| Net Revenue E-commerce is now the latest buzzword in retail/service
The concept of business conducted via the Internet is one
that gets a lot of play in both trade journals and the popular press. If you were to judge
the phenomenon solely on the basis of visibility in the media, you would think that all
those folks with computers now just stay at home to shop and conduct their banking and
other financial business.
It is definitely the case that a significant amount of commerce, in
terms of dollars expended, takes place through online transactions. And it is true that
the volume of e-commerce will undoubtedly increase during the coming years, especially in
selected areas. For instance, online sales of packaged software are projected to increase
to $5.9 billion by 2001. According to a report recently released by the International Data
Corporation, not only will online sales of software burgeon over the next few years, but
one subset of the market sales of site licenses for businesses will be
conducted 100 percent via the Internet by 2008.
We can also expect to see a tremendous amount of growth in online
financial services, though perhaps not from the consumer end of things, which is normally
the lens through which we view the Internet. As a matter of fact, the hot growth area now
is in the realm of the relationship between business and banking. The percentage of banks
that allow small businesses to access their accounts via the Web was a mere five percent
last year. That percentage will have risen to 18 percent by the end of this year, and is
projected to be 65 percent by the end of next year.
It is necessary, however, to step back for
a moment and try to gain a realistic perspective on the state of e-commerce today and on
some of the problems it faces in the future. A report released in September by the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development reveals total revenue from
e-commerce world-wide was about $26 billion last year. Now, that sounds like a lot of
money to me (but Im easily impressed by zeros), and it is a lot of money. However,
it represents only 0.5 percent of retail sales for the seven largest national economies
monitored by the OECD. Many industry analysts believe that there is no other area of
technological change that presents such a discrepancy between the actual phenomenon and
what policy makers, the business community, and the public believe to be the case.
The fact that the U.S. is not immune to the vagaries of the global
economy is now abundantly clear to us after the events of the last few months, and that
may not bode well for e-commerce. Even in Europe, not to mention the rest of the world,
the outlook for e-commerce could be described as dismal due to constraints such as
language barriers, multiple currencies, heavy taxation, expensive phone calls, and low
bandwidth in the telecommunications infrastructure. The OECD estimates that approximately
80 percent of global online sales originate in the United States, and that situation is
unlikely to change anytime soon.
John F. Clark is College Technology
Coordinator for the University of Kentucky College of Communications and Information
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