Expanded
E-Commerce Management (ECM) Deployment
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ECnow.com 2000 trends: Expanded
E-Commerce Management (ECM) Deployment
CONTENT
ECMGT.COM E-COMMERCE NEWS
- E-STRATEGIES & TRENDS
- E-PRODUCTS
- E-SERVICES
- E-MARKETING
- SUPPLY
CHAIN
- CONTENT, PORTALS & COMMUNITY
- GOVERNANCE
& GOING GLOBAL
- PARTNERS & DEALS
- MOVERS &
SHAKERS
E-STRATEGIES
& TRENDS NEWS
This section sponsored by - ECnow.com, please
visit them at http://www.ecnow.com
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ToC
-
Web
Retailers Pressured on Profits
-
Security
Concerns Keep Women from Shopping Online
-
Retailers
May Miss Out On New Net Customers
-
Are
Beyond.com's woes a sign of things to come?
-
Trouble
Indemnity for Web Sites
-
Food:
The Final E-Frontier
-
Couch
Peddlers Love B-to-B, Too
-
E-tailers
look for profits with Net-only products
-
Boo.com
Trims its Bottom Line
-
Shoot
First, Ask Questions Later
-
The
Customer Information Backlash
-
Business-To-Business
E-commerce To Soar
-
The
Future of Retailing
-
Who's
Afraid of the Big Bad Wal-Mart?
-
New
year spells tough times for e-tailers
-
Failed
Blackmail Attempt Leads to Credit Card Theft
-
E-Tailers
Dodge Christmas Bullet
-
DoubleClick
sued over privacy
-
Report:
Healthcare E-Commerce to Hit $370 Billion by 2004
-
Study:
Online Consumers Willing to Pay More for Food
----
Web Retailers Pressured
on Profits
Wall Street is sounding
a loud cry to e-retailers: Show us the money! Internet retailing stocks have been
on a freefall recently, and analysts are steering clients away from the sector
until there are signs that these companies are starting to reduce their losses.
Security
Concerns Keep Women from Shopping Online
Concern
about the safety of ordering online is the biggest stumbling block to more women
shopping on the Net, according to a recent study from researcher Cyber Dialogue.
Retailers May Miss Out On New Net Customers
Bricks-and-mortar retailers slowly moving
to the Internet need to hurry up, said a keynote speaker at the National Retail
Federation 2000 conference on Monday.
Are Beyond.com's woes a sign of things
to come?
Welcome to what may well
be the "year of the shakeout" for online retailers.
Trouble Indemnity for Web Sites
It was inevitable: Insurance for e-commerce
Web sites -- protection against loss from malicious crackers and unstable equipment
-- is an acknowledgement that digital disasters can cause as much damage as any
physical calamity.
Food:
The Final E-Frontier
Messy, bulky
and perishable, groceries aren't easy products to sell online. So it's no wonder
the food business has lagged behind other industries in Internet sales. Industry
types are looking to speed things up.
Couch
Peddlers Love B-to-B, Too
For a while
now, stores have been selling furniture online, even as the media scoffs at the
very idea.
E-tailers look for profits with Net-only
products
Taking a page from direct
sales companies such as L.L. Bean and Dell Computer, a growing number of e-commerce
firms are introducing products that consumers can only buy online.
Boo.com Trims its Bottom Line
Seventy editorial staff members fall victim
to fashion site's post-Christmas "headcount reduction."
Shoot
First, Ask Questions Later
The mad
dash to create e-commerce sites is forcing prudent business practices out the
window. Instead of testing first and then deploying, e-tailers are deploying first,
then testing.
The
Customer Information Backlash
Customers
are tired of giving up their personal information only to have it used without
their knowledge in ways that don't offer them any benefit. Smart companies are
going to start giving customers their information back. All of it. In a format
that lets customers share their information not only with you, but with your divisions
-- even your competitors.
Business-To-Business E-commerce To
Soar
Business-to-business e-commerce
will show blistering growth in the coming years, with the worldwide market expected
to expand to $7.29 trillion by 2004, more than 50 times larger than in 1999, a
market research company said on Wednesday.
The
Future of Retailing
The future of
retailing will be in advanced showrooms without cash registers, without any turnover
and without price tags. Retailers will become big entertainment centers - the
"Disney Worlds" of shoes, cars, and so on.
Who's
Afraid of the Big Bad Wal-Mart?
On
January 1 Wal-Mart opened the latest version of its online store, and the consensus
among the press and analysts was much the same: Be afraid, they wrote, be very
afraid.
New
year spells tough times for e-tailers
Despite
booming holiday sales, Web retailers can't seem to get a break from Wall Street.
Failed
Blackmail Attempt Leads to Credit Card Theft
In
what may be the largest credit card heist on the Internet, an 18-year-old Russian
cracker claims to have stolen thousands of credit card numbers from an online
store and dispensed them to visitors of his Web site.
E-Tailers
Dodge Christmas Bullet
The Toysrus.com
almost-disaster at Christmas was important from a number of perspectives. It not
only demonstrated that we are past the novelty phase of e-commerce, but also showed
that how well an e-business is run can determine its success and failure.
Report: Women Enjoy E-Shopping Less Than
Men
While women now comprise 49 percent
of online users, they still lag behind men in online shopping, according to the
latest American Internet User Survey published by customer relationship management
firm Cyber Dialogue.
DoubleClick
sued over privacy
The Web advertising
company is accused of unlawfully obtaining and selling consumers' private personal
information without their consent.
Report:
Healthcare E-Commerce to Hit $370 Billion by 2004
A new research report estimates that the healthcare industry will reach
$370 billion in online transactions by 2004.
Study:
Online Consumers Willing to Pay More for Food
Convenience
and quality, not price, are the major motivators for online grocery buyers, says
a new study.
E-PRODUCTS
NEWS
ToC
-
IBM hones
B2B apps, message
-
AltaVista
targets B2B e-commerce with new unit
-
NYToday.com
to offer local dinner reservations
-
ICOMS To Outsource
Fraud Screening
-
Mercury
to launch load testing service
-
New E-Commerce
Site Raises Bar on Competitiveness
-
Priceline kicks
off "yard sale" site
----
IBM hones B2B apps, message
IBM is about to plant a very large foot
in the middle of the business-to-business e-commerce marketplace.
AltaVista
targets B2B e-commerce with new unit
AltaVista
is planning to launch a new business unit to sell the company's search technology
to business-to-business e-commerce firms.
NYToday.com
to offer local dinner reservations
NYToday.com
and OpenTable.com together plan to help New Yorkers pick a local restaurant, then
reserve a table--direct from their desktops.
ICOMS
To Outsource Fraud Screening
Internet
Commerce Services is looking to help e-retailers take a bite out of crime. The
company, which provides transaction processing and fulfillment services for companies
on an outsourced basis, is teaming up with eHNC, the electronic commerce subsidiary
of HNC Software, to add credit-card fraud detection to its services platform.
Mercury
to launch load testing service
Load
testing the performance of a new e-commerce site before it goes live will get
a bit easier and less expensive with the advent of a new service from Mercury
Interactive Corp.
New
E-Commerce Site Raises Bar on Competitiveness
A
new site called Nosaleisfinal.com that allows shoppers at both Internet and bricks
and mortar stores to learn if they received the best deal in time to cancel or
return a purchase and buy from a store offering a better deal.
Priceline kicks off "yard sale"
site
Internet pricing firm Priceline.com
said today it had launched an e-commerce Web site bringing together buyers and
sellers of second-hand goods in a virtual yard sale.
E-SERVICES
NEWS
ToC
-
Outsourcer
offers one-touch service
-
UPS helps online grocers cart goods
-
Web Shoppers Vexed by Poor Customer
Service, Survey
-
Future
of E-Commerce May Rest on Customer Service
-
Glitch-free online shopping tips
-
Ladies And Gentlemen, Start Your
ShopBots
-
Airlines'
Ticket Comparison-Shop Site Cleared for Takeoff
-
Customer Service Goes Virtual
-
Online Customer Service Tough To
Implement
-
Can
Exchanges Put Energy Into E-Commerce?
-
E-Business Means E-Relationships
-
Tax Planning With ISOs
-
It's Not Big Brother, It's Customer
Service
-
Outpost
Leaves Data Unguarded
----
Outsourcer
offers one-touch service
Get the customer
to click "buy" on your site and a new outsourcing firm backed by USWeb
co-founder Joe Firmage says it will take care of the rest.
UPS
helps online grocers cart goods
Roadnet
Technologies, a subsidiary of United Parcel Service that concentrates on solving
logistical problems associated with home delivery, will license hardware and software
systems to online grocers to help provide their customers next-day or same-day
delivery.
Web
Shoppers Vexed by Poor Customer Service, Survey
The
final week of holiday shopping proved the toughest for Internet retailers as consumer
satisfaction evaporated after many so-called "e-tailers'' failed to provide
adequate customer service, a recent survey found.
Future
of E-Commerce May Rest on Customer Service
Now
that the shopping has been done, the real fun starts. Returns, exchanges, gifts
that didn't make it home for the holidays... It's time for e-tailers to flex their
customer service muscle, and their future may very well depend on it.
Glitch-free
online shopping tips
Holiday disappointments
change consumer behavior
Ladies
And Gentlemen, Start Your ShopBots
The
artificial intelligence laboratory at the University of Michigan is organizing
a competition to find a champion software-based shopping agent.
Airlines'
Ticket Comparison-Shop Site Cleared for Takeoff
As
industry consolidates, the as-yet-unnamed venture hopes to compete with other
sites' name-your-price model.
Customer
Service Goes Virtual
Personalized
beauty-care site Reflect.com is making a big bet on an innovative new form of
customer interaction replacing service reps with software.
Online
Customer Service Tough To Implement
E-tailers
are scrambling to come up with the right solutions to satisfy customer service
needs. While the most comprehensive solution is to provide live representatives,
it is also the most expensive solution. Many cost-conscious online merchants are
looking at natural language processing software. The big question is whether it
will work.
Can
Exchanges Put Energy Into E-Commerce?
Ariba,
Commerce One pair off with petrochemical corporations in hopes of beginning b-to-b-eautiful
friendships.
E-Business
Means E-Relationships
Web retailers
must gain consumers' loyalty and trust before making the sales pitch.
Tax
Planning With ISOs
One of the most
popular and useful forms of stock-based compensation is the incentive stock option,
or ISO. Rapidly growing e-commerce companies, which are always short of cash,
see options as a way of conserving cash; and, employees see options as a way of
participating in company growth.
It's
Not Big Brother, It's Customer Service
Many
companies are making it possible for e-commerce sites to pipe live customer service
representatives to shoppers over the Internet. The company representatives --
however unseen in the background -- are sometimes able to get in contact with
Web shoppers, many of whom believe they are browsing the Net unobserved.
Outpost
Leaves Data Unguarded
Outpost.com
lets you track your orders online -- and everyone else's too. A security glitch
leaves names, purchases, email, and shipping address exposed.
E-MARKETING
NEWS
ToC
-
The Internet
Retail Revolution
-
Amazon.com
Tops Shopping Sites
-
Online
Consumer Spending Growth Slowing
-
E-Holiday Sales Peak During 2nd Week of December
-
AOL users spend billions over holidays
-
Consumables Market Takes Larger Share
of E-Commerce
-
Would
you buy an Old Master online?
-
Affiliate Marketing's Last Stand?
-
"Dot coms" look to score
from Super Bowl ads
-
Pet Sites Vie To Be Top Dog
-
Virgin Megastores keeps customers in hand
-
CyberCash Denies Fault in Security
Breach Case
-
E-commerce
sites target women
----
The Internet Retail Revolution
Although
the shape and form of retailing has continued to evolve throughout history, its
significance to society in distributing goods and services cannot be understated.
To get an idea of how important retailing is to our economy, one need only look
at current figures.
Amazon.com
Tops Shopping Sites
More than one
in four Internet users did part of their holiday shopping online. So how come
sales fell short of Ernst & Young's US$15 billion predictions?
Online
Consumer Spending Growth Slowing
The
rate of growth of online spending per person is declining even though total online
retail spending is increasing, according to a study by the The Wharton School
of Business.
E-Holiday
Sales Peak During 2nd Week of December
Online
shopping reached its peak during the week of December 6th through 12th, according
to a Goldman Sachs / PC Data Online survey that was released today. Spending then
fell from $1.25 billion to $495 million during Christmas week December 20 - 26
, as online visitors turned to greeting cards and computer game sites.
AOL
users spend billions over holidays
Internet
giant America Online said members of its service spent $2.5 billion shopping on
the Internet during the holiday season, a total that more than doubled from the
same period last year.
Consumables
Market Takes Larger Share of E-Commerce
Total
online retail sales during 1999 are expected to reach $66 billion, according to
ActivMedia Research, and the buying of consumable products will lead the way into
the next century.
Would
you buy an Old Master online?
How
about a New Master? Online galleries are hoping to make art lovers -- and buyers
-- out of us all, using the power of the Internet.
Affiliate
Marketing's Last Stand?
Two years
ago at this time, affiliate marketing was flying under everyone's radar. Last
year at this time, affiliate marketing was a real hot topic. These days, it's
mostly under the radar again.
"Dot
coms" look to score from Super Bowl ads
Super
Bowl Sunday may not wind up so super for Internet companies that are spending
huge chunks of their marketing budgets on the advertising world's premier showcase.
Pet
Sites Vie To Be Top Dog
Startups,
chain stores, and venture capitalists alike are all betting big bucks on building
the perfect online pet store.
Virgin
Megastores keeps customers in hand
Virgin
Megastores next month will offer 10,000 preferred customers a free personal digital
appliance that they can use to browse the Net--but not before logging on to Virginmega.com.
CyberCash
Denies Fault in Security Breach Case
After
coming under heavy scrutiny for an alleged software failure that allowed an unidentified
hacker to purloin and publish confidential credit card information on the Internet,
CyberCash has issued a terse statement denying that its product contributed in
any way to the security breach.
E-commerce
sites target women
The Web sites with
the highest percentage of women viewers last November, the start of the holiday
shopping season, were toy retailers, women's portals and greeting card sites,
according to a report released on Monday.
SUPPLY
CHAIN NEWS
ToC
-
BizTalk:
All Talk?
-
IBM
lukewarm about Microsoft's 'proprietary' BizTalk
-
Channel Companies Invest In First
E-Business Hub
-
Consumer
sites adopt barter model
-
Exchanges for Everything
-
Gartner ultrabullish on B2B
-
Amazon buyers choose Barnes &
Noble for returns
-
Attention
shoppers
-
Manufacturers
Grapple With Online Sales
-
Luxury Watchmakers Are Web Wary
-
'Be Prepared' Not Just a Motto in
Post-Y2K Era
-
The
Y2K Bug Was in the Channel
-
ToysRUs.com Sued: Santa Failed
-
Barter Exchanges on the Internet
-
Can FedEx Get Up to Net Speed by
Slowing Deliveries Down?
-
Ship happens: Same-Day Delivery Woes
-
Study: retailers remain unready for
online sales
----
BizTalk:
All Talk?
Key pieces of Microsoft's e-commerce strategy are still missing
in action.
IBM
lukewarm about Microsoft's 'proprietary' BizTalk
A
key IBM executive, in an interview here at the company's Partner World 2000 conference,
said Big Blue will only support the BizTalk Framework -- a Microsoft-developed
framework for describing how the Extensible Markup Language is to be used in business-to-business
commerce -- in Windows environments.
Channel
Companies Invest In First E-Business Hub
Channel
giants Ingram Micro Inc., Tech Data Corp., Avnet Inc., Arrow Electronics Inc.,
FDX Corp. and Softbank said today they have collaborated to help create the first
e-business hub for the IT industry. The
venture, Viacore Inc., is a service provider developing the first e-commerce business-to-business
hub linked with RosettaNet Internet-based language standards and designed for
the IT industry, organizers said.
Consumer
sites adopt barter model
A new crop
of start-ups and their heavyweight financial backers are betting that the next
wave in consumer e-commerce will have people trading their belongings without
cash.
Exchanges
for Everything
Buyers and sellers
are leveraging the power of auctions for every good imaginable. Are you ready
to compete in the new exchange economy?
Gartner
ultrabullish on B2B
The market research
firms sees big things ahead for the B2B commerce market and for the B2B market
makers.
Amazon
buyers choose Barnes & Noble for returns
Amazon.com
touts a quick and easy return policy, yet some of its customers find it easier
to return books at rival Barnes & Noble superstores
Commerce
One, Ariba in B2B e-commerce battle
Online procurement rivals Commerce
One and Ariba are engaged in a marketing battle for the ages.
Attention
shoppers
Top consumer goods manufacturers
wisely look to ally with Web grocers while it's still cheap.
Manufacturers
Grapple With Online Sales
Just as
Amazon.com has led millions of would-be entrepreneurs toward the e-commerce promised
land, so too has the success of Dell Computer led countless manufacturers to believe
that their future success rides on the ability to sell directly to consumers over
the Internet.
Luxury
Watchmakers Are Web Wary
Luxury-goods
companies like Europe's makers of high-end watches are getting increasingly uneasy
about the Internet, which threatens to loosen their control over distribution.
'Be
Prepared' Not Just a Motto in Post-Y2K Era
The
peaceful passage of the Y2K weekend hasn't prompted massive returns, online retailers
say.
The
Y2K Bug Was in the Channel
There is
a serious Y2K problem, after all, and it originates from Cybercash's ICVerify
unit, recently victimized by a cracker-embezzler who tried to post 300,000 credit
card numbers online. The problem lies in those terminals merchants use to process
credit card transactions, and how they got them. It's estimated that some 6,000
stores are impacted.
ToysRUs.com Sued: Santa Failed
A
customer files a class-action suit against the toys giant Internet division because
it couldn't get the gifts under the Xmas tree in time.
Barter
Exchanges on the Internet
The Internet
is an ideal medium for bartering goods and services. Barter exchanges, when brought
to the Web, enjoy a great potential for growth. The tax rules for recognizing
income from bartering transactions present no great difficulties. The rules that
apply outside the Web will apply equally to Internet-based transactions.
Can
FedEx Get Up to Net Speed by Slowing Deliveries Down?
With
its stock in the dumps, the air express giant reorganizes operations to better
reach the e-commerce customer on the ground.
Ship happens: Same-Day Delivery Woes
Ordering online gets easier with practice.
Actually receiving what you ordered, however, can be more of a challenge. Until
goods can be beamed up, Star Trek-style, e-commerce companies will keep coming
up with new delivery strategies.
Study: retailers remain unready for online
sales
Despite the growth of e-commerce,
many offline companies remain unprepared to compete on the Internet, according
to a new study.
CONTENT,
PORTALS & COMMUNITY NEWS
ToC
-
GM
pushes for Toyota to join e-commerce site
-
Vertical
Portals Pick Up Steam
-
Disney's Go.com narrowing
focus
-
Yahoo!
Plans 'Group Buy' Service
-
Internet shoppers are a new source for charitable donations
-
New Ranking Service Shuns Leading
E-tailers
-
Will
NBC viewers become Net shoppers?
-
CNET gained 6M shopping
'leads' in December
-
Commerce:
E-Marketplaces Getting Connected
-
Marketplaces Where Businesses Meet
-
B2B E-Commerce Transforms Chemical
Industry
-
Web
Markets Booming
----
GM
pushes for Toyota to join e-commerce site
General Motors is intensifying
its talks with Toyota Motor to involve the Japanese automaker in TradeXchange,
and it is open to offering Toyota a stake in the new business-to-business e-commerce
site, a senior GM official said today.
Vertical
Portals Pick Up Steam
Microsoft, SAP and a host of newer players are seeking
new ways to reach target markets.
Disney's
Go.com narrowing focus
The company's online directory is changing its
Web strategy, narrowing its focus to play up its strength as an entertainment
destination.
Yahoo! Plans 'Group Buy' Service
Navigation hub Yahoo! is preparing to
launch an aggregated selling service in the second half of the year, a move signaling
that the idea of "group buying" may be on the verge of becoming a mainstream
part of Web commerce
Internet shoppers are a new source
for charitable donations
Each morning,
Paula Duffy powers up her computer and takes on the weight of the world.
New
Ranking Service Shuns Leading E-tailers
Customer
service portal Feedback Direct joined the ratings game this week by launching
the Feedback 50 online companies with the best customer service operations.
Will
NBC viewers become Net shoppers?
NBCi
and ValueVision will invest in Roxy.com, an online consumer electronics store,
as part of a broader strategy to turn TV viewers into Net shoppers.
CNET
gained 6M shopping 'leads' in December
The
online technology company CNET Inc. Thursday said December shopping activity on
its site was more than double year-ago levels.
Commerce:
E-Marketplaces Getting Connected
Name
the commodity or service and there soon will be an Internet marketplace specializing
in bringing together buyers and sellers for that sector.
Marketplaces
Where Businesses Meet
In the world
of business-to-business Internet commerce, it has become difficult to keep up
with the rapid-fire creation of so-called e-marketplaces -- the darlings du jour
of the investment community.
B2B
E-Commerce Transforms Chemical Industry
Chemical
auctions, exchanges and a variety of e-commerce sites have altered the way that
chemicals are bought and sold worldwide, according to Forrester Research.
Web
Markets Booming
A bumper crop of electronic
marketplaces blossomed onto the Internet scene Monday.
GOVERNANCE
& GOING GLOBAL NEWS
ToC
-
UPS sees
regulations hamper Latin e-commerce
-
European E-Commerce
To Hit $1 Trillion by 2004
-
No e-taxes, says CES
panel
-
U.S. Hispanic E-Shoppers Indifferent To Language
-
European E-Christmas Sales Fly, But Not Profits
-
Japan convenience stores in e-commerce battle
-
Net
Taxes: When, Not If
-
European E-Commerce Still Lags
Behind U.S.
-
Singapore encourages e-commerce with
incentives
-
National Retailers Mull E-Tax
-
U.S. Culture Pervades Global E-commerce
-
Pushing
for a Crackdown on Auto Sales Done Directly Online
-
A
Merry e-Christmas for UK?
-
Web brings boom for small
businesses
-
'E-commerce backers are targeting Latin
America, but its a tough sell
----
UPS sees regulations hamper Latin e-commerce
Tariffs, cumbersome customs rules and
other government regulations are a big hurdle to electronic commerce throughout
Latin America, according to a leader of U.S. deliveries-giant United Parcel Service
Inc.
European
E-Commerce To Hit $1 Trillion by 2004
According
to a new report by Forrester Research, European e-commerce will grow at triple-digit
rates over the next five years to a total of more than $1 trillion
No
e-taxes, says CES panel
E-commerce
isn't ruining bricks-and-mortar businesses and should be left alone, Virginia
governor says.
U.S.
Hispanic E-Shoppers Indifferent To Language
Spanish-language
online retailer Espanol.com has found that few Hispanic Internet shoppers in the
United States care whether their shopping destinations are in English or Spanish.
European
E-Christmas Sales Fly, But Not Profits
Online
shopping boomed across Europe over Christmas as expected, but Internet retailers
piled up heavy losses and goods were often delivered late.
Japan
convenience stores in e-commerce battle
The
battle for Japan's fast-growing e-commerce market among operators of huge convenience
store chains intensified on Tuesday when five firms teamed up to compete with
top chain store operator Seven-Eleven.
Net
Taxes: When, Not If
Economics will
force tax equality for online and offline merchants.
European E-Commerce Still Lags Behind
U.S.
Despite recent gains, European
e-commerce still lags behind online sales in the United States, according to a
new study from International Data Corporation
Singapore
encourages e-commerce with incentives
Singapore
said on Thursday it had approved its first two companies under a tax incentive
scheme to encourage firms to set up regional e-commerce trading centers in the
city state.
National
Retailers Mull E-Tax
The din of whether
to tax Internet commerce is destined to become louder Jan. 18 when the 99 member
board of the National Retail Federation votes to take a position on the issue."
U.S. Culture Pervades Global E-commerce
Outside the United States, consumers are
increasingly shopping online, but it's a young market slowed by security concerns,
a developing infrastructure, and cultural risks, said speakers at a conference
in Ontario.
Pushing for a Crackdown on Auto Sales
Done Directly Online
Internet companies
that sell cars directly to consumers are encountering stiff opposition from auto
dealers, who are using their influence in state legislatures and with state regulators
to protect their businesses.
A Merry e-Christmas for UK?
It
appears that many people in the UK went online to find the cheapest prices for
gifts - but then headed to the high street to buy them.
Web
brings boom for small businesses
UK
e-commerce minister Patricia Hewitt launches a national award scheme for small
businesses who go online.
'E-commerce
backers are targeting Latin America, but its a tough sell
Latin
America is heralded as the next frontier for electronic commerce. But making e-commerce
happen in countries such as Mexico will require overcoming some serious obstacles.
Antiquated back-office computer systems, inefficient distribution networks and
widespread credit-card fraud have kept many businesses from jumping online.
PARTNERS & DEALS NEWS
ToC
-
CMGI's
Engage buys Flycast and Adsmart
-
Medtronic enters alliance
with Healtheon/WebMD
-
CA Expands E-Services
Portfolio
-
Microsoft
Takes B2B Stake In VerticalNet
-
New York Times to spin off Net division
-
VC
firms hot on trail of B2B startups
-
Softbank considers additional banking operations
-
PricewaterhouseCoopers denies report
of IBM ties
-
A
new spin on e-commerce
-
CNET Acquires mySimon
-
Time Warner, EMI rock the music world
-
What EMI deal means
for the Web
-
B2B
expert Breakaway buys Eggrock for $250M
-
IBM
and SAS enter e-business partnership
-
Ask Jeeves buys Direct Hit
-
Commerce One to buy product information
manager
-
Mexico
retailer to buy CompUSA
-
Wal-Mart, Accel To Create
Web Company
-
Cisco,
IBM join forces on e-business offerings
-
Airlines
join forces on new Web site
-
Net Perceptions buys data analysis vendor
-
Independents merge to fight the flower
powers
-
Drugstore.com
Buys Beauty.com
-
MGM,
Blockbuster team for Net movie delivery
-
BroadVision
to buy Interleaf, profit nearly triples
-
Ariba,
Ernst & Young in E-Commerce Deal
----
CMGI's
Engage buys Flycast and Adsmart
Engage Technologies agreed to buy the
two smaller Internet-advertising companies from majority holder CMGI for $2.5
billion in stock
Medtronic
enters alliance with Healtheon/WebMD
Medtronic, a maker of medical devices,
said today it has formed a $100 million, four-year partnership with Healtheon/WebMD
to provide health care information over the Internet.
CA
Expands E-Services Portfolio
Computer Associates International Inc. has
acquired a minority stake in I-Storm Inc., a specialist in developing and operating
e-commerce Web sites. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed, but CA was
said to have paid $2 million-plus for an under-10 percent share of I-Storm. CA
will have a seat on I-Storm's five-member board
Microsoft
Takes B2B Stake In VerticalNet
Microsoft is making a play to get more
directly involved in the business-to-business marketplace arena by taking a large
equity stake in VerticalNet.
New
York Times to spin off Net division
The
publisher files to raise as much as $100 million in an initial stock offering
for a tracking stock to represent its Internet business division, the Times Company
Digital.
VC
firms hot on trail of B2B startups
The venture capitalists who flocked
to the Showcase conference in Palm Springs were gaga to find new business-to-business
opportunities.
Softbank considers additional
banking operations
The Japanese Internet
investor is in informal talks with Fuji Bank on an online banking venture as it
tries to push to the forefront of the restructuring of Japan's financial industry.
PricewaterhouseCoopers
denies report of IBM ties
The Company
denies a report that it is considering selling its consulting unit to IBM or teaming
up with the computer maker.
A
new spin on e-commerce
More and more
large companies are spinning off their e-commerce units to maximize valuations.
The rewards could be great, but so are the risks.
CNET Acquires mySimon
Internet
publisher CNET Inc. Thursday acquired comparison shopping service mySimon for
$700 million.
Time
Warner, EMI rock the music world
AOL's
new partner, Time Warner, will become the world's largest record company -- controlling
about 20 percent of global market.
What
EMI deal means for the Web
AOL-Time
Warner-EMI deals have rocked the music business and showed it finally awakening
to the not-so-distant multimedia future.
B2B
expert Breakaway buys Eggrock for $250M
Breakaway Solutions Inc. today
announced it will acquire systems integrator and consulting firm Eggrock Partners
in an all-stock deal valued at about $250 million.
IBM
and SAS enter e-business partnership
IBM and SAS Institute Inc. on Monday announced a partnership to tighten
integration between IBM's DB2 Universal Database and SAS analytic software and
to provide enhanced consulting services to e-businesses
Ask Jeeves buys Direct Hit
Search company Ask Jeeves Inc. will acquire
Direct Hit Technologies Inc. in a deal worth around $507 million. The deal calls
for Ask Jeeves to exchange 5.12 million shares, approximately 12 percent of the
company, for Direct Hit. Ask Jeeves closed at $99 Monday
Commerce
One to buy product information manager
Commerce
One (Nasdaq: CMRC) slid in after-hours trading Tuesday after the company announced
plans to issue 870,000 shares as part of a deal to buy a system for online catalogs.
Mexico
retailer to buy CompUSA
Mexico-based retailer Grupo Sanborns said today
it plans to acquire computer retailer CompUSA in a tender offer worth $10.10 per
share.
Wal-Mart,
Accel To Create Web Company
The discount retailer late Thursday said it
is partnering with venture capital firm Accel Partners to create a stand-alone
Web retailing company carrying the Wal-Mart brand.
Cisco,
IBM join forces on e-business offerings
IBM and Cisco Systems Inc. added
some meat to an ongoing technology alliance today, announcing two initiatives
that could help IT managers better manage Internet transactions
Airlines
join forces on new Web site
American Airlines, US Airways and other carriers
have signed up to offer tickets, including Internet-only discounts, on a Web site
being created by United, Delta, Northwest and Continental.
Nearly
two dozen U.S. and foreign airlines have signed up to offer tickets, including
discounted Internet-only special fares, on a Web site being created by UAL Corp.'s
United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Northwest Airlines and Continental Airlines.
Net
Perceptions buys data analysis vendor
Net
Perceptions Inc., a maker of software that enables e-business Web sites to deliver
personalized Web content to surfers, is fortifying its portfolio with the $126
million acquisition of a data-analysis developer.
Independents
merge to fight the flower powers
Proflowers.com
and Flowerfarm.com joined forces today to compete in the fast-growing online flower
market.
Drugstore.com
Buys Beauty.com
Online pharmacy Drugstore.com
is buying cosmetic retailer Beauty.com for about $42 million in stock.
MGM,
Blockbuster team for Net movie delivery
Film
studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, the home of classic musicals and holder of the rights
to 19 James Bond movies, today reached agreement with rental giant Blockbuster
to find ways to give customers movies via the Internet.
BroadVision
to buy Interleaf, profit nearly triples
BroadVision, which makes software
for Internet commerce, said its fourth quarter profit rose 287 percent, and announced
it would buy Internet e-commerce software maker Interleaf.
Ariba,
Ernst & Young in E-Commerce Deal
Ariba Inc., a maker of software to
help businesses use the Internet to buy supplies, said Monday it had entered a
deal with Ernst & Young LLP to provide products and services for electronic
commerce.
MOVERS & SHAKERS NEWS
ToC
-
Online
merchants seek to improve e-commerce
-
Amazon.com
Announces Layoffs
-
Beyond.com hits hard times
-
Barnesandnoble.com CEO closes chapter
-
TheGlobe.com
founders step aside as CEOs
----
Online
merchants seek to improve e-commerce
Electronic
commerce executives said they want to make online shopping better than any experience
in a physical store at a conference of Texas e-commerce companies.
Amazon.com
Announces Layoffs
Amazon.com
Inc. said yesterday that it will lay off 150 employees as part of a company-wide
reorganization, just five days before it is expected to report further losses
in its fourth quarter. The Internet's largest
retailer wouldn't say why it's cutting staff. But a spokesman said the firings
are not related to the losses. The layoffs will be spread across its divisions
and hit mostly at its Seattle headquarters. The company has 7,500 employees, up
from just over 2,000 a year ago.
Beyond.com
hits hard times
CEO Mark Breier will step down and the company will lay
off almost 20 percent of its work force.
Beyond.com will lay off around 20 percent of its work force in a restructuring
move that will shift the company's focus away from consumer sales.
Barnesandnoble.com
CEO closes chapter
Jonathan Bulkeley, just a year on the job, is leaving
the online bookseller to focus on investments. Barnesandnoble.com Inc., the online
bookseller in heated competition with Amazon.com Inc., has lost its chief executive
after just one year on the job.
TheGlobe.com
founders step aside as CEOs
Online services firm Theglobe.com Inc. said
on Thursday that joint CEOs Stephan Paternot and Todd Krizelman were stepping
down as the leaders of the company they founded five years ago. Theglobe.com said
it would initiate a search for a new chief executive with a view to taking over
during the second quarter