| GartnerGroup's Dataquest Says E-Market Makers to Revolutionize Business-to-Business Commerce |
| New Report Examines these Trading Hubs that Enhance Business-to-Business Commerce |
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Lake Buena Vista, Fla., October 12, 1999-Business-to-business commerce
marketplace is being transformed by the emergence of e-market makers that
facilitate online transactions, according to Dataquest Inc., a unit of Gartner
Group, Inc. (NYSE: IT). Dataquest analysts estimate e-market makers
generated approximately $12 billion in 1998, and this excludes e-marketplaces
focused on financial products (mortgages, bonds securities, and so on), where
volumes exceeded $100 billion.
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Dataquest defines e-market makers as business-to-business reintermediaries.
They enter supply chains in vertical industries and horizontal business
functions, introducing new efficiencies and new ways of selling and purchasing
products and services. An e-market maker is an organization that develops a
business-to-business, Internet Protocol (IP) network-based, e-marketplace of
buyers and sellers within a particular industry, geographic region, or affinity
group.
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"E-market makers will revolutionize trading relationships and
business-to-business e-commerce, diverting a significant percentage of
transactions from extranets, electronic data interchange (EDI), and Web
storefronts while creating opportunity for a new breed of e-commerce
transactions," said Leah Knight, senior industry analyst for Dataquest's
e-Commerce Worldwide program. "E-market makers will change the way
organizations purchase and sell strategic and nonstrategic products, the way
they purchase and deploy software, and the way they evaluate professional
services companies, financial institutions, and Internet service providers (ISPs)."
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Dataquest segments e-market makers into four categories:
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Content and Community Portals.
These portals provide value-added content,
such as specification sheets and part descriptions for design engineers, buyer's
guides for small companies, and hosted software. They may also provide
bulletin board functionality for sellers and buyers to post information about
products and services for sale or sought. These portals earn revenue by posting
advertisements or collecting subscription fees. They may also charge sellers a
finder's fee for sales leads.
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Channel Enablers.
The e-marketers sell a commerce software and hosting
solution to help the channel to participate in e-commerce. They are common in
industries in which suppliers have ceded so much supply chain power to
channels of distributors, brokers, and agents, that suppliers may now be
hesitant to initiate direct sales.
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Efficient Commerce Networks.
These organizations manage a trading
network that generally maintains existing supply chain relationships and pricing
models, but it attacks industry inefficiencies. Efficient commerce networks
often aggregate suppliers' catalogs; they may compete with brick-and-mortar
distributors.
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Dynamic Marketplaces.
These marketplaces employ a commerce model,
whereby product pricing is negotiated within the marketplace through auctions,
request for proposal/request for quote processes, or bid-ask matching
exchanges. These dynamic marketplaces can represent seller advocates,
buyer advocates, or be neutral online exchanges. The neutral online exchanges
manage purchases and sales among multiple buyers and sellers. These
exchanges work best for commodity and near-commodity products, for which
descriptive information facilitates reasonable price/quality comparisons.
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"Initially the e-market makers will drive adoption of catalog software, search
engine software, and buy-side software. Over time, the e-market makers will
either compete with software providers or will provide a channel," Ms. Knight
said. "E-commerce software vendors that do not have a strategy for partnering
with and in the long term potentially competing with e-market makers need to
develop a strategy. Developing an e-market maker strategy is critical for
buy-side software vendors as enterprise procurement evolves to the extended
enterprise and trading communities."
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Additional information on this market is available in the Dataquest Perspective
"The E-Market Maker Revolution." The Perspective examines some of the
leading e-market makers. The report provides examples of how these
companies are succeeding in the marketplace. This report is the first in a series
of GartnerE research publications to explore e-market makers' business models
and supply chain dynamics and their impact on e-business and
e-commerce-enabling technologies.
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This report is produced by Dataquest's e-Commerce Worldwide program. This
program is designed to help executives, product marketers, strategic planners,
and investors capitalize on emerging opportunities by providing research and
analysis on the electronic commerce marketplace. Additional information on
this program is available on Dataquest's Web site
www.dataquest.com/public/static/home/n04dcomww.html..
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To purchase this report or subscribe to this program please call 800-419-DATA,
or 408-468-8009. More information about Dataquest's programs, descriptions of
recent research reports, and full text of press releases can be found on the
Internet at http://www.dataquest.com.
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The e-business market is also being discussed at the world's leading IT
conference, GartnerGroup Symposium/ITxpo 99, running now through October
15 in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. This conference presents leading-edge IT
news, solutions, and developments essential to effective IT planning. The U.S.
Symposium/ITxpo is sold out, but keynotes and many analyst sessions are
being Webcast on GartnerGroup's Web site at
www.gartner.com/symposium/static/99/us/intro.html.
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GartnerGroup's Dataquest is the recognized leader in providing the
high-technology and financial communities with market intelligence for the
semiconductor, computer systems and peripherals, communications,
document management, software, and services sectors of the global information
technology industry.
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As the world's leading authority on IT, GartnerGroup provides clients with a wide
range of products and services in the areas of IT advisory services,
measurement, research, decision support, analysis, and consulting. Founded in
1979, with headquarters in Stamford, Conn., GartnerGroup is at the center of a
global community serving Fortune 1000 clients from 80 locations worldwide.
Additional information about the company is available on the Internet at
www.gartner.com.
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CONTACT:
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