Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Aplikasi B2C E-commerce

1. Electronic Storefront Electronic Storefront is an e-commerce solution for merchants who want to host a website that advertises their products or services and for which consumer transactions are generated online. Various software applications are available to merchants, which range from electronic shopping carts to secure payment gateways. Merchants that lack e-commerce technical skills find that storefront vendors are especially helpful when starting out or maintaining their online stores. Another name for an electronic storefront is an online storefront. 2. Electronic Mall Electronic Mall is Website that displays electronic catalogs from several suppliers, and charges commission from them for the sales revenue generated at that site. 3. Electronic Retailing Electronic Retailing is a buzzword for any business-to-consumer (B2C) transactions that take place over the Internet. Simply put, e-tailing is the sale of goods online. Companies like Amazon and Dell created the online retail industry by putting the entire customer experience - from browsing products to placing orders to paying for purchases - on the Internet. The success of these and other companies encouraged more traditional retailers to create an online presence to augment their brick-and-mortar outlets. Electronic retailing may also be referred to as Internet retailing. 4. Cyber Banking Cyber Banking is the use of computers to carry out banking transactions such as withdrawals through cash dispensers or transfer of funds at point of sale. 5. Online Security Trading Online Security Trading: OUCH is a digital communications protocol that allows customers of the NASDAQ (National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations) to conduct business in the options market. With OUCH, subscribers can place, execute or cancel orders. OUCH allows subscribers to integrate NASDAQ into their proprietary networks. The earliest version of OUCH was developed 1997. 6. Online Job Market Online Job Market as a marketplace that brings buyers and sellers of labor. As a seller of labor in this market are job seekers (Owner of Labour), while the buyers are people / institutions who need manpower. The labor market is organized with the intent to coordinate meetings between job seekers and people or institutions who need manpower. 7. Travel Travel: Act of traversing through a geographic region or moving from one place to another. This can be temporarily, as is often the case, and can be for a short period of time. Salespersons often travel to different regions in order to generate sales with another company for example. 8. Real Estate Real Estate: Land and anything fixed, immovable, or permanently attached to it such as appurtenances, buildings, fences, fixtures, improvements, roads, shrubs and trees (but not growing crops), sewers, structures, utility systems, and walls. Title to real estate normally includes title to air rights, mineral rights, and surface rights which can be bought, leased, sold, or transferred together or separately. Also called real property or realty. 9. Foreward Auction Foreward Auction: Auction in which one seller offers items for bidding and several buyers compete to offer the price the seller will accept. The seller usually has the option to accept any bid or reject all. 10. Reverse Auction Reverse Auction is a type of auction in which the roles of buyers and sellers are reversed. In an ordinary auction (also known as a forward auction), buyers compete to obtain a good or service, and the price typically increases over time. In a reverse auction, sellers compete to obtain business, and prices typically decrease over time. 11. Bartering Bartering is a method of exchange by which goods or services are directly exchanged for other goods or services without using a medium of exchange, such as money.[1] It is usually bilateral, but may be multilateral, and usually exists parallel to monetary systems in most developed countries, though to a very limited extent. Barter usually replaces money as the method of exchange in times of monetary crisis, such as when the currency may be either unstable (e.g., hyperinflation or deflationary spiral) or simply unavailable for conducting commerce.

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