The Open Information Systems Journal

2011, 6 : 8-18
Published online 2011 June 16. DOI: 10.2174/1874133901105010008
Publisher ID: TOISJ-5-8

Evolution of Standard Web Shop Software Systems: A Review and Analysis of Literature and Market Surveys

Matthias F. Treutner and Lucky M. TeHerwig Ostermann
University of Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology, Institute for Health Information Systems, Eduard Wallnöfer-Zentrum 1, A-6060 Hall in Tyrol, Austria

ABSTRACT

The possibility of trading goods and services over the Internet has brought fundamental changes and opened new opportunities for both buyers and sellers.

The possibilities offered by the World Wide Web (WWW) are particularly important for small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs). Using relatively modest financial resources, it has become possible to realize new business models, test new marketing possibilities and develop new markets. However, it is frequently uneconomical for SME to finance the development of its own, individual shop software solution. Complete or standard web shop systems “out of the box” offer traders an alternative.

This article reports an investigation of the development of standard web shop systems from 1995 (as the Internet and WWW became a mass medium), starting with a definition of concepts and a general presentation of the development of Internet trading. A literature search forms the basis of an examination of the functional scope of standard web shop software systems since 1995.

The second part of the article analysis the Surveys to show how the development changes with time. This analysis leads to the definition of five phases in the development of web shop systems from 1995 until the present day and presents an evolutionary model for standard web shop systems. In the final section, currently recognizable development trends are described and their importance is evaluated for standard systems.

Keywords:

E-commerce, web shop software evolution, shopping cart, online shopping system..