Classroom Companion: Business
· Competition, Cooperation, and Coopetition 118 8
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Introduction to Digital Economics
8.6 · Competition, Cooperation, and Coopetition
118 8 sourcing takes full advantage of the technological evolution since the work can change direction as new technological advances emerge. The best example is the mobile stan- dards which have been enhanced with new features (e.g., GPRS in GSM and HSPA in 3G) or become an entirely new standard (e.g., 4G) as soon as the mobile phone had achieved enough computational power to support these features. The participation in these projects is entirely voluntarily, and the amount of work each participant contributes to the project varies among the different participants. There are also free-riders who do not contribute to the development of the project but imple- ment and make business on the results of the project. As the complexity of ICT projects have increased, more and more of the evolution of the technology has been achieved through this type of cooperative endeavor. ◄ . Figure 8.6 illustrates the concepts of competition, cooperation, and coopeti- tion. The figure shows how a user of a chat service can choose between various providers at all three business levels independently. The user may choose among different equipment supporting chat services (Apple iPhone, Samsung Galaxy, or Google Pixel), select one of several ISPs (Telenor, Telia, or TDC), and select one out of four chat applica- tions (Skype, WeChat, WhatsApp, and Messenger). Each chat application can be used with any combination of user equipment and ISP. However, chat appli- cations are not necessarily compatible— if a user selects Skype, they cannot chat directly with another user using WeChat. This is because there is no standard among chat applications; therefore, they cannot interoperate. On each business level (ASP, user equip- ment, and ISP), companies compete to attract users. Skype competes with WeChat, WhatsApp, and Messenger; Telenor competes with Telia and TDC; Apple competes with Samsung and Google. On the other hand, Skype does not compete with Telenor, Telia, or TDC since they are at different business layers. This is a truth with modifications since Telenor is also an ASP offering a chat application through its SMS service. However, in its role as an ISP, Telenor does not compete with Skype. To provide a complete digital good or service, it is necessary for compa- nies at different business layers to cooperate. For instance, cooperation between Skype, Telenor, and Apple iPhone is required to provide the chat service to some users, while Telia, Samsung, and WeChat must cooperate to provide chat services to other users. This is vertical cooperation. These companies may have or not have for- malized cooperation agreements between them. In any case, through standards, contracts, and agreements, they each provide elements of the complete digital service. A Telenor subscriber can communi- cate with a Telia subscriber, a TDC sub- scriber, or a subscriber of any other ISP. International agreements enforce coop- eration between ISPs to ensure interop- erability between operators located in different countries and within the same country. For the chat service, this implies that a customer using an iPhone may be a subscriber of Telenor, while the server providing the chat service is attached to Download 5.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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