Classroom Companion: Business
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Introduction to Digital Economics
Chapter 13 · Digital Monopolies and Oligopolies 201 13 13.3 Formation of Oligopolies Mobile communications and streaming services are two examples of oligopolistic markets in digital economics. In 1992, mobile communication was deregulated in Europe, and, stimulated by the governments, two or three operators in each country acquired license to offer GSM services. Competition was later enhanced by allowing resellers to buy bulk there were no real competitors that could match it in growth and market impact. From 2008, the growth of Facebook has been governed by strong network effects creating lock-in with high barri- ers for competitors to enter the same market. The barriers created by Facebook were not economic but psy- chological. The major concern for the users is that they may lose all informa- tion they have produced and collected, as well as being chopped off from the network of interactions with friends and other user they have built up. The primary service of Facebook is free of charge for the users. This makes the entry barriers for competitors even higher: the competitors cannot provide the same service cheaper, leaving them with the alternatives to pay users for joining their platform to differentiate them on price or offer a better customer experience with less exploitation of per- sonal data. This will require enormous efforts and ingenuity and is extremely expensive. The platform is designed such that Facebook can extract enormous amounts of data about the users such as personal data (gender, age, geographic location, work, etc.), political prefer- ences, network of friends and contacts, habits, motivations, cultural preferences, and so on and so forth. Facebook sells information based on this knowledge to marketers and other organizations uti- lizing the information for statistics, trend analysis, sociological studies, lob- bying, opinion shaping, surveillance, and other purposes. It is this sale of per- sonal information that generates the rev- enues of Facebook. Facebook does not meet competi- tion on its social networking platform: it has long ago become a de facto monop- oly. The competition Facebook encoun- ter is on advertisements. It turns out that it is a leading stakeholder in this respect also. As of January 2019, 94% of mar- keters worldwide were using Facebook for advertising, and 74% were using its subsidiary Instagram. In contrast, 59% were using Twitter, 58% LinkedIn, and 54% YouTube. All other social media combined were used by less than 50% of the marketers (Leading social media platforms used by marketers worldwide as of January 2019. Statista). Social media earns money on adver- tisements because of a strong cross-side network effect caused by the large num- ber of users as explained in 7 Chap. 10 . This effect is particularly large for Facebook since it has the largest number of users and, perhaps most important, that it can discover and store more per- sonal information about the users than other social media, facilitating market- ers to target their advertisements pre- cisely at individual users. Download 5.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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