Author List: Kauffman, Robert J.; McAndrews, James; Wang, Yu-Ming;
Information Systems Research, 2000, Volume 11, Issue 1, Page 61.
Recent theoretical work suggests that network externalities are a determinant of network adoption. However, few empirical studies have reported the impact of network externalities on the adoption of networks. As a result, little is known about the extent to which network externalities may influence network adoption and diffusion. Using electronic banking as a context and an econometric technique called hazard modeling, this research examines empirically the impact of network externalities and other influences that combine to determine network membership. The results support the network externalities hypothesis. We find that banks in markets that can generate a larger effective network size and a higher level of externalities tend to adopt early, while the size of a bank's own branch network (a proxy for the opportunity cost of adoption) decreases the probability of early adoption.
Keywords: Duration Models; Economic Analysis; Electronic Banking; Financial Services; Hazard Function; IT Investment; Network Externalities; Network Goods; Technology Adoption
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#249 0.388 network networks social analysis ties structure p2p exchange externalities individual impact peer-to-peer structural growth centrality participants sharing economic ownership embeddedness
#200 0.152 banking bank multilevel banks level individual implementation analysis resistance financial suggests modeling group large bank's services levels national data early
#49 0.144 adoption diffusion technology adopters innovation adopt process information potential innovations influence new characteristics early adopting set compatibility time initial current
#220 0.116 research study different context findings types prior results focused studies empirical examine work previous little knowledge sources implications specifically provide