eCommerce terminology and definitions
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by Michael Bloch July 08, 2003
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eCommerce,
Ecommerce, e-commerce; however you spell it, the term is now firmly lodged
in our language. So just what is it?
At it's most
simplistic level; eCommerce is simply the buying and selling of goods,
services or information via the World Wide Web, email or other pathways
on the Internet.
Ecommerce
and Ebusiness are interchangeable terms. As with any other industry, ecommerce
has introduce new terms into our language.
B2B
(Business to Business)
The exchange of goods and services between business.
B2C
(Business to Consumer)
The exchange of goods and services with the end consumer being the target
market.
Chargeback
Where a transaction is debited against a merchant account in cases of
refunds and fraud. Chargebacks usually attract a fee that is debited against
the merchant.
Certificate
Authority
A third party company that issues digital certificates that confirms a
company or individuals' identification. A digital certificate is a crucial
part of secure ecommerce
Cobranding
Where two companies identify a partnership between them through one company
displaying their logos, color schemes etc on another companies application.
Cookies
Small text files stored on your computer when visiting a site that record
preference for that particular site's usage. Cookies are also common in
shopping cart applications in order to remember visitors as they move
throughout product pages.
CRM
- Customer Relationship Management
The entire process of a pre-sales, sales and service relationship with
a customer. Many software applications are now available that permit you
to record this relationship from the time the clients asks their first
question. Good CRM software is much more efficient than fragmented records
as it can save time in tracking communications and transactions with a
particular person.
EDI
(Electronic Data Interchange)
This is the business to business (b2b) flow of information between companies
or within a company itself. The 90's saw the concept of information equaling
power. Whatever creates power also generates money and therefore creates
new enterprises to supply this information.
Encryption
Process of transforming data into a type that prevents casual observers
from deciphering.
Etailing
These are mainly "virtual" storefronts which act as a catalogue
of products of merchants and usually include a "shopping cart"
system to enable consumers to purchase online with the use of credit cards.
Firewall
Software/hardware used to prevent unauthorized access from a computer
system or network of computer systems.
Gateway
Computer that allows communications between networks one network with
another. Used in ecommerce to act as an interface between a merchant and
a bank; i.e, a Payment Gateway.
Infomediary
An infomediary is an online resources that collates data from a variety
of sources and acts as a middleman between those distributing the information
and people who want the information.
Luhn
algorithm
The LUHN algorith is used for credit card number generation and validation.
eCheck
An E-Check is a form of payment that deducts funds directly from your
own standard checking account. eCheck services are usually managed by
third party companies that interface with a number of different banks.
An echeck provides a more fraud resistant option in terms of ecommerce
transactions.
Merchant
account
A special account account where money from credit card sales is first
routed to and held before transfer to your own business account. This
process is usually fully automated in ecommerce transactions. Money may
be transferred into your standard business account in real-time or during
various points in a 24 hour period. A merchant account is a crucial part
of ecommerce.
Merchant
Identification Number (MIDS)
Unique merchant identification number that is used in conjunction with
all transactions.
Out
of the box
Refers to an applications suitability to be rapidly integrated into an
existing system
P2P
(Peer-to-Peer)
Process whereby computers can trade information between each other directly
without the assistance of a third party network.
Payment
threshold
The minimum accumulated commission an affiliate must earn to trigger payment
from an affiliate program.
Privacy
policy
A Web site's official statement on the type of information collected on
a site, how the information will be used, how the person can access this
data and the steps for having the data removed. A privacy statement will
also usually include information regarding systems that are in place to
protect the information of web site visitors.
Privacy
seal programs
Independent organizations that verify if an online companies' Privacy
Statement is verifiable and accurate.
Scalability
The ability and flexibility of an application to meet growth requirements
of an organization
Secure
servers
Special servers that utilize encryption to prevent unauthorized users
from intercepting and reading a message that passes through its system..
Session
cookie
Temporary cookie stored in a computers memory for remembering preferences
during a web site visit that is flushed on leaving the site.
Shareware
Software that is distributed at no cost that can be used for free for
a specific period of time or under certain circumstances to allow evaluation.
Shopping
cart
Software that keeps track of items a visitor picks to buy from your site
until they proceed to the "checkout".
SLA
(Service Level Agreement)
Used in many merchant/institution and merchant/consumer transactions to
define the boundaries of what the service is committed to deliver and
under what circumstances.
SSL
(Secure Socket Layer)
A secure protocol that ensures the integrity of information that is transmitted
via this means.
Uptime
The amount of time a web site is available. The industry benchmark at
this point in time for availability is 99.99%.
SOHO
Stands for Small Office/Home Office and refers to a specific group of
people who work from home or very small companies.
Turnkey
Refers to an application that with very few adjustments is ready for use,
such as a remotely hosted shopping cart service.
User
session
Each visit to a web site by one person. The session is usually "ended"
when all pages have been closed or after a specific time of inactivity.
Vortals
(vertical industry portals)
Online resources that are gateways to specific industry related information.
WYSIWYG
What You See Is What You Get. An application that displays how the resulting
page will look as it is being developed by the user in which the screen
displays what the end result will look like, while the document is being
created or modified. |