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  1. Two-sided markets, pricing, and network effects
    Erschienen: 24 August 2021
    Verlag:  Centre for Economic Policy Research, London

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    Schriftenreihe: Array ; DP16480
    Schlagworte: two-sided market; Platform; Pricing; network effects; Matching
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 103 Seiten), Illustrationen
  2. Consumer search and choice overload
    Erschienen: 09 August 2021
    Verlag:  Centre for Economic Policy Research, London

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    Schriftenreihe: Array ; DP16440
    Schlagworte: sequential consumer search; product variety; choice overload; multiproduct firm; Platform
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 86 Seiten)
  3. The little engines that could
    game industry platforms and the new drivers of digitalization
    Erschienen: 2021
    Verlag:  Berkeley, University of California, Berkeley Roundtable on the International Economy, [Berkeley, CA]

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    Schriftenreihe: BRIE working paper ; 2021, 12
    Schlagworte: Game Engine; Virtual Reality; Metaverse; Platform; Platform Business Group (PBG) Strategy; System of Systems; Digitalization
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 8 Seiten), Illustrationen
  4. Net neutrality and welfare effects of discrimination on either or both the content side and the user side
    Erschienen: December 2, 2021
    Verlag:  School of Entrepreneurship and Management, ShanghaiTech University, [Shanghai]

    We analyze the welfare effects of price discrimination by a monopolistic platform that mediates between two sides of a market. Discrimination is based on asymmetric costs on one side of the market and may be allowed on either or both sides. We show... mehr

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    We analyze the welfare effects of price discrimination by a monopolistic platform that mediates between two sides of a market. Discrimination is based on asymmetric costs on one side of the market and may be allowed on either or both sides. We show that unconstrained discrimination on both sides of the market improves welfare compared to uniform pricing but may be dominated by single-side discrimination. This result is driven by matching effects between sides, which add to the standard reallocation effects within sides

     

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    Schriftenreihe: ShanghaiTech SEM working paper series ; no. 2021, 011
    Schlagworte: Net Neutrality; Zero-rating; Price Discrimination; Platform; Network Effects
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 29 Seiten), Illustrationen
  5. Should I stay or should I go?
    migrating away from an incumbent platform
    Erschienen: December 2021
    Verlag:  [Toulouse School of Economics], [Toulouse]

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    Schriftenreihe: Working papers / Toulouse School of Economics ; no 1281
    Schlagworte: Platform; Migration; Standardization and Compatibility; Industry Dynamics
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 55 Seiten), Illustrationen
  6. The simple economics of an external shock on a crowdsourced "bug bounty platform"
    Erschienen: 06 July 2022
    Verlag:  Centre for Economic Policy Research, London

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    Schriftenreihe: Array ; DP17443
    Schlagworte: Bug Bounty Programs; Platform; COVID-19
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 17 Seiten), Illustrationen
  7. Platform liability and innovation
    Erschienen: September 2022
    Verlag:  [Toulouse School of Economics], [Toulouse]

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    Auflage/Ausgabe: Current version: September 2022
    Schriftenreihe: Working papers / Toulouse School of Economics ; no 1361
    Schlagworte: Platform; Liability; Intellectual Property; Innovation
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 39 Seiten), Illustrationen
  8. Spotify
    from music streaming start-up to global audio company
    Erschienen: [2022]
    Verlag:  ESCP Europe Wirtschaftshochschule Berlin e.V., Berlin, Germany

    During the last few decades, the internet and digital technology have fundamentally changed the global music industry. As a consequence, new companies and novel business models have emerged. Spotify, one of the new players in the music industry, has... mehr

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    During the last few decades, the internet and digital technology have fundamentally changed the global music industry. As a consequence, new companies and novel business models have emerged. Spotify, one of the new players in the music industry, has expanded its business activities and grown to become the leading streaming company worldwide. Today, Spotify offers a wide variety of audio products, such as podcasts and audiobooks, to subscribers, as well as significant service solutions for artists and music producers alike. This case study describes the development of the music industry before the advent of Spotify. After presenting Spotify’s origins and after discussing Spotify’s market entry into the most important music market in the world, namely, the US, the case study focuses on the company’s growth. We show that acquisitions of other companies enabled Spotify to develop its services further, as well as to diversify its product portfolio. We also shed light on Spotify’s internationalization as another important driver of firm growth. Over time, Spotify’s relationship with major labels has changed, and this case study reveals how Spotify has gained power while getting more independent from the major labels.

     

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    Schriftenreihe: ESCP working paper ; no. 71 (September 2022)
    Schlagworte: Acquisitions; Case Study; Diversification; Internationalization; Digital Music; Firm Growth; Internet; Music Label; Market Entry; Music Industry; Platform; Podcast; Product Development; Spotify; Streaming
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 60 Seiten)
  9. Digitization for Innovative Platform Design and Advertising
    Autor*in: Xie, Yingkang
    Erschienen: 2023

    Technology that processes text, audio and video, as well as location data, has revolutionized many industries by enabling innovative operations for customer retention. To retain transactions for a platform and viewers for advertisers, this... mehr

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    Technology that processes text, audio and video, as well as location data, has revolutionized many industries by enabling innovative operations for customer retention. To retain transactions for a platform and viewers for advertisers, this dissertation leverages novel digital tools to analyze consumer behavior, proposes original economic frameworks to guide platform design, and generates new insights to encourage engaging ad creatives. Chapter 1 and Chapter 2 are devoted to disintermediation, also known as leakage, when users stop doing transactions on the platform. Buyers and sellers can coordinate outside the platform to transact directly, usually to avoid paying fees after being matched. Although platforms are concerned about losing revenue, leakage---by its very nature---is hard to measure and mitigate. Working with Huaiyu Zhu and Jingyi Wang who are employees of an on-demand logistics platform, we develop three detection algorithms and examine their effectiveness in Chapter 1. We find that the state-of-art BERT-based deep learning model improves the precision of detection, but comes with an expensive tradeoff of dropping the high recall we achieve by tracing whether drivers stopped by the origin and destination of a canceled trip. We call for caution regarding heavy resource allocation towards text mining on conversational data when platforms could be more cost-effective by using only behavioral data to detect leakage. In Chapter 2, we focus on the economic incentives behind leakage. We exploit a quasi-experiment that gradually introduced driver commissions, thereby generating variation in participants' incentives for leakage. The introduction of this commission increased leakage by nearly four percentage points, doubling the percentage of offline transactions we detected. We leverage the variation in commission fees to estimate price sensitivities and transaction costs in a structural model. The likelihood of leakage increases as the quoted price of the delivery increases, as the drivers' potential savings in the commission exceed the costs of offline coordination. Our model estimates suggest that customers typically receive half of the commission savings from drivers to rationalize their agreement to leakage. We discuss how targeting, monitoring, and matching can mitigate leakage by better aligning the incentives of different parties in two-sided markets. Chapter 3 (with Joonhyuk Yang, Lakshman Krishnamurthi, and Purushottam Papatla) focuses on ad avoidance when viewers stop watching a video ad. We use a proprietary measure of ad interruption provided by a marketing analytics platform to tracks whether an ad is being played on the screen, and develops a new framework to algorithmically measure the energy level in ad content from the audio of ads. Our machine learning-based measure is related to the human arousal stimulated by ad content. Given that TV ads have become increasingly energetic, we investigate the association between the energy level in ad content and the tendency for consumers to avoid the ads. Overall, more energetic commercials are less likely to be avoided by viewers. However, the association varies across product categories and program genres. We suggest advertisers pay attention to components of ad content other than loudness, which has been regulated by law. Digital transformation is a mindset, not just about the technology solutions. I hope that these three chapters not only document how novel digital measures can be developed to inform and boost retention efforts for platforms and advertisers, but also demonstrate that marketing researchers and economists can seize opportunities in digitization to work with firms closely to create a culture of innovation and customer-centricity.

     

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    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Dissertation
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    ISBN: 9798379586713
    Schriftenreihe: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Schlagworte: Information technology; Ad avoidance; Disintermediation; Geolocation; Machine learning; Multimedia data; Platform
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (227 p.)
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    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-11, Section: B. - Advisor: Gordon, Brett

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), Northwestern University, 2023

  10. Essays on the Industrial Organization of the Digital Economy
    Erschienen: 2023

    Recent years have witnessed a surge in the significance of digital platforms and online retailers. The analysis of digital firms and the industries in which they compete is useful for both furthering general economic knowledge and for informing... mehr

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    Recent years have witnessed a surge in the significance of digital platforms and online retailers. The analysis of digital firms and the industries in which they compete is useful for both furthering general economic knowledge and for informing policy. First, digital firms’ activities incidentally generate digitized data that facilitate the empirical analysis of economic concepts applying to settings traditional and digital alike. Examples of such concepts include network externalities, pass-through of tariffs in vertical relationships, and consumer search. In addition, digital firms differ from traditional firms in ways that matter for the effects of regulation; this makes an understanding of digital firms crucial for intelligent policymaking in contemporary industries. To illustrate, the relative values of the fees that digital platforms charge on different sides of a market depend on industry features distinctive to platform markets, including network externalities and capacity for multihoming. The effects of platform fee regulations depend on these distinctive features. Additionally, the extent of search frictions and of seller differentiation in e-commerce may differ from those in brick-and-mortar retail. These differences have implications for the efficacy of interventions intended to remedy retailer market power — e.g., if search frictions are low at baseline in e-commerce, then informational interventions may do little to intensify price competition among online retailers. In recognition of the value of understanding digital firms, I empirically characterize digital platform and e-commerce markets in this dissertation. This analysis includes assessments of (i) the welfare impacts of digital firms and (ii) the effects of policies targeting these firms. To study digital firms, I collect data from varied sources and develop empirical models of firm competition and consumer behaviour.In the first chapter, I evaluate caps on the commissions that food delivery platforms charge to restaurants. Commission caps may entice restaurants to join platforms, thereby benefitting consumers who value variety in platforms’ restaurant listings. A reduction in platform commissions may also lead restaurants to lower their prices, further benefitting consumers. But commission caps may lead platforms to raise their consumer fees, thereby reducing consumer ordering on platforms and consequently platforms’ value to restaurants. The net effects of caps on restaurant and consumer welfare are thus uncertain. To estimate caps’ effects, I assemble data on restaurant orders, platform adoption, and platform fees. An initial analysis of the data suggests that caps raise platforms’ consumer fees, reduce ordering on platforms, and lead restaurants to join platforms. To analyze these effects, I develop a model of platform pricing, restaurant pricing, platform adoption by restaurants, and consumer ordering. Counterfactual simulations using the estimated model imply that commission caps benefit restaurants at the expense of consumers and platforms. I estimate a total welfare reduction of caps equal to 6.2% of participant surplus from platforms.In the second chapter, I empirically evaluate the contributions of search frictions and presearch seller differentiation to limited consumer search and markups in e-commerce. The internet facilitates consumer learning and allows firms sell products without physical stores. These conditions seem capable of inducing high consumer awareness and cut-throat price competition. In practice, though, consumers exhibit limited consideration in online markets and often pay significantly above the minimum available price for a product. High search costs could explain these facts, as could pre-search seller differentiation: consumers with little aversion to search may not visit a store they believe they are unlikely to purchase from based on information known prior to search. I assess these explanations for limited consideration and market power using a model of sequential consumer search and retailer price competition. I estimate this model on data describing browsing and transactions in contact lens e-commerce. I find that pre-search seller differentiation, not search costs, is primarily responsible for limited consideration and market power in contact lens e-commerce.In the third chapter, I characterize the identifiability of demand models with network externalities. Guided by my identification analysis, I empirically evaluate how network externalities shape the effects of consolidation among US dating websites. Network externalities often arise in differentiated products markets, and especially in platform markets. I show that demand models with network externalities are generally not identified with market-level data alone. This result reflects the impossibility of independently varying product characteristics and market shares at the market level. However, an extension of results in Berry and Haile (2023) establishes that demand models with network externalities are identified under reasonable conditions with microdata linking consumers’ decisions and characteristics. I estimate demand for dating websites using online browsing microdata. The estimates imply that a site’s user values a 10% increase in site usership at USD6.34/month. I find that welfare losses from price rises outweigh gains from network externalities associated with monopolization. Additionally, I find that—due to platform differentiation—a firm earns higher profits from joint ownership of two large dating sites when it does not integrate these sites.

     

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    ISBN: 9798379781354
    Schriftenreihe: Dissertations Abstracts International
    Schlagworte: Computer science; Commission; E-commerce; Platform; Regulation; Search; Market power; Digital platforms
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (289 p.)
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    Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-01, Section: B. - Advisor: Seim, Katja

    Dissertation (Ph.D.), Yale University, 2023

  11. Data sharing and revenue distribution rule
    Erschienen: [2020]
    Verlag:  RIETI, [Tokyo, Japan]

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    Schriftenreihe: RIETI discussion paper series ; 20-E, 015 (March 2020)
    Schlagworte: Data Sharing; Platform; Revenue Distribution Rule; Externality; Social Welfare
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 14 Seiten)
  12. Guiding the evolution of B2B platform ecosystems
    governance mechanisms and acquisition strategy
    Autor*in: Staub, Nicola
    Erschienen: 2023

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    Schlagworte: Platform; Ecosystems; Digital; Governance; EDIS-5310; Platform Ecosystem Evolution; Digital Platforms; Governance Mechanisms; Platform Ecosystems; Platform Acquisitions
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource
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    Dissertation, Universität St. Gallen, 2023

  13. Breaking down information inequality
    evidence from a field experiment in the technology industry
    Erschienen: [2023]
    Verlag:  [Stanford Graduate School of Business], [Stanford, CA]

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    Schriftenreihe: [Stanford University Graduate School of Business research paper ; no. 4119]
    Schlagworte: Information Inequality; Disaggregation; Technology Industry; Platform; Job Search; Gender Inequality
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 80 Seiten), Illustrationen
  14. Antitrust platform regulation and entrepreneurship
    evidence from China
    Erschienen: [2024]
    Verlag:  [Harvard Business School], [Boston, MA]

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    Schriftenreihe: Working paper / Harvard Business School ; 24, 039
    Schlagworte: Platform; Antitrust; Regulation; Competition; Venture Capital
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 29 Seiten), Illustrationen