The CITY.ZA Network - Richard Byrom
Managing Electronic Commerce: Assignment 2
The CITY.ZA Network
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|Code for Course: |MBL 426-B |
|Assignment Number: |02 |
|Name: |Richard Byrom |
|Student number: |750-163-3 |
|Group Code Number: |BOT1000 |
Table of Contents
Assignment task 4
Introduction 4
Portal Overview 6
Generation 1 6
Generation 2 6
Generation 3 6
Generation 4 6
Analysis of the business plan 8
1. Articulate the business strategy 8
a. Framing the Market Opportunity 8
b. Determining the appropriate business model 11
c. Customer Interface 12
d. Market Communications and branding 13
e. Implementation 13
2. Translate strategy into desired outcome and devise metrics 15
a. Market Opportunity 15
b. Business Model 17
c. Customer interface and outcomes 17
d. Branding and Implementation 18
e. Financial 18
Evaluation of Pros and Cons 19
Pros 19
Cons 19
Recommendations for improvement 21
Analysis of the Budget for Income and Expenditure 23
Expectations 23
Findings 24
Revised Budget 25
Non – monetary indicators/metrics 25
Financial Indicators 26
a. Detailed Sales/ Cost of Sales and Payroll 26
b. Summary Profit and Loss 27
Bibliography 28
Table of Figures
Figure 1: Evolution of Portals (Source: Sood, R. 2001. Portals and Branding. GartnerGroup. Available from: Accessed [29 July 2002]) 7
Figure 2: A framework for electronic commerce (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001: 18) 8
Figure 3: Framework for Market Opportunity (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001: 27) 9
Figure 4: Customer Interface (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001: 17) 12
Figure 5: Market space evolution and need for continuous improvement (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001: 215) 14
Assignment task
Read the business case of the CITY.ZA network. Analyse every aspect of the business plan, from strategy to finance to the business model to the implementation of strategy. Evaluate the pros and cons of the Business Plan and give recommendations for improvement. Analyse the Budgets for both income and expenditure. Provide your own budget based on the knowledge you have gathered thus far.
Introduction
The word portal means gateway and portals are really information gateways. They open doors to organisations and people. According to the Net and Digital Media Measurement firm Media Matrix Inc., seven of the top ten most heavily trafficked Web properties are portals[1]. This emphasizes their importance in our newly wired world. The idea is to offer everything that a surfer needs under one roof so that the surfer is trapped forever. As more users become trapped, this in turn generates more advertising revenue[2].
Since the possession of knowledge and information translates into capabilities and profits the primary goal of management today is to discover relevant information and knowledge in a timely manner and convert it into a competitive advantage[3]. One way of achieving this is via a Portal. The enterprise portal is one of today’s corporate certainties, a software market that will have grown from $30 million in 1998 toward US$1.75 billion in license revenue by 2005, according to the Gartner Group[4].
The CITY.ZA network is effectively a community Portal that incorporates B2B and B2C principles. It is aimed at vertical, horizontal and diagonal market segments. In terms of portal development it can be classified as a generation 4 portal as seen in figure 1. It contains elements of the services shown in all generations mentioned in the diagram but still has plenty of room for growth as service offerings can be extended when new generations introduce new functionality and capability.
I used the Performance Dashboard and Framework for Electronic Commerce [5] to analyse the multi-media strategy and implementation from the articulation of the business strategy to the calculation of current and target performance. This includes market opportunity analysis, the business model, customer interface, branding and market communications and implementation.
My conclusion is that CITY.ZA has implemented a sound business model with strong market communications and branding. The customer interface is particularly strong as it offers a number of integration options to the customer and also ensures that retrieval options can be customised to the particular user. Implementation capability is high due to a strong delivery system, however ways to innovate need to be established. Access to the site is enhanced via a number of different mediums, namely Internet, phone and traditional media. Introducing a transaction-based model can increase the number of different revenue streams. A more detailed look needs to be taken at the budget and implementation plans together with how these should be linked together. CITY.ZA has early on identified the key to the success of the project which is developing strategic partnerships and alliances. It’s first mover advantage should contribute considerably to it’s success and this advantage should be sustained by developing long terms contracts with all parties in the supply chain.
Portal Overview
A portal provides a single point of personalized online access to business information and knowledge sources. Their central goal remains to filter and provide relevant information to the users of portals. They are about customisation (push), making timely, useful data available to the user community; and personalisation (pull), allowing users to filter information in a way that improves their satisfaction and productivity[6].
A Portals main strategy should be to: -
1. Accumulate as many visitors as possible.
2. Keep visitors their for as long as possible[7].
In the portal arena the name of the game is market share. The more users, the more money from advertising. Factors that influence successful execution of the portal strategy include: -
❑ Access route.
❑ Strategic Alliance.
❑ Content Route – content driven portals need to invest heavily in brand building.
❑ Alternative content route.
❑ General versus Specialised portals.
In terms of the progression of portals a number of generations can be recognized as shown in figure 1.
Generation 1
Homepage on steroids with basis searching capabilities
Generation 2
Introduced more of a customer focus, also contained links to other sites
Generation 3
A more integrated approach was adopted. B2E portals began to develop as well as support for collaboration like E-mail and chat.
Generation 4
Adds features like contextual personalization, "So I can personalize the context of the interaction, not just the role of the user," says Pfifer. Other new features coming to market include better process integration, cascading portals, (portals within portals), federated portals, (multiple portals working in concert), knowledge management, e-learning, shared team spaces and proactive notification of problems and offline support.
Figure 1: Evolution of Portals (Source: Sood, R. 2001. Portals and Branding. GartnerGroup. Available from: Accessed [29 July 2002])
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The key to portal power lies in two powerful capabilities. The first is as an information consolidator for data, applications, and geographies that speeds access to information and enables organisations to put new work processes into play. The second is a contextualiser - a technology, finally, puts data into actionable form specific to the goals of your corporation[8]. Some basis services that should be provided by a portal are: -
❑ Management of heterogeneous databases
❑ Structured Access
❑ Customised interfaces.
❑ Collaborative Working
❑ Multi Level security
❑ High Levels of Currency
❑ Future Proof[9].
No matter what the goals, the key to a successful portal is to offer an oasis of organization within the tangled web[10].
Analysis of the business plan
The Performance Dashboard and the framework for electronic commerce will be used in the evaluation of the business plan.
The Performance Dashboard consists of five steps: -
1. Articulate Business Strategy
a. Market Opportunity Analysis: Framing the market opportunity.
b. Determining the appropriate Business Model.
c. Customer Interface Design.
d. Branding and market communications.
e. Implementation
f. Evaluation (ties in with steps 2 and 3 mentioned below)
Theses stages of step one form the six interrelated, sequential decisions of the Framework for Electronic Commerce as seen below in figure 1.
Figure 2: A framework for electronic commerce (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001: 18)
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2. Translate Strategy Into Desired Outcomes
3. Devise Metrics
4. Link Metrics To Leading And Lagging Indicators (catered for under the analysis of the budget and provision of new budget)
5. Calculate Current and Target Performance Indicators (catered for under the analysis of the budget and provision of new budget)
1. Articulate the business strategy
This corresponds with the six stages of the framework for electronic commerce as in fig. 1 above.
Framing the Market Opportunity
Any firm (according to the framework – see figure 2) should satisfy five conditions to determine the financial, technological and competitive attractiveness before going into an industry: Seed opportunity in existing or new value system[11], identify unmet or underserved needs (the opportunity nucleus), identify the target segment, declare the company’s resource-based opportunity for advantage, assess competitive, technological and financial opportunity attractiveness and make a “Go/No Go” assessment.
Figure 3: Framework for Market Opportunity (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001: 27)
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Value System
CITY.ZA will unlock trapped value they will do this firstly by creating more efficient markets in the sense that will be improving customers and suppliers coming together. Secondly they are creating more efficient value systems by compressing or eliminating steps in the current system. The speed at which buyers and suppliers come together should be enhanced by this system. Thirdly ease of access is promoted by using multiple media channels in which access to CITY.ZA can be obtained, namely, telephone, Internet, newspaper and CD-ROM. Lastly they will definitely disrupt current pricing power. The simple fact that customers will be able to search a wide variety of sites means that they will be able to compare prices amongst a larger number of suppliers than before. This should effectively drive prices down.
CITY.ZA will also create new value by firstly customising their offerings both to suppliers and customers. Persons gaining exposure on CITY.ZA can choose the level of exposure that they want and persons searching for products to purchase can customise their searches. Secondly they radically extend reach and access by extending the boundaries of existing markets. Thirdly they are building a virtual community that is centered around a bricks and mortar community as well as enabling collaboration amongst multiple people, locations and time by bringing the offering to the internet as well as ensuring that traditional media forms. Lastly they are introducing new to the world functionality and experience as this project is one never seen before in South Africa.
Unmet or undeserved needs (the opportunity nucleus)
This usually entails asking yourself a number of questions about your customers or actually surveying the potential customers and then establishing their needs. There is no evidence in the case that there has been any market analysis conducted. It looks as though the need has been assumed based on other similar offerings available in the market.
Target Segments
We need to determine what target segment CITY.ZA caters for by looking at their demographics[12], geography[13], behavioural[14], psychographics[15], benefits[16], beliefs and attitudes[17]. According to the case the target markets can be identified as: -
• Horizontal markets – all players in all industries
• Vertical markets – specific industries
• Diagonal markets – specific players in specific industries
• Municipalities
Therefore the market is segmented based on industry and geographic lines with the aim of reaching 1,200 domains within South Africa.
Resource based opportunity for advantage.
At a company level I believe that the resource that CITY.ZA offers is exposure to varying degrees for its customers. These levels of exposure can be leveraged in such a way that buyers on the domain can also view or sort their information according to these levels of exposure. The levels of exposure provided by CITY.ZA are: -
• Local exposure
• Regional exposure
• Provincial exposure
• National exposure
• International exposure
In terms of partnerships the company is successfully partnering with other portals to enhance exposure to a national and international level.
Assess Competitive, Technological and Financial Opportunity Attractiveness
CITY.ZA is one of the first initiatives of this type within South Africa. Although there are other portals in existence this is the only one that provides such a high level of exposure for potential users. Certainly at regional, local, provincial and municipal level there is a lot of white space. By partnering with other portals at national and international level CITY.ZA has effectively made sure that it is not competing in the market space. In appropriately segmenting the market, CITY.ZA has effectively reduced the level of competitive intensity it will experience at the outset. However, this does not prevent other competitors from entering the market place and therefore, appropriate barriers to entry for other competitors to enter the market need to be built.
The level’s of technology adoption in South Africa are sufficient to ensure success of their strategy. Where technology adoption is not high CITY.ZA has also put in place measures to deal with the non-technology aspects such as using newspapers and CD-ROMs. The continued deregulation of the telecoms industry in South Africa should also ensure that customers which were previously unreachable can now be attracted. This deregulation should also enable improved growth in the telecoms infrastructure which forms the backbone of the internet upon which CITY.ZA’s strategy is built.
The market size is very large with a potential customer base of eleven million by 2005. This is as a result of the market space being in all geographical regions. Although profitability should initially be low due to high costs and slow customer adoption all signals indicate that the margins should be very high once a large customer base has been established.
Make go/no-go assessment
Based on the assessments made above it is clear that CITY.ZA has a unique offering with massive potential to create new markets by ensuring that each person or company can be a given any level of exposure they require.
Determining the appropriate business model
“The New Economy business model requires four choices on the part of senior management that include the specification of (1) a value proposition or a value cluster for targeted customers, (2) a market space offering – which could be a product, service, information or all three, (3) a unique, defendable resource system, and (4) a financial model.” “Construction of a value proposition requires management to specify the following three items: (1) Choice of target segment, (2) choice of focal customer benefits, and (3) rationale why the firm can deliver the benefit package significantly better than competitors in the same space[18].”
CITY.ZA falls into Business-to-Business (B2B) and Business to Consumer (B2C) category by giving customers exposure at provincial, regional, local, national and international level so that they can compete in the vertical, horizontal, diagonal and municipal market space. CITY.ZA also ensures that they maximise the value of their business model by providing a variety of different channels to access their network, namely Internet, Phone (mobile and land), Newspaper, CD-ROM and call centres. The revenue model used is an advertising and subscription based model. There is also potential to include a transaction-based model.
Customer Interface
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Figure 4: Customer Interface (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001: 17)
Fit refers to the extent to which each of the 7Cs (context[19], content[20], community[21], customisation[22], communication[23], connection[24] and commerce[25]) individually supports the business model (see figure 5). Reinforcement refers to the degree of consistency between each of the Cs[26].
The CITY.ZA site is structured in such a way that it superbly supports the business model and also interacts with the various access channels. Customers wanting exposure are provided with a variety of options and integrated offerings for coming on line. These options ensure that the site maintains it’s structure and that hosted sites are not arbitrarily integrated into the CITY.ZA infrastructure.
The establishment of such standards ensures data integrity and allows for a better interface to be built. The site structure also supports a high level of customisation in terms of such services as searches. One can search the site using a variety of different parameters and categories. It is also clear from the site appearance whether all functionality is operable or not e.g. whether electronic payments are enabled for a particular supplier.
The site also makes use of appropriate aesthetics such as maps to indicate its emphasis in the geographical infrastructure that it employs.
Market Communications[27] and branding[28]
The marketing of the service provided by CITY.ZA is cleverly linked to the distribution of their services. i.e. when distributing the service they are effectively marketing. This means that there is a direct relationship between the distribution and marketing of the service. Therefore, when the distribution of the service grows so does the marketing reach. CITY.ZA uses a combination of three of the four types of marketing communications, namely traditional mass marketing, direct and general online. At this stage their most powerful marketing mechanism are the agents. In future I believe that personalised marketing will be a viable option as users will most likely have the ability to customise their web site when retrieving the information they require.
I believe that the CITY.ZA brand is very powerful for two reasons, firstly, the name and secondly, the wide array of services attached to their initial service offering.
The brand is immediately established in a persons mind just by the name CITY.ZA. The name automatically implies that it has something to do with cities in South Africa. The key elements of a brand namely differentiation, relevance and perceived value can all be rated as high at the time of doing this study.
Implementation
This is really important to CITY.ZA since the idea is good, but many good ideas fail or never come to fruition through lack of implementation. It is also important to CITY.ZA to implement very quickly so that they obtain a first mover advantage. The implementation process can be divided into two phases as displayed in fig.5. First, the firm is concerned with the delivery of the offering or delivery system[29]. In the second phase, the firm is concerned with the extent to which the offerings and infrastructures are modified to fit the evolution of the market or the innovation process. CITY.ZA’s delivery system is extremely effective simply because it uses an already existing infrastructure of people and is well integrated in that it utilizes online and offline resources. The obvious advantage here is that all the costs and disadvantages of setting up distribution channels are avoided. Particularly in this instance the idea works well because there are so many different areas of distribution that it would be impossible for CITY.ZA to maintain an effective distribution system if they kept it in house. The systematic approach for bringing new customers on line and integrating them into existing structures is also well thought out. There are a number of different offerings available to a customer as to how they can join CITY.ZA which should enhance the chances of the organisation gaining new customers.
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Figure 5: Market space evolution and need for continuous improvement (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001: 215)
Although I am sure CITY.ZA will continue to innovate the business plan does not specifically say what procedures will be put in place to ensure that they do. One small way of doing this would be to put into place structures and procedures that will ensure the data and information collected on the site is used in a way that it continues to enhance the service offerings offered by the organisation. An analogy is that of . The value that this site delivers is not in selling books but is rather how they leverage their huge database of information to ensure that the shopping experience is fast and convenient. The same can be said of CITY.ZA. They need to appropriately leverage the information that the have access to and deliver new offerings to customers based on this information
In this particular instance it is difficult to tell whether the actual implementation has been successful as there is only a high level project plan and this does not indicate actual vs. budget for resource and cost. Certainly the implementation strategy is sound, however, it’s just not clear at this stage whether the implementation can be regarded as successful.
Translate strategy into desired outcome and devise metrics
The metrics that should be evaluated relate to opportunity, business model, customer interface and outcomes, branding and implementation, and financial. I will establish possible future metrics as well as current metrics. Whether these metrics can be measured within the South African context was not considered.
Market Opportunity
Opportunity (within South Africa)
# of web sites and type.
Average # of pages per web site.
# of hosted sites by type and by host.
Average number of pages per hosted site by host
# of portals.
Total population
Of total population how many have internet access, how many have phones, how many can be accessed by traditional media.
Total number of organisations/businesses
Of total number of organisations/businesses how many have internet access, how many have phones, how many can be accessed by traditional media.
How all of the above change annually
Target Segment
# of industries within vertical markets
Potential number of diagonal markets
# of people/organisations within horizontal market.
# of municipalities
Within all the segments above should identify: -
❑ # of web sites
❑ # of portals
❑ How many of these people/organisations have phones, internet access or can be reached via traditional media.
❑ What our market share is
❑ How these numbers change annually
Resource Based
# of national domains and people/organisations within this domain
# of provincial domains and people/organisations within this domain
# of regional domains and people/organisations within this domain
# of local domains and people/organisations within this domain
Within all the segments above should identify: -
❑ # of web sites
❑ # of portals
❑ How many of these people/organisations have phones, internet access or can be reached via traditional media.
❑ What our market share is
❑ How these numbers change annually
Financial attractiveness
% of customers in target segment versus other segments
% of customers in target areas versus other areas
Intensity of competition
# of competitors at local, regional, national and municipal level and their market share
# of competitors in vertical, horizontal and diagonal markets and their market share
Rate of competitors entering and leaving the market
Business Model
Perceive value proposition versus competition.
# of competitors offering any combination of CITY.ZA’s benefits
Customer’s perception of CITY.ZA’s performance versus the competition.
Users perception of CITY.ZA’s performance versus the competition.
Advertisers perception of CITY.ZA’s performance versus the competition.
Attractiveness of offer versus competition
Importance to target customers of innovative products, high quality information, service and low price.
Extent to which customers perceived that CITY.ZA was outperforming competition on the stages of the customer decision process.
Extent to which site’s products, services and information were viewed as superior to the competition.
# of web sites on which customers will be exposed as opposed to competition.
Capabilities and partnerships versus competition
Money invested in technology relative to competition.
Customer brand awareness relative to competition.
Number of distribution channels relative to competition (this includes agents).
Number of strategic alliances relative to competition.
Sustainability of value proposition versus competition.
Exclusivity and length of partnership agreements
Number of remaining duration of patents held for offered products and services.
Average switching costs for customers.
Customer interface and outcomes
Effectiveness and efficiency of customer acquisition
Customer Acquisition costs
Money spent on marketing (percent offline and online)
Churn (turnover between competing sites)
Level of integration of commercial information into website.
Number of clients drawn into deeper levels of involvement through web site
Transition of customers online
Number of transactions per year by transaction type, by area and by market
% of CITY.ZA customers using both online and offline offerings compared to just offline.
Perception of online customer experience
Customer valuation of the 7C’s versus competition.
Site usability metrics (number of users, page views, average time spent per person etc.)
Number of occurrences of critical failures.
% of click through’s on banners or advertisements
sell through rate
Satisfaction and loyalty of customers versus competition.
Overall customer satisfaction relative to competition
Score on key attributes (quality of information, price, reliability and quality of service)
Percent of return advertisers and web users.
Branding and Implementation
Brand perception in the market
Customer unprompted brand awareness
Customer associations with the CITY.ZA brand.
Customer perceptions of CITY.ZA brand
IT Infrastructure
Trade capacity to volume ratios.
Number of possible simultaneous web sessions that the system can handle
Uptime of system (versus competition)
Cutover time (time to route information between all the servers)
Number of security breaches.
Organisation
Average time to respond to and solve problem
Advertising sell-out ratio (compared to competitors)
Number/type of advertiser compared to competitors
Advertiser attrition in comparison to competitors.
Advertiser growth in comparison to competitors
Advertiser rate trends
Advertising contract length
Financial
Outperforming competition in financial metrics
Revenue (total revenue and total growth, revenue breakdown by area by market)
Profit (total profit and profit growth)
Cost (total cost, cost per advertising transaction, cost per impression on web)
Gross margin trends
Sales/marketing expense per incremental customer and against revenue ratio
Evaluation of Pros and Cons
Pros
❑ Offers high levels of exposure this will tend to attract more customers.
❑ Strategic alliances – “without a strong network of alliances, no portal can survive[30]”
❑ Brand reflects portal capabilities.
❑ Longevity
❑ First Mover Advantage.
❑ Exceptional distribution channel. Makes use of existing distributions infrastructures
❑ Wide array of service offerings.
❑ Benefits of the business case were comprehensively listed. Revenue generating examples were well documented.
❑ The target audience in terms of markets was well defined.
❑ The various geographical areas in which CITY.ZA have been well defined and care has been taken not to compete in market space that is already well occupied like accommodation and tenders
❑ Having multiple access channels to CITY.ZA i.e. phone, internet and traditional media.
❑ Providing a wide variety of offerings for bringing customers online.
❑ Components and players within the value chain were well identified and a comprehensive solution was created. This looked at suppliers, potential partners, consumer interest and the integration of all the above.
❑ Good web site architecture allows users to customise their retrieval options in a variety of ways.
Cons
❑ Integration effort underestimated - Integration is the Holy Grail of e-business. In generating a single view of customers and suppliers, the portal will become a centerpiece." IBM's own hope is that customers will increasingly choose portals from application infrastructure specialists (the ranks of which include IBM rival BEA Systems) over products from pure-play portal companies[31]. There is very little mention of how the integration with other portals will be handled as well as between different systems.
❑ Software architecture not clearly defined. There are a number of different solutions which CITY.ZA can go for. Firstly the decision must be made whether to build or buy, here there are a number of different options which need to be considered. In South Africa it may work out cheaper to build as the cost of labour can work out cheaper than the cost of software (which is mostly priced in $US). In most instances nowadays packaged solutions are preferred. Portal software packages generally fall into one of the four following categories: digital dashboard, pure-play, application, or infrastructure portals. A digital dashboard portal package creates a centralized starting point for various applications and provide a summary of information pertaining to those applications, just as a car's dashboard provides centralized access to summarized information about various aspects of the car's critical details. A pure-play portal package concentrates on creating a portable interface for a specific portal offering across multiple platforms. Pure-play provides more functionality than the digital dashboard in a centralized access point for various business productivity applications, such as e-mail, collaboration tools, and resource planning tools. An application portal package includes a wide variety of tools - such as workgroup software - that have been adapted to go with a portal interface. Most common applications now fall into this category, since most are built to work in a portal environment. An infrastructure portal package is similar to a pure-play package, but is specifically geared towards technologies developed within the company rather than towards portability; for example, Oracle's portal product is geared toward Oracle technologies. My personal recommendation would be to choose a pure play solution, as this is more open. It can sit on any particular platform and this should also ease integration efforts.
❑ Hardware architecture not well outlined and should be linked to the software infrastructure that is chosen.
❑ Technology architecture not based on open standards – the database of choice is SQL server. This runs ONLY on Windows NT. Both of these systems are proprietary and do not support open standards, secondly their total cost of ownership is high. A more appropriate database to choose, for example, is Oracle or an open source database as these can run on any platform. Once an open standards database is chosen the software sitting on top of those databases should also support open standards.
❑ Insufficient assessment of existing hardware, software and technology infrastructures used by the existing players in the market. This may hamper integration efforts.
❑ Legal, ethical and tax issues do not appear to have been addressed. Legal needs to be considered from the point of view that there are bound to be lots of contractual agreements taking place.
❑ Does not have an appropriate culture and language strategy in order to extend the reach of the portal this will be essential – this is especially the case in South Africa where there are a number of different cultures and official languages.
❑ No market analysis has been conducted to assess the demand for this portal and what customers really want.
❑ Measures to continually innovate have not been outlined. As part of the implementation it is essential to identify how the organisation will continually innovate so that they can introduce new products and services and come up with better ways of running the organisation.
❑ Implementation project plan is high level and does not contain enough detail.
❑ No effort to assess the volume of transactions that will be traded through the portal and the associated impact on hardware, software and technology infrastructure.
❑ No performance metrics have been identified which means it will be hard to assess whether the site has been a success or not.
❑ Revenue model is too simplistic, it only includes the option to make revenue based on subscriptions and advertising revenue. Another possible revenue channel is based on transaction volumes
Recommendations for improvement
Successful portals are built on brands, scale, scalability, technology and crucially, quality content[32]. The two most common portal pitfalls are lack of user acceptance and lack of supporting infrastructure[33]. During 2002/03, the emphasis on ROI will cause the biggest pitfall to be cancellation of portal projects/expansions due to failure to prove business value, rather than their technical failure. By 2004, inappropriate product choices will become apparent, as many B2E portals fail to gain traction among employees and are deemed unable to handle B2C duties. Through 2007, the overall portal failure rate will decrease to 10% (from an estimated 30% in 2001) due to maturity of products and dissemination of best practices[34].
Based on these comments and the pros and cons mentioned above my recommendations are as follows: -
|Action |Reason |Impact on CITY.ZA and other comments |
|Build Barriers to entry |This will help maintain and sustain the |The best way to do this is via contracts. |
| |competitive advantage of CITY.ZA |CITY.ZA should contract with |
| | |municipalities, ISP’s and Asp’s. They |
| | |should also try and lock customers into |
| | |contracts to prevent switching. Contracts |
| | |should also be negotiated with advertisers |
| | |so as to ensure long terms revenue streams.|
|Improve Collaboration services by providing|Enhances sense of community |This should give users a good reason to |
|e-mail and chat | |also return to the site. |
|Create a membership function |Improves tracking of users |This will enable better measurement of |
| | |activities on the web site and enhance |
| | |CITY.ZA’s use of personal advertising which|
| | |is currently a weakness. |
|Partner with the world or other city |This will extend CITY.ZA’s reach and will |New revenue streams will be built and |
|domains |also ensure that it is part of a greater |improves chances of obtaining new |
| |network. |customers. Also enhances existing customers|
| | |levels of exposure. |
|Establish a set of performance metrics |To establish whether the portal has been a |Will be clear to stakeholders what is |
| |success. |needed to achieve success. |
|Develop a more detailed project plan and |Will be able to better manage the |RSG could have used the Systems Development|
|ensure usability testing is included |implementation. Usability testing should to|Life Cycle (SDLC)[35] or prototyping[36] to|
| |some extent counter one of the main |develop the new system or systems. The |
| |pitfalls which is lack of user acceptance. |SDLC consists of system investigation, |
| | |systems analysis, systems design (including|
| | |feasibility analysis[37]), systems |
| | |implementation and systems maintenance and |
| | |review |
|Sell CITY.ZA’s data |The organisation will have large volumes of|Additional revenue stream and improved |
| |data that has been organised at their |analysis of what is actually going on in |
| |disposal |the company. |
|Conduct an infrastructure impact assessment|To counter one of the most common portal |This will ensure that all the appropriate |
| |pitfalls being lack of supporting |hardware, software and technology |
| |infrastructure |infrastructures are put in place. |
|Conduct a market and industry analysis |To counter one of the most common portal |The market analysis should increase the |
| |pitfalls which is lack of user acceptance |awareness of the types of products and |
| | |services that need to be delivered to our |
| | |customers. The industry analysis will |
| | |amongst other things enhance integration |
| | |efforts as well as give an indication of |
| | |what volume of transactions can reasonably |
| | |be expected |
|Develop a revenue model for transactions |Since transactions will be going through |New revenue stream with huge profit |
|going through CITY.Za |this site this will potentially increase |potential if managed carefully. |
| |the costs involved in managing these | |
| |transactions and therefore revenue should | |
| |be earned to cover these costs. | |
Analysis of the Budget for Income and Expenditure
Expectations
My expectations for a project of this nature are as follows: -
❑ Low initial sales with a large increase in the first years – expectation met.
❑ High initial costs that eventually come down as the years progress – expectation met.
❑ High initial software cost followed by an annual licensing charge on software purchased – expectation not met.
❑ High initial hardware cost followed by a maintenance/depreciation charge on this hardware – expectation was not met. Initial hardware investment appears to be low and there is no maintenance component on this.
❑ Revenue should be calculated from all the different revenue streams mentioned to date mainly subscription/hosting fees and advertising – expectation not met.
❑ High initial integration costs followed by a maintenance charge – expectation partially met. There does not appear to be a huge initial investment cost in integration. There is only an annual maintenance cost of two integration specialists.
❑ Heavy initial investment in advertising/marketing which should become a more stable value over time – Expectation met
Findings
❑ Budget not appropriately linked to any project plan with appropriate phases through the years.
❑ Revenue stream is to simplistic, should include more detail on this.
❑ Revenue bears no relation to growth in customers.
❑ Relationship between Costs of sales and revenue is not clear i.e. does cost of sales contain a large fixed or variable component? Does cost of sales increase in relationship to sales and transactions/no. of customers or does it remain stable over time?
❑ Initial hardware investment is too small for such a large project.
❑ No estimation of potential income and costs from the different markets and areas
❑ Integration costs underestimated. No effort has been made to put an appropriate cost to the level of integration required.
❑ Staff costs do not indicate break up between contract staff and full time equivalents (FTE) although it looks like most are FTE. However, I would expect that there is some contract work involved.
❑ Very few non-monetary indicators – specifically what are the expected volumes of transactions that we anticipate will be generated through the site. Secondly no mention of no. of advertisers, advertising contracts
❑ No industry assessment of what ratios can be expected in terms of GP% and in terms of the cost relationships i.e. what % of our total costs should be advertising, what % should be administrative and so on. The industry assessment should also include expected averages in terms of staff costs for the different areas, namely admin, integration etc.
❑ No relationship between costs and number of transactions – one would expect costs to rise with an increase in the number of transactions and customers as the cost of managing all this information increases.
❑ No indication of how payroll burden is determined as well as creditors in cash flow.
❑ No assessment of cost of outsourcing as opposed to running the operation in house was performed. In assessing this one must look at what organisations core competencies are. Those competencies which are core should be maintained in house whilst the remaining competencies should be outsourced.
❑ Negative tax charge incurred in first two years. This is not possible unless it is to do with tax allowances.
Revised Budget
Non – monetary indicators/metrics
Financial Indicators
Detailed Sales/ Cost of Sales and Payroll
Summary Profit and Loss
Bibliography
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[1] Rao, 2001: 326
[2] Rao, 2001: 326
[3] Kotorov, R and Hsu, E. 2001: 86
[4] Ericson, J. 2001. The Portal Comes of Age. Line56. Available from: Accessed [29 July 2002]
[5] Rayport, JF. and Jaworski, BJ. 2001. e-COMMERCE. Singapore: McGraw-Hill Book Co.
[6] Ericson, J. 2002. PortalCulture. Line56. Available from: Accessed [29 July 2002]
[7] Ledbetter, 1999: 22.
[8] Caruso, 2000: 36.
[9] White, 2000: 357
[10] Rao, 2001: 326
[11] Value System: An interconnection of processes and activities within and among firms that create benefits for intermediaries and end consumers. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 419)
[12] Demographics: Groupings by age, gender, occupation, ethnicity, income, family status, life stage, Internet connectivity, and browser type. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 40)
[13] Geography: Country/Region/City, city size, density (urban, suburban, rural), ISP domain, etc. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 40)
[14] Behavioural: Online shopping behaviour, offline shopping behaviour, web-page/site visited, website loyalty, prior purchases, site, etc. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 40)
[15] Psychographics: Lifestyle (thrill seekers, fun lovers, recluses), personality (laid-back, Type A, risk takers), affinity (community builders, belongers, outcasts). (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 40)
[16] Benefits: Convenience, economy, quality, ease of use, speed, information, selection. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 40)
[17] Beliefs and attitudes: Brand beliefs (New economy, old fashioned), attitudes towards the category, channel effectiveness beliefs, beliefs about themselves (technical savvy), etc. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 40)
[18] Rayport and Jaworski, 2001: 71
[19] Context: Captures the site’s aesthetic and functional look and feel. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 410)
[20] Content: All digital subject matter on the site. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 410)
[21] Community: The interaction that occurs between site users. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 410)
[22] Customisation: The site’s ability to tailor itself or to be tailored by each user. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 410)
[23] Communication: Communication refers to the dialogue that unfolds between the site and its users. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 409)
[24] Connection: The extent of formal linkages between the site and other sites. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 410)
[25] Commerce: The sale of goods, products, or services on the site. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 409)
[26] Rayport and Jaworski, 2001: 117
[27] Market Communications: Refers to all the points of contact that the firm has with its customers. This includes the obvious offline communications such as television advertising, promotions, and sales calls as well as the emergent advertising approaches of the Internet. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 414)
[28] Brand: A name, term, design, symbol or any other feature that identifies one seller’s good and service as distinct from other sellers. (Churchill, GA Jr. and Peter, JP. 1998, 240)
[29] Delivery System: The most detailed and concrete expression of the company’s value proposition. The delivery system translates the resource system from a conceptual structure into a concrete configuration of resources, processes, and supply chains. (Rayport and Jaworski, 2001, 411)
[30] Mougayar, W. 2000. The New Portal Math. Business2.. Available from: Accessed [22 August 2002].
[31] Barlas, D. 2002. Consultant’s Push IBM’s portal. Line56. Available from: Accessed [15 August 2002]
[32] Rao, 2001:327
[33] Roth, C. 2002. Top 10 Portal Pitfalls. MetaGroup. Available from: . Accessed [29 July 2002].
[34] Roth, C. 2002. Top 10 Portal Pitfalls. MetaGroup. Available from: . Accessed [29 July 2002].
[35] Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC): The steps of systems development of computer systems; also, the activities that together make up the SDLC. (Stair, RM. 1992, 674)
[36] Prototyping: An approach to systems design that develops a preliminary working model of the system then changes that model as more information about requirements and operations develop. (Stair, RM. 1992, 669)
[37] Feasibility Analysis: An investigation into the technical, economic, operational, and schedule possibilities that a systems design can be carried out successfully. (Stair, RM. 1992, 657)
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