Information Systems, 2002
The e-Business Challenge

IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology Series, Vol. 95

Coordinator: Traunmüller Roland

Language: English

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Information Systems
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258 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Paperback

Approximative price 105.49 €

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Information systems: the e-business challenge
Publication date:
258 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Paperback
Information Systems: The e-Business Challenge Indisputable, e-Business is shaping the future inspiring a growing range of innovative business models. To bring it to the point: the Internet has redefined the way electronic business is performed. In an electronic supported business all relationships are transformed -may it be a seller-to­ buyer relationship or a an agency-to-citizen relationship. So for instance in commerce new business models incorporate various activities: promoting and communicating company and product information to a global user base; accepting orders and payments for goods and services; providing ongoing customer support; getting feedback and spurring collaboration for a new product development. There are several ways of further differentiating e-Business such as sketching some diversions on various levels: e-Commerce, e-Government; B2C, B2B, B2G, G2C; Customer Relationship Management, Business Intelligence and so on. Further distinctions may follow divergent criteria such as separating in business stages. Thus particular problem domains emerge. They all state of its own guiding the development of adequate information systems.
Preface. Programme Committee. A Language Based Combined Requirements Engineering Approach; J. Barjis. Support Structure of Knowledge Management in Software Process Improvement; Wan Jiangping, et al. IT Failure and the Collapse of One.Tel; D. Avison, D. Wilson. Active Models for Digitally Enabled Creative Business Networks; J. Krogstie, et al. Modeling of e-Business Brokerage Systems Using UML and Petri Net; B. Shishkov, J. Barjis. Trust and Virtual Organizations; E. Rossen. Identifying Communities of Practice; K. O'Hara, et al. The Role Of Culture In the Development of Global E-Commerce Systems; J. Slay, G. Quirchmayr. Online One-Stop Government; M.A. Wimmer, E.Tambouris. Designing Collaborative Business Systems; I. Hawryszkiewycz. Video-based Customer Consulting via Internet Using Videoconferencing Standard H.323; U. Zschuckelt, et al. A System For Secure Mobile Payment Transactions; T. Halonen, T. Virtanen. A User Centred Website Development Approach; M. J. Taylor, et al. Designing a Web Application Using an Ethnographic Research Approach; N.C. Surendra. A Framework for Facilitating Higher-order Strategic Thinking in Online Management Development; P. Nicholson, G.White. An Evaluation of the Web Presence of a Nonprofit Organization; A. Abuhamdieh, et al. Auctions with Buyer Preferences; C. Bandela, et al. From Vision to Reality; J. Gunnarsson, G. Sigurdardóttir. Design: How Can We Cope with Change? R. Traunmüller. Index.
Roland Traunmüller is the head of the Institute for Applied Computer Science at the University of Linz, Austria. In 1990, Traunmüller established the working group "Information Systems in Public Administration" (WG8.5) within IFIP. Currently, he serves as deputy chairman of IFIP TC 8 "Information Systems" and as vice-president of the Austrian Computer Society (OCG), where he also founded a Forum e-Government in 2001.