Author List: Yoo, Byungjoon; Choudhary, Vidyanand; Mukhopadhyay, Tridas;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 2002, Volume 19, Issue 3, Page 43-68.
Business-to-business (B2B) electronic commerce has become an important issue in the debate about electronic commerce. How should the intermediary charge suppliers and buyers to maximize profits from such a marketplace. We analyze a monopolistic B2B marketplace owned by an independent intermediary. The marketplace exhibits two-sided network effects where the value of the marketplace to buyers is dependent on the number of suppliers, and the value to suppliers is dependent on the number of buyers and suppliers. When these two-sided network effects exist, we find that the optimal price for buyers and the fraction of buyers in the electronic market are dependent on the switching cost and the strength of the network effect of both types: buyers and suppliers. The same is true for the optimal price for suppliers and the fraction of suppliers in the electronic market. In other words, the parameters that define the buyers also affect the optimal price for suppliers and the fraction of suppliers in the electronic market, and vice versa. Our results also point some counterintuitive optimal pricing strategies that depend on the nature of the industry served by the marketplace.
Keywords: business-to-business e-commerce; intermediation; network effect; pricing strategy
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#84 0.308 electronic markets commerce market new efficiency suppliers internet changes marketplace analysis suggests b2b marketplaces industry examine easy product making physical
#5 0.234 consumer consumers model optimal welfare price market pricing equilibrium surplus different higher results strategy quality cost lower competition firm paper
#62 0.197 price buyers sellers pricing market prices seller offer goods profits buyer two-sided preferences purchase intermediary traditional marketplace decisions intermediaries selling
#285 0.108 effects effect research data studies empirical information literature different interaction analysis implications findings results important set large provide using paper
#102 0.073 choice type functions nature paper literature particular implications function examine specific choices extent theoretical design discussion value widely finally adopted
#249 0.056 network networks social analysis ties structure p2p exchange externalities individual impact peer-to-peer structural growth centrality participants sharing economic ownership embeddedness