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Companies Spending
Big Bucks to Move Markets Online
Companies will spend
an estimated $5.4 million to $22.9 million each to
integrate into online markets over the next five years,
according to a report by Forrester
Research. The result will be big business generation
for e-marketplace vendors while putting cost performance
pressures on Net markets themselves.
"E-marketplaces
offer significant opportunities for buyers to lower
prices and streamline buying processes, but those
savings require a significant investment," said
Matthew Sanders, analyst at Forrester. "Companies
can make the most out of these outlays by documenting
workflows, leveraging their integration efforts and
pushing their purchases online."
The promise of
lowering the cost of goods entices buyers, but in order
to capture the benefits, purchasing organizations will
need to invest heavily in four areas: 1) changing
internal procurement processes; 2) integrating
e-marketplaces within internal systems; 3) purchasing
B2B applications; and 4) paying e-marketplace
transaction fees. These costs, however, won't be the
same for all implementations.
According to
Forrester, buyers getting started with e-marketplace
buying will seek to trim transaction costs associated
with processing purchase orders for maintenance, repair
and operations (MRO) goods. The price tag for these
baseline buyers is around $5.6 million, and it will be
driven by a combination of transaction fees, integration
software and internal staffing.
Spot market dabblers,
those purchasing executives who will use e-marketplaces
to make spot purchases for their direct materials will
spend $10.7 million in order to help manage costly
inventories and avoid shortfalls. Forrester says these
buyers will pay the most for new software installation
and related consultant fees.
Enterprise enablers
will spend $22.9 million. They will use e-marketplaces
to manage all of their contracts for all of their
indirect and direct materials purchases. For these
aggressive buyers, significant costs will come from the
large consulting teams needed to implement this complex
approach.
Based on these online
buying activities, Forrester also projects that
e-procurement consulting projects for e-commerce
integrators like PricewaterhouseCoopers will swell to
$3.2 billion in five years.
"On average,
firms expect their online buying efforts to save 4
percent this year, doubling to 8 percent by 2003. But
these buyers aren't blindly enthusiastic," Sanders
said. "More than half of the purchasing executives
we interviewed acknowledge that in-house adoption
hurdles like user-level resistance might delay their
savings."
Research by International
Data Corp. (IDC) found that worldwide e-marketplace
services spending will increase at a compound annual
growth rate of 27 percent, from $5.2 billion in 2000 to
$17 billion in 2005.
"The demand for
a full range of consulting, implementation and operation
services has driven stunning growth for e-marketplace
services," said Leo Lipis, senior analyst for IDC's
eMarketplace Services program. "Moving forward, the
greatest opportunities for e-marketplace service firms
will be in integrating participants' internal systems
with those of the e-marketplace."
By 2005, IDC found,
more than 50 percent of the opportunity in the
e-marketplace services market will come from
participants in e-marketplaces, whereas nearly 85
percent of the revenue is currently coming from
e-marketplaces.
"E-Marketplace
service firms would be well served to develop preferred
integrator relationships with e-marketplaces and to
increase their marketing activities directed at
e-marketplace participants," Lipis said.
According to IDC, the
explosive growth in e-marketplace services in North
America has reached its peak. However, other regions
will compensate for this slowdown. Western Europe and
Asia/Pacific, for example, represent the greatest growth
opportunity for e-marketplace services spending during
the forecast.
Courtesy of Cyber
Atlas
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