Classroom Companion: Business
Download 5.51 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
Introduction to Digital Economics
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- Fig. 9.10
- Google Search
9.6.2
Sarnoff’s Law Sarnoff’s law is about the value of broadcast networks such as radio and television broadcast networks. In such networks, one sender transmits information to a group of n receivers. Sarnoff claimed that there is no additional value for new customers to join the network because others have done so in the past. For the supplier, the value of the network is the number of customers connected to it, that is: V n n Sarnoff ~ , in which V(n) is the value of the network and n is the number of devices connected to the network. The value added by a new user to the network (network effect or feedback term) is F Sarnoff (n) = V ′ Sarnoff (n)~1. Hence, there is no network effect in this case. Every new user adds only a single link to the network. This is shown in . Fig. 9.11 , in which the number of customers equals the number of links in the network which, in turn, equals the total value of the network. The value of a com- pany providing a broadcast service depends on the number of customers only since . Fig. 9.10 A new user joins the network. (Authors’ own figure) 9.6 · Estimating the Value of Networks 138 9 each customer provides a fixed income to the company. There is no other value created in these networks. The law is named after David Sarnoff (1891–1971), an American pioneer of radio and television manufacturing and broadcast. Sarnoff spent most of his career in the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) and the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) and was one of the most influential businessmen in the early days of radio and television. Sarnoff’s law applies to all kinds of broadcast networks in which there is no interaction or exchange of value between users or customers. The only interaction in a broadcast network takes place between the provider of the service and the users. In addition to radio and television broadcast networks, there are several examples of other digital services in which there is no network effect, for example: 5 In Google Search, a user does not benefit from using the search engine because other people are using it. Therefore, there are no direct network effects stimulat- ing people to use the search engine so that, in this respect, Google Search is a Sarnoff network. However, there may be a weak indirect network effect, hardly recognized by the users, since search habits of the users contribute to refine- ment of the engine’s search algorithm which, in turn, results in more accurate search results for other users. On the other hand, Google is a multisided plat- form, where the users of Google Search generate a strong cross-side network effect for the advertisement business of Google since the number of people using the search engine determines the fees that Google can charge advertisers. 5 Netflix uses a subscription-based business model. Each subscriber contributes to the value of Netflix by paying regular subscription fees. There is no interac- tion or exchange of value between Netflix subscribers. On the other hand, Net- flix was initially subject to negative network effects (word-of-mouth) and loss of users to the illegal Popcorn Time because of overloaded databases (Idland et al., 2016 ). 5 The value of Wikipedia depends entirely on the volume and quality of the arti- cles in the encyclopedia. There is no interaction between readers, writers, and benefactors and thus no feedback effects prompting new readers of Wikipedia. Digital service Users . Fig. 9.11 A broadcast network. (Authors’ own figure) Download 5.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling