Classroom Companion: Business
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Introduction to Digital Economics
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- 10.2.1 Network Effects
- 10.2.2 Pricing
MSP
Type of business User groups Platform type New York Times Newspaper Readers and advertisers Digital eBay Electronic marketplace Sellers and buyers Tangible Social networking service Users and advertisers Digital Uber Sharing service Drivers and passengers Tangible Airbnb Sharing service Hosts and guests Tangible MasterCard Point-of-sale transactions Merchants and cardholders Digital Kickstarter Crowdfunding Borrowers and investors Digital 10.2 · Characteristics of Multisided Platforms 152 10 MasterCard are examples of digital MSPs, whereas Uber and Airbnb are examples of tangible MSPs. Tangible MSPs have also been termed online-to-offline (O2O) MSPs (McAfee & Brynjolfsson, 2017 ). . Table 10.1 lists some two-sided platform businesses. Some of the major characteristics of MSPs are associated with network effects, pricing, competition, business ecosystem, and market regulation (Ardolino et al., 2020 ). 10.2.1 Network Effects The MSP may be subject to complex network effects not only involving each user group but also between user groups. Network effects are so important for MSPs that they are discussed in more detail in 7 Sect. 10.3 . The network effects may sometimes lead to winner-take-all markets where one platform supplier after some time becomes a de facto monopoly. 10.2.2 Pricing The pricing model and, hence, the way revenues are generated may be complex. For example, one user group are offered platform services for free, while other cus- tomer groups must pay for the services they receive (e.g., Facebook and Google Search); customers may pay per interaction or amount of service they receive, or they may pay a fixed monthly subscription fee (e.g., eBay and Airbnb); customers may pay for some types of services and receive other services free of charge (elec- tronic newspaper); or any combination thereof. It is a common feature of MSPs that some user groups subsidize the other user groups by levying differentiated charges among the user groups. Sometimes, the MSP gets all its revenues from only one user group while providing services for free to other user groups. An MSP often benefits from a reduced price of the goods or services mediated between the sellers and the buyers. This is because low prices mean more sales and, potentially, more buyers of the goods, increasing the usage of the platform and, in turn, add value to the platform in terms of increased cross-side network effects. In this respect, MSPs have incentives to reduce prices in the business areas in which they operate. In several of these pricing regimes, supply/demand theories are meaningless since the two variables are decoupled in market segments where the good is traded for free. Download 5.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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