Author List: Bakos, J. Yannis;
MIS Quarterly, 1991, Volume 15, Issue 3, Page 295-310.
Information systems can serve as intermediaries between the buyers and the sellers in a vertical market, thus creating an "electronic marketplace." A major impact of these electronic market systems is that they typically reduce the search costs buyers must pay to obtain information about the prices and product offerings available in the market. Economic theory suggests that this reduction in search costs plays a major role in determining the implications of these systems for market efficiency and competitive behavior. This article draws on economic models of search and examines how prices, seller profits, and buyer welfare are affected by reducing search costs in commodity and differentiated markets. This reduction results in direct efficiency gains from reduced intermediation costs and in indirect but possibly larger gains in allocation efficiency from better-informed buyers. Because electronic market systems generally reduce buyers' search costs, they ultimately increase the efficiency of interorganizational transactions, in the process affecting the market power of buyers and sellers. The economic characteristics of electronic marketplaces, in addition to their ability to reduce search costs, create numerous possibilities for the strategic use of these systems.
Keywords: electronic markets; Interorganizational systems; strategic information systems
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#84 0.262 electronic markets commerce market new efficiency suppliers internet changes marketplace analysis suggests b2b marketplaces industry examine easy product making physical
#151 0.221 costs cost switching reduce transaction increase benefits time economic production transactions savings reduction impact services reduced affect expected optimal associated
#62 0.137 price buyers sellers pricing market prices seller offer goods profits buyer two-sided preferences purchase intermediary traditional marketplace decisions intermediaries selling
#240 0.135 systems information management development presented function article discussed model personnel general organization described presents finally computer-based role examined functional components
#217 0.075 search information display engine results engines displays retrieval effectiveness relevant process ranking depth searching economics create functions incorporate low terms