home search a-z help
University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory
Computer Science Syllabus - E-Commerce
Computer Laboratory > Computer Science Syllabus - E-Commerce

E-Commerce next up previous contents
Next: Specification and Verification II Up: Easter Term 2007: Part Previous: Distributed Systems   Contents


E-Commerce

Lecturers: Mr J.A. Lang and others

No. of lectures: 8

Prerequisite courses: Business Studies, Security, Economics and Law

Aims

This course aims to give students an outline of the issues involved in setting up an e-commerce site.

Lectures

  • The history of electronic commerce. The growth of the telegraph; mail order; call centres; EDI; web-based businesses. Network economics: real and virtual networks, supply-side versus demand-side scale economies, Metcalfe's law, the dominant firm model, the differentiated pricing model.

  • Web site and database design. Stock and price control; credit cards and other payment mechanisms. Security - SSL; Microsoft Passport; fulfilment; audit. Help desk and conflict resolution.

  • The law and electronic commerce. Contract and tort; copyright; binding actions; liabilities and remedies. Legislation: RIP; Data Protection; EU Directives on Distance Selling and Electronic Signatures.

  • Putting it into practice. Driving and analysing traffic; site design and UI factors; search engines; dynamic pricing models. Integration with traditional media. The network marketing problem. Overseas sales. E-mail and SPAM.

  • Extracting value. Personalisation; localisation; stock and price control; collaborative filtering. Advertising models. Data mining: modelling the user. Brand value.

  • Finance. How business plans are put together. Venture capital; equity markets; the recent hysteria; maximising shareholder value. Future trends.

Objectives

At the end of the course students should know how to apply their computer science skills to the conduct of e-commerce with some understanding of the legal, security, commercial, economic, marketing and infrastructure issues involved.

Recommended reading

Shapiro, C. & Varian, H. (1998). Information rules. Harvard Business School Press.

Additional reading:

Standage, T. (1999). The Victorian Internet. Phoenix Press.



next up previous contents
Next: Specification and Verification II Up: Easter Term 2007: Part Previous: Distributed Systems   Contents
Christine Northeast
Tue Sep 12 09:56:33 BST 2006