chronicle the evolution of electronic commerce via the headlines, the conventional wisdom is that online privacy is Job One. If online privacy really is a top priority of legislators, company owners and watchdog organizations, that's a good thing. However, the more ink privacy consumes in l...

E-Commerce’s Long Journey From Free to Fee

Of everything e-commerce participants have learned so far, one rather retro lesson has taken on new meaning: There is no such thing as a free lunch. Or free anything else, for that matter. Although Internet users used to love and even expect free connections, shipping, e-mail, and other assorted ...

Why Can’t E-Commerce Close The Sale?

It appears there is a whole lot of window surfing going on at e-tail Web sites and not enough buying. Why can't e-commerce close the sale? What's so alluring about the brick-and-mortar environment? Especially when the real-world store is selling the same merchandise at a higher price? These qu...

Kmart and Wal-Mart Move On After E-tail Defeat

Whatever the cause, Walmart.com and BlueLight.com have not lived up to expectations. Not so unexpectedly, Kmart announced it would buy all shares of BlueLight.com that it does not already own, and at almost the same moment, Wal-Mart announced its own intention to buy all minority interests in Wal...

Wanted: E-Commerce Leaders To Show Government the Way

This could well go down in history as the summer the U.S. government finally woke up and recognized electronic commerce as something more than a passing fad. As the headlines harp on with the theme of dot-com mayhem and new economy crisis, the government is quietly increasing its role in the deve...

Amazon and AOL: Handshake Between Giants

On Monday -- the same day the company announced second-quarter results bordering on dismal -- Amazon and America Online revealed a new agreement in which the giant Internet service provider will invest US$100 million in cash-strapped Amazon. At the end of the day, investors and pundits were left...

The Elusive E-Shopper – Who’s on Aisle One?

Will we ever understand the Web shopper? Or is it possible that e-tailers, pundits and analysts have over-complicated the elusive online buyer? Without an understanding of who's shopping and what they want, even the best operations could easily crumble. A classic case of missing the trees while ...

The Hard-Fought Lessons of E-Commerce

My job is to keep my eyes and ears open and try to put some perspective on Web merchandising and online transactions. (You'll notice I did not use the word "spin." I said "perspective.") What is most important in my line of work is to keep myself grounded and not allow myself to be overly impres...

Privacy Glitches: Is Anyone Safe Online?

Reports of security glitches and inadvertent revelations of user identities on Web sites no longer carry the shock value they once did. That's because they have materialized time after time, causing consumers to become a bit more numb with each incident. By now it is almost de rigeur to hear of ...

The Bottom Line on Online Shopping Bots

Like many regretful TV viewers, I missed the first season of "The Sopranos" on HBO. Not to worry, since the whole season is available for sale on videotape. I decided to use an online shopping bot to find the best price after it became clear that I was going to spend at least US$100 in a brick-an...

Identity Fraud – The Great E-Commerce Roadblock

In most parts of the country, it was a news item that was easy to miss, but it was front page news in New Orleans when Lawrence E. Williams became the first person tried under the 1998 federal identity fraud statute. In all, Williams, 22, was charged with 14 counts of identity fraud. When it be...

Webvan’s Drive Was Its Downfall

In retrospect, all of the signs were there, pointing to the eventual demise of Internet grocery delivery service Webvan. It didn't take a lot of map reading or compass checking to see that Webvan was on the road to closure and bankruptcy, not new funding and profitability. In the dot-com world,...

How confident are you in the reliability of AI-powered search results?
Loading ... Loading ...

E-Commerce Times Channels