Net Profit: How to Invest and Compete in the Real World of Internet Business

Author: Peter S. Coha
Publisher: Jossey-Ba
Keywords: world, internet, business, real, compete, profit, invest, net
Number of Pages: 314
Published: 1999-05-15
List price: $28.00
ISBN-10: 0787944769
ISBN-13: 9780787944766

Book Description:



With all the uncertainty and hoopla around the Internet, how can investors and business managers hit the right financial buttons? In Net Profit, Peter S. Cohan, a premier Internet consultant and stock picker, analyzes the trade’s top companies--including Yahoo!, Amazon.com, America Online, and Cisco Systems--and offers some compelling insights for investors and businesses on the Web or those considering it. "This book is about the companies that are working to make economic sense of the Web," Cohan writes. "And it is about a search for the business strategies that distinguish the market leaders from their peers."

Cohan identifies nine segments of the industry--infrastructure, consulting, venture capital, security, portals, e-commerce, Web content, Internet service providers, and commerce tools. He judges each of the leading companies in the nine fields on its management, breadth of customer service, and most critical, ability to deliver a product that is so scarce and important that it carries a high price. Most Internet companies fail to meet all of Cohan’s strict standards. Portal leader Yahoo!, for example, lacks economic clout over advertisers because of tough rivals in the traditional media. Cohan gives high grades to technology consultants like Gartner Group, venture capital firms, and network builder Cisco. He loves Cisco because it controls 80 percent of the router market, keeps customers by providing other network components, and shows a knack for acquiring smaller companies. Easy to understand, Net Profit features some key strategies for competing on the Internet. Cohan also helps companies evaluate whether it makes sense even to offer services on the Web. --Dan Ring

Shows investors how to navigate the sometimes deceptive market of publicly traded Internet companies. Net Profit breaks down the complexity of the Internet market by answering two basic questions: Who makes money on Internet-related businesses, and how do they do it? By contrasting leading companies with those who have done poorly and analyzing different industry segments for size, growth rate, profitability, and profit drivers. Net Profit shows which industry segments are likely to profit, which won’t, and why.


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