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Sustainable e-Business Management [electronic resource] : 16th Americas Conference on Information Systems, AMCIS 2010, SIGeBIZ track, Lima, Peru, August 12-15, 2010. Selected Papers / edited by Matthew L. Nelson, Michael J. Shaw, Troy J. Strader.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing ; 58Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010Description: VIII, 173p. 55 illus. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783642151415
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 650 23
LOC classification:
  • HF54.5-54.56
Online resources:
Contents:
e-Business Models and IS in Financial Markets -- Dynamic Revenue Model Design in the Online Services Business: Two Cases in Japan -- Pricing of Content Services – An Empirical Investigation of Music as a Service -- Informational Determinants of Customer Acquisition and eTailer Revenue -- Adoption of a Centralised Post-Trade Processing Market Infrastructure after the Credit Crisis -- The Impact of Information Technology on European Post-Trading -- e-Commerce Use and Design -- Privately Waiting – A Usability Analysis of the Tor Anonymity Network -- E-Commerce Readiness in Ethiopia: A Macro-Level Assessment -- Corporate Blogging Today – Usage and Characteristics -- Agent-Based Simulation for Evaluation of a Mobile Emergency Management System -- Using Ontologies in an E-Commerce Environment: Help or Hype? -- e-Business Research Issues and Methods -- B2B Electronic Marketplaces in Supply Chain Management: Analyzing Recent Research Activities -- Proximal Business Intelligence on the Semantic Web -- Disintermediation in the Tourism Industry: Theory vs. Practice.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: With high hopes that the worst of the financial crisis is now behind us, our efforts looking forward must be more vigilant. Change is constant in the electronic business management landscape and we must continue to look for organizational efficiencies, competitive strength, strategic differentiation and value creation in both int- organizational and collaborative settings. Seeking new and innovative application areas of information technology, in general, and e-business management solutions, in particular, while simultaneously critically evaluating and constantly challenging our own research contributions, methods and practices. It is for these reasons (and many more) that we are particularly excited about and grateful for the collection of papers included in this volume, LNBIP 58, on Sustainable e-Business Management. The papers selected in this volume address these emerging e-business issues and have been organized into three research lines: e-Business Models and IS in Financial Markets, e-Commerce Use and Design, and e-Business Research Issues and Methods. We are delighted to kick off the first group of papers e-Business Models and IS in Financial Markets with a study by Masao Kakihara of Yahoo Research in Japan, proposing a dynamic revenue model framework and design. This section also includes a fresh look into two pressing e-business areas with Doerr, Benlian, Vetter and Hess’s examination of content provider pricing of music as a service and Dutta and Menon’s interesting study of the determinants of customer acquisition and e-tailer revenue.
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e-Business Models and IS in Financial Markets -- Dynamic Revenue Model Design in the Online Services Business: Two Cases in Japan -- Pricing of Content Services – An Empirical Investigation of Music as a Service -- Informational Determinants of Customer Acquisition and eTailer Revenue -- Adoption of a Centralised Post-Trade Processing Market Infrastructure after the Credit Crisis -- The Impact of Information Technology on European Post-Trading -- e-Commerce Use and Design -- Privately Waiting – A Usability Analysis of the Tor Anonymity Network -- E-Commerce Readiness in Ethiopia: A Macro-Level Assessment -- Corporate Blogging Today – Usage and Characteristics -- Agent-Based Simulation for Evaluation of a Mobile Emergency Management System -- Using Ontologies in an E-Commerce Environment: Help or Hype? -- e-Business Research Issues and Methods -- B2B Electronic Marketplaces in Supply Chain Management: Analyzing Recent Research Activities -- Proximal Business Intelligence on the Semantic Web -- Disintermediation in the Tourism Industry: Theory vs. Practice.

With high hopes that the worst of the financial crisis is now behind us, our efforts looking forward must be more vigilant. Change is constant in the electronic business management landscape and we must continue to look for organizational efficiencies, competitive strength, strategic differentiation and value creation in both int- organizational and collaborative settings. Seeking new and innovative application areas of information technology, in general, and e-business management solutions, in particular, while simultaneously critically evaluating and constantly challenging our own research contributions, methods and practices. It is for these reasons (and many more) that we are particularly excited about and grateful for the collection of papers included in this volume, LNBIP 58, on Sustainable e-Business Management. The papers selected in this volume address these emerging e-business issues and have been organized into three research lines: e-Business Models and IS in Financial Markets, e-Commerce Use and Design, and e-Business Research Issues and Methods. We are delighted to kick off the first group of papers e-Business Models and IS in Financial Markets with a study by Masao Kakihara of Yahoo Research in Japan, proposing a dynamic revenue model framework and design. This section also includes a fresh look into two pressing e-business areas with Doerr, Benlian, Vetter and Hess’s examination of content provider pricing of music as a service and Dutta and Menon’s interesting study of the determinants of customer acquisition and e-tailer revenue.

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