Classroom Companion: Business
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Introduction to Digital Economics
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- Case Study 11.1 Videotape Format War
Chapter 11 · Path Dependence 169 11 them will become a monopoly in the advertisement sector since both are important advertisement channels targeting different user groups. One of the most analyzed examples of the competitive war between techno- logical standards is the competition between VHS and Betamax. The case is also used as pedagogic example of path dependence because it illustrates in a simple way how path dependence may arise and lead to a winner-takes-all situation (see the Wikipedia article for more details (Wikipedia, n.d. )). Case Study 11.1 Videotape Format War VHS and Betamax were two competing standards for video cassette recorders (VCR) in the late 1970s and the early 1980s. They were incompatible stan- dards since cassettes designed to the VHS standard did not work with Betamax and vice versa. After intense competition, it became clear in the early 1980s that VHS won the videotape for- mat war and eventually captured 100% of the market. Betamax was developed by SONY and released on the consumer market in May 1975 in Japan and on the US mar- ket the following November. VHS was developed by Matsushita (now Panasonic) and released in 1976 in Japan and 1977 in the USA. The market for VCRs, offering a new form of home entertainment, grew quickly. Betamax had the first mover advan- tage since it was the only VCR available in the USA during the first year. Introduction of VHS in the USA in 1977 triggered full competition between Betamax and VHS. Standard microeco- nomic theory predicts that both stan- dards would prevail and share the market. However, it turned out that VHS and Betamax were operating in a market with strong network effects which, eventually, became a winner- takes-all market. The VHS cassette could record lon- ger TV shows than the Betamax cassette due to its larger size. Of particular importance was the fact that VHS could record a complete football match (up to 3 hours) on a single cassette. This, com- bined with lower prices, shifted the mar- ket share leadership from Betamax to VHS in the late 1970s. As a secondary effect, the number of VHS recorders on display in retailer shops gradually increased, resulting in a bandwagon effect in favor of VHS. This led producers of movies and other content to favor VHS. In the beginning, content producers made their titles available on both Betamax and VHS; however, when VHS took the mar- ket lead, they gradually stopped produc- ing content for Betamax, strengthening the position of VHS. Finally, VHS was locked into the path of dominating the VCR market entirely. Download 5.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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