E-Commerce
According to a Wall Street Journal article by David Pringle, "One would think that, since America went first into the void, that Europe would have the advantage of seeing their mistakes and avoiding them." However, the article dispels this myth, stating that e-commerce has turned out to be a lot more difficult than the major bricks and mortar retail establishment's had originally thought.
According to Pringle, traditional European businesses have enjoyed several advantages over American companies for conducting online business. The first is that the European market is less savvy and sophisticated than the American audience. American online consumers represented a large and demanding audience that required the latest in convenience options and state-of -- the art technology. At the same time, brick-and-mortar companies in the United States had to deal with far more competition from newer Internet startups than did brick-and-mortar companies in Europe. Because of these factors, brick-and-mortar companies in Europe have been able to maintain a leading position in their local markets.
Infrastructure is also another obstacle for electronic commerce in Europe. Competition in most European Union countries' wireline markets, particularly Spain and Italy, remains limited because the telecommunications incumbents (which have only recently been privatized) still control more than eighty-five percent of their respective national markets. They remain the dominant providers of telecommunications services, including broadband. As a result, there has been slower than expected Internet expansion. Internet penetration rates average…
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