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On the other hand, e-business aims to improve the value creation process between companies or company units by making use of Inter- and intranet applications. Thus, B2B e-business seeks to generate synergies between value chain elements through the fast and detailed exchange of data and information along the supply chain. Theoretically, e-business is a way to organize cooperations between individual parts of value chains without geographical limitations and to generate benefits for all parties involved.
However, despite the differences, both e-commerce and e-business have to be integrated on the company and intercompany level. Both concepts, the kinds of e-relationships within the supply chain and towards the external environment, are interrelated and constitute the emerging global e-economy.
Today, many e-commerce and e-business concepts promise economic benefits through ad-hoc market transaction, short-term ones of collaborations and almost unlimited access to global resources. All these e-solutions are short-term driven and exploit the immediate global market opportunities. This short-term thinking and opportunistic behavior lead to uncertainty and mistrust between the value chain elements and consequently to unsatisfied final customers. The main criticism is that these e-solutions lack sustainability, neglects long term strategies, and hinder the generation of synergies through cooperations. Basically, the businesses become opportunity driven.
In contrast, the virtual Web organization is a different and particular form of an e-business organization model with long-term prospects. Like other e-business models the virtual Web concept aims to improve the collaboration between independent economic actors. However, in addition it focuses on the fast and flexible configuration and operation of dynamic value chains. Similar to other new forms of organizations the main drivers of virtual Web organizations are customer orientation and globalization facilitated by the global spread of the Internet and efficient ICT applications. The main difference compared to traditional and other new forms of organizational arrangements is the different business understanding of the partnering virtual Web member firms. On the one hand, the tendency towards concentrating on core competencies has been resulting in the fact that individual companies cover smaller parts of the total value creation process. This tendency increases the need of companies to be included in many different value chains in order to market and exploit their specialization and core competencies. On the other hand, this development increases the dependency on other, more powerful value chain partners, as well as the need to coordinate the activities along the supply chain. The different business understanding of virtual Web partner firms is integration and cooperation with other partner firms in dynamically formed and temporally operated virtual corporations.
Basically, it is the openness of partner firms for real cooperation, which means the preparedness of partner firms to share costs, risks, benefits and profits. The competitive advantage of such interorganizational virtual organizations (virtual corporations/virtual enterprises) is the dynamic and flexible configurations of (world-class) value chains.
However, the major concerns of partnering companies are how to find suitable partner companies with complementary (core-) competencies, how to establish a trust-based partnership in a very short period of time and how to coordinate the activities of the geographically and organizationally dispersed independent partner companies.
The virtual Web organization, as an e-business organization model, provides an organizational framework that facilitates the coordination and cooperation between virtually partnering companies. Basically, the virtual Web concept incorporates three sub-concepts: the virtual Web platform, the virtual corporation, and the Net-broker.
First, the virtual Web platform is a pool of independent companies that generally agree to cooperate. This virtual Web platform provides the environmental condition, such as trust and coordination mechanisms and tools, necessary for the dynamic configuration of market and customer-driven value chain constellations.
Thus, deriving from the rather stable virtual Web platform, virtual corporations are temporary operational units that are configured on market opportunities and/or customer needs. Moreover, virtual corporations are characterized not by close but integrated cooperation between independent and dispersed partner firms. Virtual corporations can take the form of supply chains, joint R&D projects and any other form of vertical or horizontal partner cooperation. Both the relatively stable virtual Web platform and the dynamic virtual corporations are integrated and constitute the virtual Web organization.
The third organizational element of the virtual Web concept is the management organization, the so-called net-broker (management service company) that acts as a inter-firm network facilitator. Basically, the net-broker initiates the virtual Web platform, maintains the relationships between the Web partner companies and facilitates the formation of market and customer driven temporary virtual corporations. Modern interorganizational ICT applications and a common business understanding of partnering companies facilitate the collaboration between the virtual Web partner firms.
This book and its individual chapters aim to provide readers with a better understanding of this new kind of e-business organization concept. Thus, this book deals with issues and challenges of managing virtual Web organizations. Besides introducing the organizational concept of virtual Web organizations, the individual chapters provide theoretical background, practical examples and guidance on how to manage virtual Web organizations.
The different book contributions view and investigate the virtual Web organization from different managerial perspectives, identify issues and challenges about the management of the stable virtual Web platform and, in particular, the deriving dynamic virtual corporations (virtual enterprises) as well as introduce management models, concepts and tools that are suitable to operationalise virtual Web organizations. In general, this book can be regarded as a handbook guidance for the management of a new kind of b2b e-business organization, namely the virtual Web organization.
The first part of this book reviews the particular challenges in respect to managing virtual Web organizations and proposes possible solutions on how to tackle those challenges by applying a number of distinct managerial models, concepts and tools developed to facilitate the management of dispersed and independent partner firms in virtual space and real day-to-day business performance.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars
This book is a real stake in the ground,
By Dr. Paul Chapman (Cranfield School of Management, England) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Managing Virtual Web Organizations in the 21st Century: Issues and Challenges (Hardcover)
Understanding the issues and challenges associated with virtual organisations is a subject area in its ascendancy. Whilst more structured ways of working (such as vertically integrated companies and long term supplier partnerships) will continue, virtual organisations will become an increasingly relevant feature in developed economies.This book provides an essential contribution to the subject area. It is useful to readers seeking to gain an academic perspective on the issues and to practitioners and industrialists seeking to deploy these new ways of operating in order to deliver competitive advantage. Hence I thoroughly recommend it.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Writing the bible of VO's,
By Edgar Wortmann (Rotterdam, ZH Netherlands) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Managing Virtual Web Organizations in the 21st Century: Issues and Challenges (Hardcover)
So far, most serious publications about `virtual organizations' I came across are fragmented and theoretical. There seems to be a lot of talking and thinking about the subject but there is little experience and accomplished successes to report on. Under these circumstances, the editor of `Managing Virtual Web Organizations in the 21st Century' did a remarkable job to introduce a converging conception of the virtual organization (VO) and include theoretical knowledge, practical solutions and recent experiences with VO's. The book contains 17 articles that elaborate on various issues ranging from the general conception of VO's to its legal format and from the business point of view to the underlying ICT-architecture. From the number of contributors and their various positions and geographical locations I might conclude that the undertaking of writing this book required a virtual organization itself. For many contributors this seems to be nothing new. In many articles it is stated that VO's have existed ever since people started to work together on the basis of trust. The new thing that the 21st century brings is the addition of ICT, which adds potentially more structure and scale to the VO. The book focuses largely on the design and management of such organizations. In most cases it takes the production and ebusiness environment as its object. Occasionally there is attention for web organizations in the professional services industries. For those who want to know on what the European Commission spent much of her billions for the `Information Society' (IST-program), the book provides a number of references to relevant IST-projects. Some effort seems to be taken to make all articles fit into a general framework of the book, which could not prevent many contributors to start with a description of what they regard to be a virtual organization themselves. Happily for the editor, most contributors agree more or less on the underlying concept, which is remarkable, where-as the book lays out a quite specific and practical framework for this kind of organization. For its riches in issues and practical models the book is a useful source for professionals and decision makers that want to keep up to date with key concepts and developments regarding `web organizations'. However, I don't think it is going to be `The Bible of VO's'. Therefore it is too specific on some issues and not encompassing enough on others. On many issues the book provides insight and useful ideas, but overall it leaves the reader with a lot of critical thinking to do himself. It seems the editor does have a clear view on the basic concept he likes to introduce. On top of that he is gathering and analyzing additional data and models. Little doubt next time he will come out with his bible after all.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Complete Overview of Virtual Organizations,
By A Customer
This review is from: Managing Virtual Web Organizations in the 21st Century: Issues and Challenges (Hardcover)
Ulrich Franke and his co-authors give a broad overview over the Management of the relatively new organizational form of virtual enterprises. For all business people who are interested in strategic management or involved in networked economy this book is essential. The topic is structured quite well and shows a collection of different views given by international experts in the field of virtual organisations.
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