Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Classification of commerce

Classification of commerce

B2C, B2B, C2C, B2G, EDI commerce and so on.

1, B2C

B2C is the abbreviation of Business-to-Consumer, and its Chinese abbreviation is "business-to-consumer". "Business-to-Consumer" is a mode of e-commerce, that is, it is often referred to as direct-to-consumer sales of products and services commercial retail model.

2, B2B

B2B (also written as BTB, is the abbreviation of Business-to-Business) refers to the business model of business-to-business through a private network or the Internet, the exchange of data and information, transfer, and carry out trading activities.

It combines the intranet and the products and services of an enterprise with its customers through a B2B website or a mobile client, and through the rapid response of the network, it provides customers with better services, thus promoting the development of the enterprise's business.

3, C2C

C2C is actually a specialized term for e-commerce, which is e-commerce between individuals and individuals. C refers to the consumer, because the English word for consumer is Customer (Consumer), so it is abbreviated as c, and because the pronunciation of 2 in English is the same as to.

So C to C is abbreviated as C2C. C2C is Customer (Consumer) to Customer (Consumer).

4, B2G

B2G is the abbreviation of "Boot To Gecko", which is a completely open mobile operating system developed by Mozilla based on Web standards, from the system itself to the application written entirely in HTML5, CSS and JS.

5, EDI

EDI, full name ?Electronic ?Data ?Interchange, translation: electronic data interchange.

It is an international standard introduced by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), which refers to a method of electronic transmission from computer to computer for the processing of business or administrative affairs, in accordance with a recognized standard, forming a structured transaction or message message format, as well as a computer-recognizable business language.

For example, the exchange of data such as purchase orders, packing lists, bills of lading, etc., in international trade.