Business-to-business e-commerce is thriving
Published:
3 May 2003 y., Saturday
As Europeans pile onto the Internet in record numbers and shed their nervousness about buying online, consumer e-commerce is soaring at an impressive 75% per year.
B2B e-commerce in Europe is still growing -- and fast. Companies purchased more than $200 billion in goods and services over the Net last year, a fourfold increase from 2000, according to researcher IDC. That's less than boosters were predicting a few years back, but B2B has now wormed its way firmly into Europe Inc., especially in the tech-savvier northern countries. There are even new online exchanges popping up, such as Aquadia, a water-industry site launched last year by Thames Water and Suez.
More important, Internet B2B is also delivering on many of its original promises. Companies that have slogged through the tough work of building e-commerce systems -- from Alcatel to BASF to Nestlé -- have lowered their transaction costs and boosted efficiency. Paris-based Alcatel now takes 90% of its orders for corporate networking gear over the Net, saving hundreds of thousands of dollars a year vs. manually entering sales. And Nestlé is halfway through an e-business makeover that it predicts will save $2.2 billion by 2006.
Šaltinis:
businessweek.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Wincor Nixdorf is enhancing its consulting portfolio for the banking business.
more »
Wincor Nixdorf is set to present its ProClassic Enterprise Cash Management software for effective and rational organization of end-to end cash management processes in banks at the Retail Delivery Show.
more »
Yahoo said Jerry Yang will step down as chief executive as soon as the board finds a replacement.
more »
Wincor Nixdorf AG has turned in the best year in its history.
more »
Visa Inc. is working with the Los Angeles transit authority to allow train, subway and bus riders to pay fares with Visa’s payWave-enabled contactless cards.
more »
Customers line up in New York City to be the first to buy Google's new G1 phone.
more »
Children and teenagers are keen internet users - 12 to 15-year-olds spend at least three hours a day on screen - but are not always aware of the dangers: not just sites showing child pornography or violence but also the risk of bullying or grooming.
more »
A European Commission study found that devices left on stand-by throughout the European Union in 2005 consumed the same amount of electrical energy as a country the size of Greece or Portugal in 2008.
more »
The European Commission has launched a new web portal called “Study in Europe” to promote the attractiveness of European Higher Education to students from other parts of the world.
more »
With the increasing availability of the internet, children are being exposed more and more to illicit images and content.
more »