288 Pages
    by Routledge

    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    This comprehensive textbook considers all of the key business, management and technical issues of e-Business, examining and explaining how technologies can help organizations in both the public and private sectors conduct business in new ways.

    After addressing the changing nature of the e-Economy and the impact of the dot.com 'bubble' of the late 1990s, Eckersley, Harris and Jackson go on to analyse key software developments and the impact these have had on organizational practices. They then outline the legal and ethical frameworks of e-Business, and consider how companies use various e-commerce tools to enter new markets. Finally, they trace the progress public sector organizations have made in adopting e-Business practice.

    This is an accessible, jargon-free and focused textbook that offers readers both a technical and managerial overview of the issues surrounding e-Business. It uses illustrative cases and discussion questions to help students and managers in organizations not only to familiarize themselves with e-Business but also to equip themselves with the skills to challenge and analyze the changing business environment.

    1. Introduction 2. The Business Environment for e-Commerce 3. e-Commerce Technology 4. Organisational Considerations for e-Business 5. Using Marketing Databases in e-Business 6. The Ethics Environment for e-Business 7. e-Business and the Law 8. e-Commerce: A Global Overview 9. e-Government

    Biography

    Paul Jackson is e-Government Forum Manager for the Institute of Public Finance.
    Lisa Harris is Lecturer in e-Business at Brunel University.
    Peter Eckersley is an e-Government Research Officer for the Institute of Public Finance.