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yvenisem

Electronic Waste: A Growing Concern in Today's Environment - 0 views

shared by yvenisem on 28 Sep 20 - No Cached
  • Over the past two decades, the global market of electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) continues to grow exponentially, while the lifespan of those products becomes shorter and shorter. Therefore, business as well as waste management officials are facing a new challenge, and e-Waste or waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) is receiving considerable amount of attention from policy makers.
    • yvenisem
       
      From this we see technology market is progressing to grow however the lifespan of these items lessesns. In turn, this creates a problem for those that work in the waste managemnent sector and calls for politics to get involved.
  • e-Waste has raised concerns because many components in these products are toxic and do not biodegrade easily if at all.
    • yvenisem
       
      Besides contributing to landfills e-waste can also contain many toxic chemicals. I know that mercury and other harmful chemicals can are common in electronics.
  • Most developing countries lack the waste removal infrastructure and technical capacities necessary to ensure the safe disposal of hazardous waste. And e-Waste has been linked to a variety of health problems in these countries, including cancer, neurological and respiratory disorders, and birth defects
    • yvenisem
       
      One of the biggest issues is that developing countries do not have the resources or infastructure to properly dispose of e-waste. I know that economics play a huge roll in this issue as 3rd world countries are often used as dumping places for 1st world waste, and these problems are not being addressed because of sytematic limitations. The health concerns are also staggering, they include: cancer, birth defects etc...
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  • However, even with these regulations, all hazardous materials that are used in newly manufactured products cannot be fully controlled, and management of e-Waste within the supply chain cannot be fully addressed.
    • yvenisem
       
      From this we can see that even with additional policies enacted they are simply not enough to address the e-waste issue. In my opinion with a issue this severe more drastic measures should be taken considering the options that have been exacterbated.
  • For e-Waste management systems, some of the most successful examples can be found in countries such as Switzerland and the Netherlands [16 D. Sinha-Khetriwal, P. Kraeuchi, and R. Widmer, “Producer responsibility for e-waste management: key issues for consideration—learning from the Swiss experience,” Journal of Environmental Management, vol. 90, no. 1, pp. 153–165, 2009. View at: Publisher Site | Google Scholar See in References ]. Experience of the Swiss e-Waste management system is shown as an example in this paper. Generally, the Swiss e-Waste management system can be viewed as an ERP-based system, where each stakeholder has their own clear definition of role and responsibilities as shown in Table 4.
    • yvenisem
       
      Here we see that more sucessful applications have been implemented in Nordic countries. The author goes into further detail about the techniques used by these countries.
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    The main point of this scientific report was to demonstrate how e-waste is becoming an issue and why the current structures in place today are simply not enough to overcome this issue. The author goes into detail the common issues with e-waste: hazardous materials being disposed of incorrectly, the side effects e-waste has on human and environmental life, how current infrastructures in 3rd world countries are not able to keep up with the waste load, why certain policies aren't enough and how new techniques such as the ones being applied in Nordic countries may be the answer to the issue. Ultimately the author makes the argument for why it is an issue, how the issue is growing, and presents alternatives on how to better tackle the e-waste issue.
Qike Chu

E-Commerce Is the Next Frontier in Global Expansion - Paper - A.T. Kearney - 0 views

  • As online sales skyrocket in developing markets, an online presence is a low-risk way to test new markets and complement existing store footprints.
  • Retail expansion is increasingly occurring through online channels as a way to tap into growth markets, build brands, and learn about consumers while investing less capital than traditional formats.
  • With a 78 percent annual growth rate since 2006, China's online retail market is expected to explode, reaching $81 billion over the next five years.
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    According to this article, e-commerce such as online activities has been changing how retailers develop their global expansion strategies. As e-commerce is growing so fast, online booking, online shopping and online reservation are more popular than old days. Being a retailer, he has to be adapt to this new e-commerce trend and start to build an  online presence in order to maximize potential advantages from e-commerce. This article also showed top 10 countries in the 2012 E-Commerce index in which China is decided being the leader of the pack. China has 513 million internet users and 164 million online shoppers, which means that China's potential online retail market is expected to develop faster and faster. What's more, there are three main reasons that people in China like shopping online. The first is that there are greater products selections comparing with shopping in some malls. The second reason is that online shopping make customers be able to compare the prices by vendors. The last reason is also the simplest because online shopping make daily life more convenient than before.
cvera019

E-marketing solutions firm iCubesWire floats early-stage investment fund - VCCircle - 0 views

  • E-marketing solutions firm iCubesWire floats early-stage investment fund
  • Gurgaon-based iCubesWire Technologies Pvt. Ltd, which offers digital marketing solutions to companies, has launched a $3-million (Rs 19.2 crore) fund to support early-stage tech startups.
  • iCubesWire is primarily looking to invest in artificial intelligence- and progressive automation-driven companies. It plans to deploy the fund across four to six startups by the end of 2017-18, with an average ticket size of $500,000-$700,000.
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  • Earlier, Chopra had said that though digital marketing was in geometric progression, there were huge gaps that created significant opportunities.
  • Founded in 2010, iCubesWire works with over 400 brands across e-commerce, automobile, technology, financial, travel and hospitality sectors. It helps deliver tailor-made digital concepts to the brands they work with.
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    This new company is looking to support startups with e-marketing solutions and e-commerce. It is loves to invest primarily in artificial intelligence for companies looking to have automated driven services. Some of the hospitality companies that engage with iCubesWire are: Domino's Pizza, McDonald's, GoAir, Qatar Aiways, Etihad and AirAsia.
patrick021

E-Commerce Innovations With Applications for Hospitality - 0 views

  • With a variety of online visitor tracking tools out there, hotels and similar businesses can monitor individual customers when they visit their site, and tailor their offers and recommendations based on their behavior.
  • Almost every industry has their buyer personas, and the hospitality industry is no different. You’ve got your once-a-year family travelers, your regular businesspeople, and so on. Once these buyer personas are created, hotels and casinos can tailor their marketing efforts to reach one
  • the traveler’s journey is complicated, and can very from person to person. It means that there is much more competition online, and hospitality industries have to compete to get shoppers’ attention
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  • One such avenue is through retargeting. This is the process whereby shoppers who have visited a website are displayed adverts for that site even after navigating away from it. It can also be employed when a shopper adds a product or service to their cart, but then abandons it before paying.
  • With recent advances in 360-degree photography, hotel websites can now offer virtual tours of their rooms and venues. This lets any potential customers to see first-hand (almost) where they will be staying before booking.
  • one of the most simple tactics is to use ticker counters to denote how many rooms are available for certain dates, with the number steadily decreasing as they get snapped up. Urgency is a powerful motivator of action, and a countdown is perfect for conveying that.
  • As ecommerce grows ever more popular, online businesses are given more and more options to capitalize on psychological triggers to turn potential customers into sales. There are a number of these available out there, from storytelling, to building a sense of community.
  • Ecommerce is also a great medium for utilizing social proof. This is the leveraging of user-generated reviews and testimonials to convince dithering customers to commit to a purchase. By sharing customer sentiment in emails or on websites at the point of sale, brands can head off any concerns that shoppers might have with authentic testimonials.
  • The arrival of ecommerce has transformed the way thousands of industries do business
  • From retail and finance to construction and agriculture, more and more businesses are embracing the ecommerce boom
  • Ecommerce is opening up new avenues for businesses all over the world across a variety of industries. Hospitality has a lot to gain from adopting new technology and ecommerce innovations. Use smart tech to help you market experiences. And don’t forget to invest in data and personalization to drive up conversion rates
  • Ecommerce is opening up new avenues for businesses all over the world across a variety of industries. Hospitality has a lot to gain from adopting new technology and ecommerce innovations. Use smart tech to help you market experiences. And don’t forget to invest in data and personalization to drive up conversion rates.
  • Improved customer experience, targeted advertising, streamlined marketing processes — the benefits for brands are almost endless.
  • commerce is opening up new avenues for businesses all over the world across a variety of industries. Hospitality has a lot to gain from adopting new technology and ecommerce innovations. Use smart tech to help you market experiences. And don’t forget to invest in data and personalization to drive up conversion rates
  • Today’s consumers are increasingly demanding a more personalized service in their ecommerce experience.
  • London’s Strand Palace Hotel offers their guests such an experience, with the option of navigating through their restaurant, cafe, lounge, gym and more, all without ever even setting foot in the hotel.
  • VR is already being experimented with by a number of big-name brands.
  • Another innovation offered by ecommerce is selling to segmented buyer personas. These are imagined creations of your most common types of customer, built on consumer data that takes into account how and why they shop with you.
  • This is a useful technique employed by a number of online stores.
  • allowing them to target anyone who abandoned their cart before paying by displaying relevant ads and sending emails with special offers and discounts. By ‘chasing’ consumers as they browse the web, online businesses can ensure that they follow up on any missed sales.
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    This article provides a detailed account of the variety of ways that E-Commerce can be used within the hospitality industry. With the advent of the Internet and new and improved technology, it has become much more imperative for companies to remain competitive in this space. From VR to targeting, as well as online tracking, there are a variety of tools that hospitality firms can employ to attract customers via the Internet. As the Internet is the primary resource that people utilize to shop for hospitality products such as hotel rooms, airfare, etc... it is incredibly important for companies to remain on the cutting edge in regards to their marketing online and attracting and retaining customers.
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    This article talks about how e commerce is opening up new roads for organizations everywhere throughout the world for many different industries. The hospitality industry has a ton to pick up from embracing new technology and web based innovations such as e commerce. By utilizing such technology, this has helped hotels offer virtual tours, generate more reviews, and create more online businesses by marketing experiences. As applications such as TripAdvisor, Amazon, Expedia and many many more, these have created a more personalized hotel shopping experience and has aided in tracking a traveler's booking journey.
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    E-commerce as a standalone concept is one that has revolutionized all business done throughout the world. However, when it comes to hospitality, it becomes more and more intricate. Innovations within the scope of the hospitality industry have made it very easy to track a potential guest and lead them to our resort/hotel/theme park/restaurant, etc. If a guest is looking for a romantic getaway repeatedly on our site, then we can better tailor a search for them so they can enjoy quality time with each other. This is done through the use of what are called cookies. Cookies are small files that are saved on your browser when you first start searching on any given site. These files allow companies to use target marketing and aim at you, knowing what you like. Another great way that e-commerce has evolved for us here in the hospitality industry is that we can now offer our guests virtual reality tours of our rooms and commodities from the comfort of home. This allows us to show off our properties while the guests decide without having to make the trip beforehand.
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    Applications today has made the hospotality industry florish. It has given the industry several opportunities such as a better hotel shopping experience, selling to buyer personas, tracking buyer history, and virtual reality tour of the hotel.
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    The hospitality industry is faced with numerous responsibilities when it come to the satisfaction of guest. with the tremendous acts of growth within trends it is often difficult for vendors to keep up with the trends. some of the new trends that are being introduced include personalized features which is playing a major role today. Another major trend is now called virtual reality. I think this trend is a great addition to the industry because it allows customers to virtually place the item in their home to see if it fits their style. Also with the pandemic situations with can help with the idea of social distancing .
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    The innovations of e-commerce with application in hospitality is becoming a growth trend for this industry. Many more guests are interested in the experience of personalized attractions and the creativity of what brands has to offer. Many merchants are creating a tool that allows the software to remind shopper/guest about what left in the carts to reduce the number of missed sales.
Dalton Draper

Integrating e-commerce into a hotel's overall business strategy - 0 views

  • commerce should be a compliment to every part of a hotel's operations. All staff members need to be briefed on the advantages of taking a collaborative approach to e-commerce
  • needs to understand the correlation of stellar customer service on online guest reviews and the ability of a hotel to sell its products online.
  • sales departments
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  • understand the advantages of using e-distribution channels to aid travel agents and offline sales and get involved in the process
  • But hotels are trying to use e-marketing more effectively as well as focusing on social media outlets to lure prospective customers to their direct channels
  • At the end of the day, the channels that provide the most conducive environments to consumers (i.e. price, ease of use, accessibility) will win the business.
  • What do you think is the most critical aspect of integrating e-commerce into a hotel's overall business strategy?
  • Maximising direct business is most critical as it is the most profitable strategy for a hotel.
  • Ratings and reviews are a trend that is becoming more and more important. I've read that nearly 50% of consumers won't choose a hotel until they read a review. Hotels and brands need to consider this.
  • Earlier this year, an e-commerce professional mentioned that customers do not like pre-made packages, they love to package themselves by cherry picking on different sites.
  • The packaging site of tomorrow could just be a travel shopping cart that lets you add different components from different sites then price it for you when you are ready and even finding the lowest price and you are ready to book.
  • Price and quality are now more transparent than ever and sites that are more transparent will enjoy more conversions
  • Online travel shopping is still in its infancy. What we need to do is facilitate what consumers really want.
  • As an industry, we are not very sophisticated regarding our need for and requirement of intermediaries. In dire times, we are very aggressive with them
  • we must understand the true cost of bookings through each channel.
  • We need to understand when we need them and when we don't so we can minimise cannibalisation.
  • We need balance. There should be a partnership. It's unfortunate that intermediaries feel they need to cannibalise. Margin and share of business needs to be fair for both entities.
  • Which according to you is going to be biggest development in the travel distribution space this year?
  • Mobile. There has been quite a bit of traction, and we have plans of our own for this space.
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    This interview talks to Gareth Gaston, senior VP of Global E-comerse in the Wyndham Hotel Group, about recent trends in E-comerse.He believes that E-comerse should be apart of every department in the hotel, Front Office, Sales, Marketing, and the departments should help the Online Travel Agencies to draw more guest. Mr. Gaston believes that hotels need to start to create a partnership with online travel agencys(OTA) and begin to create a better system for price consolidations online rather than fight them at every turn for overbooking or under-pricing.
kaseyfl9568

Impact Of Social Media On E-Commerce Brands | Internet Marketing Inc. - 0 views

  • The Internet has become a central destination for those seeking the ultimate options in variety, value, and availability.
  • one of the most powerful influencers of an e-commerce site today is social media.
  • 1: Personalization E-commerce brands can identify habits of individual social media users to create more targeted advertising campaigns
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  • Real-Time Surveys Surveys are used in various ways for social e-commerce. They help to gather information about social media users that can positively affect how a user moves through the sales funnel
  • User-Generated Content (UGC
  • Studies have shown UGC photos are 5X more likely to convert customers versus non-UGC
  • 4: Mobile Optimization
  • E-commerce brands must optimize their entire shopping experience to cater to those who shop on their phones or tablets
  • 5: Influencers
  • E-commerce brands must partner with influencers who are authentic while representing their respective brands in a positive ligh
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    How Social Media is affecting E commerce. E Commerce is a growing business anyway we look at it. But like any business, how do you continue to grow it as times change. How do you market the business in a new way based on trends? This quick read article points out 5 great ways that social media is marketing e commerce and outlets on social media that are driving it.
Hyeyoung Jang

Hospitality eBusiness Strategies to Present at EyeforTravel's Mobile Strategies for Tra... - 2 views

  • Max Starkov, HeBS' Chief eBusiness Strategist will present the session "Mobile Marketing in Travel & Hospitality: the Future is Already Here - an Action Plan for the M-Marketer." Starkov will discuss a range of topics including the Mobile Distribution Channel, why travel marketers should care about mobile, mobile booking sites, an action plan for the travel 'm-marketer', and more. "The mobile Internet has already become a reality and a part of everyday life. Mobile users expect instant access to information and an Internet experience that rivals the one via traditional PCs and laptops -- and hoteliers must respond to this growing demand," said Max Starkov. "What should hoteliers plan for 2010 and beyond? Mobile-ready websites, location-based services, mobile Internet marketing, m-CRM, and mobile apps have already quickly become part of the hotelier's comprehensive Internet strategy."
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    Hospitality e Business Strategies (HeBS), the leading marketing consulting firm for the hospitality industry, today announced the firm will present during EyeforTravle;s mobile Strategies for travel USA conference to be held in Chicago September 16-17. This conference presents about event of the year aiming to educate and inform the travel industry for integration of :mobile" into a comprehensive marketing strategy. According to the HeBS, one of the dominant in mobile strategies in the hospitality industry is the mobile eCommerce recently. It creates and implements mobile-ready websites and mobile internet marketing strategies for the customers. During the conference, Max Starkov will discuss how hoteliers can take advantage mobile channel, how they may implement mobile marketing formats that make the most sense for their hotels, and hoe to apply the latest trends and best practices in their mobile internet marketing efforts so that can realize respectable ROI and incremental revenues growth.
Kai Zhang

Opportunities in today's hotel e-business | ehotelier.com News Archives - 1 views

  • One of the top strategies for hotel e-business is evolving from selling to engaging the customer
  • Another strategy is engaging the customer through social computing, which Harteveldt calls the fifth generation of electronic distribution
  • The sixth generation for electronic distribution is mobile technology. Mobile phones are becoming ubiquitous in many countries.
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  • "To truly engage digital travelers, hotel e-business must evolve from channel to gateway, from single purpose to all encompassing, and from functional to fulfilling
  • Shaping customers expectations is becoming crucial as customers look for an 'experience' rather than just a room. The more compelling the experience for the customer, the more satisfied the customer will be
  • Some of the opportunities center around the five important trends affecting hotel e-business. According to Ball, these trends are: more demanding consumers; more complex distribution channels; changing business models where companies must give more but expect less in return; an emphasis on technology and richer content; and a change in the structure of hotel e-business.
  • Globalization is here to stay as evidenced by changes in demographics and affluence. For instance, Russia is becoming the biggest European market while India, China and other Asian countries are emerging as important markets, too. In all of these regions, there's a huge rise in an affluent middle class who will be interested in travel.
  • The "pillars of business and commerce are out of alignment today," observes Ball. From the credit crunch to high energy prices to food prices, changes are happening at a faster pace
    • Charlie Barrett
       
      Trends in hospitality are moving toward an enphasis on technology driven social media. In all areas where hospitality business want to be successfulthey are becoming more interactive with the consumers through social media. The ebusiness is a great tool for marketing and distribution. The use of technology and ebusiness leads to globilazition with distribution. this is the perect aid to marketing in the lobal market. The target market must expand in this changing economy. Guests are now looking toward a total package versus a room. Ebusiness and interaction makes that possible.
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    This article introduces some strategies that hotels can use to enhance e-business. Evolving from selling to engaging the customers and engaging customers through social computing is recommended. Also, hotels should pay more attention to the mobile technology. I think it is really necessary for hotels to focus on e-buiness today, because it may help to identify problems and get more information, then get more profit. Besides, it is a must-do thing under this competitive and globalized environment.
ccpanther88

E-marketing in Malaysia: some are and some are ignorant - 0 views

  • When Uruguayan footballer Suarez bit an Italian player during a match in the Fifa World Cup in June last year, an Indian restaurant in Kuala Lumpur used it as a marketing tool. On that day, Fierce Curry House in Bangsar offered free biryani meals to those who walked in wearing a Uruguayan football jersey. That is e-marketing for you.
  • In December last year, the bakery called Tommy le Baker posted on Facebook a photo of two large baskets of bread with a poster next to them that said: “Take if you need, pay if you want.” The post was shared numerous times over and within a short time the bread was all taken.
  • Scicom Education Group’s head of Creative Services Vernon Adrian Emuang feels positive about social media in Malaysia when compared to other countries in Southeast Asia. “Perhaps (we are) way ahead of others, in terms of widespread public engagement and intensity of online activity,” he tells The Establishment Post. “Essentially, Malaysians seem pretty clued in. The social media landscape is pretty populated which has facilitated marketing and sales efforts that ride on technology,” adds Mr Emuang.
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  • Mr Emuang says: “As a fragmented market, it is hard to build significant numbers. So it is always important to involve cross-border initiatives.” Especially, the tourism and hospitality businesss. “Boutique accommodation places could register with aggregating travel websites like www.booking.com and www.tripadvisor.com.”
  • Under Budget 2015, the government is giving funds for SMEs to equip themselves with IT facilities for expansion purposes and to venture into overseas market using e-commerce. There is RM80 million (US$24.4 million) to encourage the use of new technology, automation and innovation.
  • “In my consultancy practice, I do not see companies incorporating social media in their crisis communications plans, even though it is very evident that many crises today stem from social media or can spread and be magnified through social media channels. It is only after they are caught like deer in the headlights are they likely to change or take social media seriously,” the Trinetizen Media Sdn Bhd director tells The Establishment Post.
  • “The crux of the matter is that social media forces companies to be more open, transparent and accountable to their stakeholders. But the management culture here, especially with family-owned companies, is closed, almost secretive, and opaque.” Time and the need to expand will force many a business to get into e-marketing.
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    Malaysia and Southeast Asia is slowly but surely adapting strategic social media and e-marketing into their small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). This article focuses on the opposing views on how these tools are being utilized and adapted to help these small businesses. Scicom Education Group's head of Creative Services Vernon Adrian Emuang is confident that Malaysia is ahead of the games in terms of social media and "widespread public engagement". This may sound like a far cry considering that 64 percent of the SMEs in Mayalsia were not engaging in social media in 2012. Emuang emphasizes the impact that social media can have, considering that SMEs account for 99 percent of the 5 million registered Malaysian businesses. Zeno Group Malaysia's CEO told The Establishment Post that "lack of knowledge is holding back many of the SMEs. They feel they need not use social media for marketing purposes." Emuang also says that many of these companies are not implementing the proper technological infrastructure to support their ecommerce, should they receive an influx of traffic on their servers, etc. He even shamed the customer service that lacks the manpower to follow-up with the volume of customers. Many hotel and lodging businesses are adapting global initiatives, such as registering with Booking.com or Tripadvisor.com. These outlets allow ecommerce to flow to a much wider, international audience, boosting bookings and revenues at venues that wouldn't have otherwise. Julian Matthews, a famous Digital Media Trainer and Consultant, says companies are operating social media on a tactical rather than strategic level. The Trinetizen Media Sdn Bdn tells The Establishment Post that many companies aren't utilizing Social Media for crisis communication-something many companies we are familiar with fully rely on. In conclusion, social media adds accountability and reliability for the companies and their stakeholders.
kayshap96

How Technology Is Redefining E-Commerce - 0 views

  • The last decade was the biggest in the history of the e-commerce industry.
  • According to eMarketer, China pulled in almost $900 billion from e-commerce storefronts in 2016, with the U.S. earning more than $423 billion in sales revenue. Overall, the e-commerce world received approximately $1.915 trillion in 2016.
  • Redefining The Consumer Shopping Experience
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  • The advent of virtual and augmented reality technologies has provisioned e-commerce vendors with an avenue to display their wares in immersive detail, comparable to the real-life experience.
  • Making Selling As Easy As Buying
  • The traditional emphasis in the e-commerce industry has always been on the shopping experience from the viewpoint of the buyer. In addition to promoting seamless buying, technology is also working to the advantage of the seller. Easy access to instantaneous communication, information transfer, logistics processing and online networking have allowed for remote orchestration of sustainable e-commerce platforms. Sellers no longer have to micromanage every aspect of the e-commerce business or possess the huge start-up capital associated with the sector in the past.
  • Seamless Payment Processing
  • If there’s one other thing that has been the bane of the e-commerce industry, it’s the issue of processing payments made by buyers. It's proven to be either too hard or too expensive to incorporate a payment gateway capable of processing orders from all world markets.
  • With other revolutionary payment solutions like Bitcoin gathering momentum, technology might once and for all eliminate the industry’s payment limitations. The ability to pay through blockchain removes the intermediate middlemen, allowing both businesses and customers to have more control over how they conduct business.
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    This article is describing how technology is redefining E commerce. E commerce has been playing a really big part into everyone's everyday lives, but with technology expanding so is E commerce. For example, technology has been helping with online stores since they are able to show exactly what they are selling with detailed descriptions. Paying methods have also been made a lot easier, and are more reliable. Since technology is not done growing that means E commerce will also be expanding!
anonymous

Our E-Waste Problem Is Ridiculous, and Gadget Makers Aren't Helping | WIRED - 1 views

  • Oh sure, many companies have green initiatives. Apple in particular has made notable, documented efforts to reduce its carbon footprint, powering a majority of its retail stores and data centers with renewable energy, developing more efficient packaging design, and designing products that use less power than their predecessors. But if your products are going to be tossed out in a year, none of that is particularly brag-worthy. That’s a tremendous amount of wasted resources.
  • In the past, computers were designed to be relatively easy to disassemble, like HP’s towers and older versions of the Mac Mini. You could swap out dead parts and batteries, add more memory if it got sluggish, even replace a motherboard. But in the mid-2000s, things started to change. Apple introduced the ultra-thin, ultra-light MacBook Air and the industry enthusiastically followed with heaping helpings of devices that, while slim, were very difficult to repair due to the construction compromises required to achieve that svelte profile. Smartphones and tablets followed with an even faster purchasing and chucking cycle.
  • Therefore, the easier it is to disassemble something, the more likely it is to be worth someone’s time to recycle it. And that’s where issues arise
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  • “The big problem the electronics industry is facing as a whole is products are getting lighter and lighter,” iFixit’s Kyle Wiens said. “This is great for consumers but a nightmare for recyclers.” Smaller, lighter products can be tricky to take apart, and yield a lower volume of raw materials.
  • Glue and adhesives are a common hurdle. Products like the iPad and Microsoft Surface achieve a slim form factor by using “a metric duckload of adhesive,” as Wiens once put it, particularly to keep the battery in place. All that glue must be removed before any recyclable material can be melted down. And battery recycling is risky endeavorin the best of circumstances—under the right conditions, a damaged battery can cause a fiery explosion. Tack onto that the need to painstakingly pry a battery from its glue-smeared lodging and you’ve got a delicate task indeed. For items with a lot of glue, like a tablet display, Sims Recycling Solutions heats the glue, then uses suction cups to apply pressure across the glass so it can be removed without cracking. Other things that can make a product more challenging to recycle include the number of screws (particularly non-standard screws), the inclusion of hazardous materials like mercury (which is declining, due to the rising popularity of LEDs instead of bulbs), large amounts of glass, and plastics. Waterproof and tightly sealed products also are more arduous to deal with.
  • As we rush headlong into a world in which we’re disposing of more and more gadgets each year, making them easily recyclable should be a growing priority of device makers. Just as display size, processor speed and energy efficiency are marketing points, so too should recyclability.
  • David Thompson, Panasonic’s head of environmental affairs, says the standardization of screws and plastic resin materials, not thermally setting screws in plastic, and minimizing the use of glue will boost recycling efforts, as will designing products for easier disassembly. Would consumers really decry, or even notice, these changes? Probably not. But such changes could require concessions to slim dimensions and light weight. And for manufacturers, increased standardization may mean fewer distinctions between competing products. Take a plastic smartphone housing: Currently there are hundreds of variations (soft touch, textures, and metallic colors, to name a few). Standardization could limit that very marketable variety. Even so, some products are embracing such ideals. Dell won The Institute for Scrap Recycling Industries 2014 Design for Recycling award for the Latitude 10 and XPS 10 tablets and Latitude E7240 notebook. Aside making its products cheap and easy to recycle, Dell has used nearly 8 million pounds of recycled plastic in its desktop and display production. And it is not alone.
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    I found an interesting article about how the big computer companies can recycle the computers. This can solve some of the main problem about the recycling. The article is referring to idea that computers may become bigger size but easier to recycle. In other words we might wanna make a step back in the past, when we was able to just replace one detail from the computer instead of throwing it away.
Yudika Claude

Ventures Africa | The Role Of E-Commerce In The Kenyan Hotel Industry - 0 views

  • A report by World Travel Market predicts mobile channel is expected to account for 30 percent of online travel value sales by 2017. At the same time, United Nations World Tourism Organization places e-tourism at a global 59 percent. Both reports evidently point to a shift in the hotel industry, a main player in the tourism industry. It’s important for local industry players to take the hint and embrace e-commerce.
  • the hotel industry is constantly changing and growing to meet new demands and expectations. One huge factor is the global shift to e-commerce, owing to the need to adapt technology in any company’s marketing structure.
  • The explosion of online tourism is not only limited to hotel bookings, as indicated in a report by the UNWTO; 59 percent of research, actual booking, cost comparisons, payments and reviews are done online. Although guests may not fully discard traditional offline hotel research, the study indicates that the average consumer will visit 14 travel-related sites before making an online booking, roughly using each site three times. They will also carry out nine travel-related searches on Google and other search engines.
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  • embrace the rise of digital and mobile marketing methods, and remember a web based business knows no international boundaries.
  • Internet and mobile penetration in Kenya is one of the highest in Africa and keeps growing rapidly. Hotels can capitalize on this with a mobile-optimized customer experience. 
  • half a century ago in 1950, only 25 million people travelled the globe. Last year, the annual number topped 1 billion, a forty fold increase in just 60 years. Upgrading technology to meet a changing industry must be on the forefront of any business operating online. For instance, provision of various payment options, accessible customer care and mobile application to ensure a seamless service on the go is incredibly important
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    I found this article of the rise of e-commerce in Kenya very interesting. We have been discussing GDS and e-commerce from an American point of view and it is great to note that African countries are also taking note of the importance of catering to customers through e-commerce.  Kenya's hospitality industry understands that more people travel nowadays than ever before, and the industry also understand that most customers prefer to book online on their own. The author of the article suggests and predicts that hospitality companies in Kenya will be capitalizing on the growth of Internet and mobile penetration in Africa. 
anonymous

The perfect marriage; Tourism weds E-commerce - AdomOnline.com - 0 views

  • E- Commerce has played a pivotal role in the growth and development of the Tourism Industry.
  • E- Commerce has played a pivotal role in the growth and development of the Tourism Industry. The lasting effects of E- Commerce are improved accessibility, a higher level of competition, and a larger market of consumers and businesses around the globe
  • E- Commerce incorporates various marketing technologies
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  • This information will help potential tourists decide whether or not they want to visit a specific location.
  • These mobile applications help visitors easily access information about their flights, reservations, and trip itineraries.
  • With E- Commerce ,Online Travel Agencies provide Exclusive deals
  • Research into various tourist sites and destinations has also been made easy by the marriage between ecommerce and tourism.
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    E-commerce has made a huge difference when it comes to how the tourism industry has grown and developed. With the introduction of marketing techniques such as virtual tours, virtual views of popular landmarks, and ideas on things to do in town, tourists have an easier time deciding where and if they want to visit different destinations. Mobile apps have also made it easier for tourists to access important information, such as their flight and hotel reservations, any itineraries they may have, and food delivery services, all of which would make their stay easier and more comfortable. E-Commerce has made traveling more cost effective for travelers by allowing online travel agencies the ability to provide deals for cheaper hotels and flights.
Xue Yan

Industry Pulse Poll Analysis: the Numbers Prove Hotel Mobile Websites are a C... - 0 views

  • Smartphone use continues to rise this year, especially in regards to using smartphones to participate in social media channels. 2012 has truly been the year of SoLoMo and hoteliers are acting accordingly by focusing on mobile initiatives such as website development.
  • According to a HeBS Digital Industry Pulse Poll performed last month, hoteliers are more interested in mobile website development than any other aspect of mobile marketing, including mobile app development, mobile banner advertising and other initiatives
  • As HeBS Digital President & CEO Max Starkov wrote in his “Hotelier’s 2012 Mobile Marketing MUST Dos and Don’ts,” developing and maintaining a quality mobile website is much more important than building, maintaining and promoting a more labor-intensive mobile app
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    Since more people are using smartphone and the number of people using mobile devices keeps rising, hoteliers are trying to focus more on mobile marketing, especially on establishing completed mobile website. Based on a survey, 60% hoteliers are interested in mobile website marketing. More and more hoteliers realize that establishing mobile apps are not that efficient and it becomes an unnecessary expense. Considering cost and revenue, hoteliers have to balance mobile marketing and traditional marketing methods.
anonymous

Proximity Marketing: How Your Business Benefits From In-Venue Targeting - 0 views

  • Proximity marketing allows venues to communicate with visitors at the right place and time, with highly relevant, personalized content on their mobile devices. It allows venue owners and businesses to use location as a basis for marketing activities
  • Use cases for retail, hospitality, transportation hubs, smart cities, shopping centers, restaurant
  • Proximity marketing enables marketers to capitalize on the local nature of an onsite visit, where in-the-moment timing can increase engagement with the messages delivered, and trigger impulse buying. For example, consider a buy-one-get-one-free offer on body soap while a visitor is in the personal hygiene aisle
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  • th an effective data-driven marketing suite, marketers can send messages via a WiFi captive portal, SMS, mobile in-app push notifications, email, digital signage, and more.
  • Mobile Apps
  • Email
  • WiFi Captive Portal
  • First, consider connectivity. As previously mentioned, proximity marketing requires one or more technologies to trigger proximity messages (e.g., WiFi, beacons, GPS, etc
  • n conclusion, the value of timing and context in proximity marketing campaigns cannot be understated. The ability to reach your visitors with highly-relevant content, at a time when they’re most likely to act allows you to cut through the noise
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    This site explains the benefits of using Proximity Marketing but this is the side of a company that is selling this marketing tool. It goes into detail of how it works and gives examples. I like how this site goes over the benefits and does touch base on how connectivity is important. It goes over how sms, email, mobile aps and wifi captive portals are beneficial.
markh283

MasterCard to bring e-marketing engine here - Times of India - 0 views

  • Mumbai: MasterCard will bring its 'Priceless Cities' programme to India, as part of its initiative for creating experiences to promote the brand.
  • Under the programme, MasterCard has identified cities and provided experiences which include a visit to the Louvre in Paris after closing hours, or access to the Chichen Itza pyramid in Mexico during a full moon.
  • "With mobile phones, we can be more intelligent in targeting the customer," said Rajamannar. "This is why we are deploying our real-time digital marketing which enables us to reach out in a hyper-targeted, hyper-local and hyper-relevant fashion."
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    This article describes how MasterCard is expanding its e-marketing engine to the country of India. It will use a program to target experiences at certain cities. For example, Paris is a popular destination, so the program will offer special events, such as a visit to the Louvre after closing hours. The company is targeting India because of its growing more affluent population.
Ashley Reed

Know your clients - social tourism marketing | Pro Tourism - 0 views

  • It´s amazing how much money tourism organizations are wasting on inoperative marketing
  • Most of these fancy brochures are dropped in the waste bin after a quick glance at some nice photos.
  • H-U-G-E amounts are spent on traditional ads. Sure, you´ll probably reach some interested clients. But at least 3 out of four readers are not.
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  • If you´re marketing by ads and brochures, or collecting surveys at the hotel or tourism centre, you´ll never know who these people are or why they didn´t show up.
  • Todays E-marketing tools allows you to communicate with them, but I´m not talking about a simple newsletter. I mean dialogue. Questions. Answers. Problemsolving.
  • One way is to build a society, club or community. Social marketing with a specified topic.
  • Or running travel clubs for different tourism niches, like fishing, local culture, ancient architecture or whatever your destination has to offer certain target groups.
  • Competitions, lotteries, research studies, interviews, articles and movie clips are just a few samples of what´s attracting people enough to fill in their names and numbers because they want the information you´re providing.
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    This article discusses different approaches to tourism marketing through social media outlets. The author points to excessive advertising costs especially with printing brochures and guides that are usually tossed in the trash. E-Marketing strategies need to involve the users interactively by having them join, register, or enter and engage in activities. This way you are collecting user information, gauging trends, and possibly making more customers out of viewers.
Odette Beauvil

Email Marketing The Right Way - 0 views

  • The digital age is a boon for marketing in the travel and hotel industry. It makes promotion and communication easier than ever before. Through the personalized medium of email, it is even more easier and safer to communicate for hotel bookings.
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    The article explains in depth why e marketing is the right way. Marketing involves a product from the geographic location, price depend on the preferences and income of consumers in the target market, the place is the distribution points where the product is available, and promotion methods and media is what the tourism service uses to communicate the availability and benefits of what it's offering, which is a marketing mix.
biancafavilli

ECommerce in Hospitality and Tourism Industry - 1 views

  • New technologies are providing different channels for marketing and management that improve the capabilities of society. And computers are providing faster and more reliable processing with lower cost continually.
  • In Hospitality and Tourism industry, hardware, software, information management, and telecommunications systems have allowed for the processing and information flow amongst organizations. The way in which tourism organizations take advantage of IT tools may determine their future success in the marketplace [4]. We consider the importance of the trend of Information Technology by implementing an effective IT system for advertising, distribution, encouragement and co-ordination of the industry. It is important that Hotel Industry take the lead of the emerging technologies to improve management abilities and develop business plans focusing on the most efficient income of delivering value added products to clients.
  • B2C transactions involve business-to-customer interactions.
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  • B2B transactions involve business-to-business.
  • B2E transactions involve a business and its employees.
  • C2C transactions involve two or more consumers (customer-to-customer).
  • The industry can make profits to many countries and pull foreign currencies into the country.
  • The travel distribution system is currently facing many changes as online agencies such as Priceline, Travelocity, Expedia, etc. have introduced a way to access travel suppliers directly via the worldwide web. In general, Global Distribution Systems have not shown much of an effort toward targeting on-line customers. As an alternative, Customer Relation Systems have remained trustworthy to their travel agency distributors.
  • The Internet is not the full solution to success in the Hospitality and Tourism industry. However, the Internet is the “overall business answer” across industries
  • The success of the Hospitality and Tourism industry will depend upon the abilities to identify and answer quickly to current and potential customer needs
  • Starwood Hotel Group was standing ahead of other Hotels to offer a online “virtual tours” of its properties. This feature provides a site visit to potential guests without having to travel to each property. And now, many well-known hotels are also providing this promotion feature for stand top of the roles to attract potential customers.
  • Google presented the vision of Internet marketing is likely to grow by 2015. Some of them are worth to be informed and aware about.
  • 50% of ad campaigns will include video ads bought on a cost-per-view basis 50% of ads will be bought using this real-time bidding technology to tailor experiences for different viewers Smartphones / mobile phone will be the number one screen for digital brands to engage users There will be at least 5 metrics that advertisers will regard as more important than the “click” 75% of web ads will be “social” in nature such as facebook. Therefore, Ads will be shared, discussed, subscribed to and recommended Multimedia formats enable great creativity and interaction – these will grow from 6% of display ad impressions to 50%, especially for brand building campaigns Digital display advertising is going to grow to a $50 billion industry This forecast shows that competition to attract potential customers via worldwide web will be more and more drastic.
  • World Tourism Organization (WTO) estimates that over 1.5 billion tourists would take international journeys in the year 2020.
  • Another e-Commerce model such as Auction style-pricing models are becoming customer preference, where the customer are able to control the price of the products and services to be consumed.
  • Airlines have a stronger straight link to customers as they compete directly against travel agents [23]. Furthermore, they could have stronger control over the customers due in part to the e-ticketing. In this respect, online technology has replaced the travel agency by adding value via fare shoppers, promotions, and personalized recommendations
  • Customers are almost guaranteed that they will obtain the best price by negotiating via an online agent such as Priceline. But a shortcoming to all of this is that the customer will not understand all of the normal benefits of air tickets as they are sacrificed via online auction purchases. For example, in many cases the travel ticket does not permit any changes or accrual of or without significant penalty charges.
  • Online companies have more of a chance at success in Hong Kong due to the dense population, strong education systems, high credit card and cell phone usage. This leaves room for the future development of the next Priceline or Travelocity in Asia which could pose a major threat to hospitality & tourism organizations. Based on the high volume cell phone usage in Hong Kong, Mobile commerce should be a new trend on next stage. [29]
  • As low cost computer real-time data, fast speed internet access, voice and video communications become a reality, travel agencies may no longer be needed. On the other hand, the Internet challenge can also mean chance. Hotel owners and operators who understand and master e-commerce or m-commerce challenges will be able to jump ahead of online threats from large players such as Priceline. Otherwise, many will find themselves out of business.
  • Information Technology tools have allowed travel intermediaries to expand their role in the industry by presenting opportunities to venture into other markets on a geographical level.
  • Not only should hoteliers focus on the business traveler, but they should also consider whether there are other types of potential target customers as we may find that both young and older generations were sitting in the Internet shops utilizing online services during their vacation as well.
  • Organizations have to invest in the expertise and equipment (Hardware, Software) for building a strong IT base at first.
  • Internet security has been a major issue surrounding the Internet community.
  • Governments are currently addressing Internet based global commerce by considering rules of conduct, guiding principles, laws and taxation. [*30]
  • Today, hotels are distributing their product via more and more channels. How they keep control of availability and price, maintain a consistent level of customer service, in addition to keep their distribution partners up to date at the same time has becomes a complicated and expensive process.
  • The core transactions of our business involve intimate face-to-face interactions, which have certain limitations in regard to the use of e-commerce in the hospitality industry compared with other enterprises
  • It is important to take a look at how Internet technology will affect the future of the tourism industry. Most IT tools are being utilized
  • The hospitality & tourism internet future suggests a universal system where property management systems will eliminate the need for expensive on-site computer hardware/software.
  • Future success for hospitality & tourism companies depends upon their abilities to identify a target market and the strategic opportunities available for survival and growth.
  • It is crucial for hospitality & tourism organizations to stay on top of the roles of the major online players that are posing a serious threat to the industry such as Travelocity, Priceline, Expedia, Yahoo, etc. Their role in the future of hospitality & tourism marketing is crucial to the survival of Hoteliers.
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    This article highlights the different aspects that e-commerce brings to society. It highlights the many ways that e-commerce has affected the Hospitality Industry and the things that can be done about it, and it also highlights the economical and political impact that e-commerce might have on the future of our society (especially the hospitality industry).
leahesper

Electronic Recycling Market 2019 Industry Outlook, Market Dynamics and Forecast by 2024... - 0 views

  • The Global Electronic Recycling Market is expected to exceed more than US$ 114 billion by 2024 and will grow at a CAGR of more than 23% in the given forecast period.
  • Computer recycling, electronic recycling or e-waste recycling is the disassembly and separation of additives and raw materials of waste electronics.
  • Digital recycling helps to recover valuable metals by means of making sure that toxic and dangerous substance are handled well thereby minimizing the environmental effect associated with mining.
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  • Despite the fact that the methods of re-use, donation and restore aren't strictly recycling. They're different common sustainable approaches to eliminate it waste.
  • Even though recycling of e-waste pose clean blessings, loss of recycling cognizance and regulatory infrastructure have resulted to low recycling price.
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    This press release article talks about how the Global Electronic Recycling Market is segmented on the lines of its type of processed material, type of equipment, source of equipment and regional. I find this interested because after watching the videos from this weeks module, my eyes have been opened to a world I once didn't know about. Computer recycling, electronic recycling or e-waste recycling aren't really recycling. This article is interesting to me because now I have knowledge of what really goes on behind the scenes.
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