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Will the magic last for business-to-business e-commerce? Companies in this market are the rage on Wall Street and among venture
capitalists. But analysts warn that despite the explosive growth of the
area, investors have a long, bumpy road ahead before expected profits will
materialize.
While this market is not as glamorous as business-to-consumer e-commerce--with household names such as Amazon.com and eBay--in sheer dollars it may soon dwarf its better-known cousin. The leading research firms have the business-to-business (B2B) market pegged between $2.7 trillion and $7.3 trillion by 2004 from about $131 billion in 1999. In comparison, Forrester Research projects business-to-consumer spending will reach $184.5 billion in 2004, up from $20.3 billion last year. Business-to-business ventures typically deal in nuts and bolts--literally--and other industrial and commercial items. Firms selling specialized software and offering online exchanges promise to drastically decrease the cost of doing business, thereby increasing profits and making new, more economically sound ventures possible. The sector is part of nearly every new business plan, analysts say.
Companies are springing up daily, and even old-line companies such as General
Motors, Ford Motor and Sears Roebuck are getting in on the action.
"In the past six months, the key magic word has been 'B2B,' with everyone including it their press releases and using it during conference calls with analysts. It can be pretty disgusting," said Darren Chervitz, a senior analyst at the $270 million Jacob Internet Fund, which launched in December. "There is no question that B2B is a huge opportunity across many industries, but it is not going to be as easy as flicking a switch." Most analysts agree that business-to-business will have a tremendous
effect on companies--from streamlining purchasing and accounting to selling
excess inventory--but many roadblocks exist that could conspire to slow
the juggernaut.
The model may be adopted more slowly than many companies expect because
of inevitable compatibility problems between company networks and the software
infrastructure available.
The rivalry between Commerce One and other software manufacturers makes sense, given the experience on the consumer side of e-commerce. For example: Once online auctioneer eBay reached critical mass in terms of the number of items available, most people began to turn to it for their auctioning needs. "As a buyer you always want to go to the place with the most sellers
because that is where you'll find the best selection," said Alan Mak, an
analyst at Argus Research. "You don't want to be conducting a whole slew
of electronic transactions over different marketplaces."
"Many corporations have an infrastructure for major purchases and sales
that is still human," Chervitz said. "Selling steel today, for example,
still involves taking people out to lunch, hitting the golf course--that
will not be an easy thing to forget."
Despite the potential potholes, even bearish analysts expect big results
from the sector.
Source: Sandeep Junnarkar, Staff Writer, CNET News.com, March 2, 2000 |
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