Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Effects of Ecommerce on the Supply Chain. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 12 page paper discussing how ecommerce can be expected to affect relationships between organizations in the supply chain. No single organization relying on ecommerce to streamline its supply chain can succeed without achieving and maintaining close working relations and a significant level of trust with its “business partners,” those organizations with which it chooses to trust a measure of its own success. In this perspective, the ultimate effect of e-business on organizational relationships is that of significant strengthening. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSsupChEcom.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Getting materials from one point to another has always been a primary business activity, although one formerly not given a great deal of attention. All of business has changed
today - some aspects have changed in philosophy; others have been affected by technologies that were not available in former years. One aspect of todays business environment is that
it is more competitive than ever before, and that hypercompetitiveness continues to expand at a pace that no one expects to lessen. The
final form of e-business likely will not be that which was envisioned in the early days of the Internet. That is not to say that the Internet will not
be of as great of importance as true believers have claimed during recent years; it only means that the final form likely will one that has not yet fully emerged.
It already has had an effect on relationships between companies, and the changes are likely to continue for some time. The
Internets Effect on Business In principle, nothing about e-business has changed basic business principles or the basics of marketing. Any new business
in the past was charged with identifying a target market and then seeking to attract and then retain customers in that market. Many of the dot-coms that came into
being and have now gone on sought to violate the laws of marketing, customer service and product quality. Those dot-coms that no longer
exist bear many similarities to the Detroit automakers of the late 1970s. American automakers gave the American car-buying public only large, heavy and fuel inefficient vehicles that often lacked
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