Author List: Lu, Yixin; Gupta, Alok; Ketter, Wolfgang; Heck, Eric van;
MIS Quarterly, 2016, Volume 40, Issue 3, Page 645-662.
The proliferation of online auctions has attracted significant research interest in understanding real-life bidding behavior. However, most of the empirical work has focused on business-to-consumer (B2C) auctions. A natural question is whether the findings obtained from B2C auctions are applicable to business-to-business (B2B) auctions, which often involve much higher stakes. In this paper, we examine how professional bidders choose their bidding strategies in multichannel, sequential B2B auctions. Using an extensive data set from the world's largest B2B market for cut flowers, we find a stable taxonomy of bidding behavior and identify five distinctive bidding strategies. In addition, we demonstrate that bidders' choice of strategies is associated with their demand, budget constraint, and transaction cost. These findings challenge the conventional view that bidders' bidding strategies will converge as they gain experience. We also analyze the economic impacts of different strategies. Our results provide useful implications for practical design of B2B auctions.
Keywords: Auction design; B2B auctions; bidder taxonomy; sequential auctions
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#91 0.430 auctions auction bidding bidders bid combinatorial bids online bidder strategies sequential prices design price using outcomes behavior theoretical computational efficiency
#101 0.124 edi electronic data interchange b2b exchange exchanges interorganizational partners adoption transaction trading supplier factors business suppliers impact network commerce efficiency
#220 0.095 research study different context findings types prior results focused studies empirical examine work previous little knowledge sources implications specifically provide
#10 0.056 strategies strategy based effort paper different findings approach suggest useful choice specific attributes explain effective affect employ particular online control
#23 0.052 channel distribution demand channels sales products long travel tail new multichannel available product implications strategy allows internet revenue technologies times
#138 0.051 use question opportunities particular identify information grammars researchers shown conceptual ontological given facilitate new little constraints dual answer post-adoption theory