DocumentCode :
375234
Title :
Re-architecting business infrastructures through global business-to-business electronic commerce
Author :
Carayannis, Elias G. ; Alexander, James M
Volume :
1
fYear :
2001
fDate :
2001
Abstract :
Summary form only given as follows. Business-to-business electronic commerce (B2BEC) activity worldwide is estimated to grow to several trillions of dollars within the next few years. Already, the increase in B2BEC has had an increasingly large and broad impact on industrial structures and the ways we measure and evaluate such fundamental concepts as risk, the valuation of and return on intangibles such as intellectual capital, brand-related goodwill, and service sector productivity. Major companies across the world are struggling to position themselves to take advantage of this new realm of business opportunity. The future of B2BEC, however, is clouded by challenges in determining global standards in technology, business processes, and government policy. In this paper, we review the evolution and current direction of global B2BEC in several industries and show how firms have used EC as a strategic differentiator in maximizing customer value added. We profile in detail the role of electronic commerce as a strategic enabling, infra-structural, path-breaking and multiuse technology that if properly leveraged, can lead to radical improvements in both quality and productivity in inter-firm trading relationships. We end by identifying best practices in industry and government for accelerating the deployment of electronic commerce, and for making this activity an agent of strategic change in the emerging digital economy
Keywords :
electronic commerce; international trade; B2BEC; brand-related goodwill; business infrastructures re-architecting; business processes; digital economy; global business-to-business electronic commerce; government policy; industrial structures; infra-structural technology; intellectual capital; inter-firm trading relationships; multi-use technology; path-breaking technology; productivity; quality; risk; service sector productivity; strategic change; Best practices; Business; Companies; Cost accounting; Electronic commerce; Electronics industry; Government; Industrial relations; Knowledge management; Productivity;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Management of Engineering and Technology, 2001. PICMET '01. Portland International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Portland, OR
Print_ISBN :
1-890843-06-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PICMET.2001.951899
Filename :
951899
Link To Document :
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