E-Life after the Dot Com Bust

Capa
Brigitte Preissl, Harry Bouwman, Charles Steinfield
Springer Science & Business Media, 12 de jan. de 2004 - 287 páginas

After the dramatic failures of the dot coms in 2000 and 2001, many observers were quick to report on the death of electronic commerce. Investor confidence sagged, stock prices of technology firms in nearly all of the related sectors suffered. In reality, the picture is not nearly as dismal as the press would have us believe. E-commerce is not dead, but it has moved beyond its overhyped beginning stage. This book is an effort to sort through the hype, providing a realistic assessment of the state of electronic commerce today, and the important areas of opportunity and challenge for tomorrow. The book sees all kind of developments where e-business is becoming an integral part of ‘traditional’ business processes, with special emphasis on practical and policy importance. E-commerce scholars from a number of disciplines and countries contribute to assess the impact of the dot com bust and the current state of e-commerce.

 

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exploiting the opportunities of today
17
a frictionless market is not in sight arguments empirics and policy implications
39
exploring the form and function of business models in the electronic marketplace
65
Business models and emetrics a state of the art
83
Click and brick electronic commerce
101
Prosumers as service configurators vision status and future requirements
119
the convergence of relationships networked supply chains and value webs
137
a SME users perspective
159
The development of location based services in mobile commerce
177
Employing mobile communities for marketing consumer goods
199
Ecommerce and Internet access in the European Union and the United States
223
Privacy and regulation in a digital age
249
Cities electronic commerce and local policies
271
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