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To: Sam Citron who wrote (62631)6/15/1999 8:33:00 PM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
E-business boom is a myth, study says
PALO ALTO, Calif., June 15 (Reuters) - For all the talk of
the Internet simplifying business transactions, the
overwhelming majority of companies still have no effective
online systems to permit seamless transactions with other
businesses, a new study finds.
Only nine percent of a sampling of global companies enable
other business customers to initiate a transaction online,
according to the study to be released Wednesday by Shelley
Taylor & Associates, a management consulting firm in Palo Alto.
The majority of companies, such as Cisco Systems Inc
<CSCO.O>, allow only existing customers who have established
accounts to initiate transactions online, the study found.
Brand new customers who hope to do business on these sites
are often told they cannot proceed without a valid purchase
order number.
The study, which uses Cisco to illustrate both the benefits
and limits of e-business today, said that company has
dramatically reduced customer support costs by using the
Internet.
"The problem with the Cisco model is that their site
provides no opportunity for prospective customers to indicate
an interest in a particular product," the study says.
The study praises the Dell Computer Corp <DELL.O> Web site
for accommodating both prospective and established customers,
but says Dell is still the exception, not the norm.
"The truth is that the bulk of sales attributed to
business-to-business e-commerce begins with the traditional
land-based channels and most customers are acquired in the
traditional land-based process," the study said.