Author List: Nault, Barrie R.; Dexter, Albert S.;
MIS Quarterly, 1995, Volume 19, Issue 4, Page 449-464.
This study evaluates the extent to which the added value to customers from a supplier's application of information technology (IT) is manifested through premium prices of a traded good. The study demonstrates that IT can add value to an otherwise undifferentiated good and shows how these benefits accrue to customers from the adoption of IT. Analyzing a case in which the traded good is a homogeneous commodity-commercial fueling-our study shows that the critical impacts of IT are convenience and control -- that is, convenience that provides improved access to fuel and control that reduces problems of delegating purchasing authority for the customer. The value of this additional service is exhibited in premium prices customers are willing to pay for the IT- enhanced traded good, relative to the same good without IT. Compared to the price without IT, statistical analysis of the supplier's pricing history demonstrates that the application of IT to commercial fuel yielded price premiums of between five and 12 percent of the retail fuel price.
Keywords: Economic impacts; interorganizational systems; pricing
Algorithm:

List of Topics

#41 0.384 price prices dispersion spot buying good transaction forward retailers commodity pricing collected premium customers using posted relatively obtain listing uncertainty
#209 0.114 results study research information studies relationship size variables previous variable examining dependent increases empirical variance accounting independent demonstrate important addition
#288 0.110 customer customers crm relationship study loyalty marketing management profitability service offer retention it-enabled web-based interactions operations sales strategy channels set
#143 0.097 value business benefits technology based economic creation related intangible cocreation assessing financial improved key economics assess question created create understanding
#81 0.055 applications application reasoning approach cases support hypertext case-based prototype problems consistency developed benchmarking described efficient practical address activity demonstrate effective