Author List: Ba, Sulin; Stallaert, Jan; Zhang, Zhongju (John);
Information Systems Research, 2010, Volume 21, Issue 3, Page 423-442.
To cut costs, companies have chosen to deliver a variety of service offerings online. However, the digital systems providing such services (e-service) have always been complemented with or supported by humanbased service (h-service). Whereas h-service has total costs that increase with the demand for services, e-service mainly requires a fixed investment upfront, which can be amortized over the totality of customers served. Considering the different nature of the costs of h-service and e-service and the heterogeneity of customer preferences for services, we derive the optimal mix of h-service and e-service for a service-providing company vis-à-vis its competitor. Our theoretical analysis finds the subgame-perfect Nash equilibria that determines the optimal positions in a duopoly setting. We further study the competitive dynamics of the system to examine how firms stay on the equilibrium paths. Using simulation, we investigate the effects of starting positions, small adjustments in h-service and/or e-service, and monotonic expansions of e-service on the final positioning and profits of the firms. Our results demonstrate that when firms follow a local best-reply strategy, they may end up in a position of low profitability, and when only monotonic expansions of e-service are allowed, both firms may end up overinvesting in e-service.
Keywords: competitive dynamics; competitive strategy; customer service; e-service quality; price competition; service differentiation
Algorithm:

List of Topics

#5 0.325 consumer consumers model optimal welfare price market pricing equilibrium surplus different higher results strategy quality cost lower competition firm paper
#211 0.230 service services delivery quality providers technology information customer business provider asp e-service role variability science propose logic companies especially customers
#242 0.172 market competition competitive network markets firms products competing competitor differentiation advantage competitors presence dominant structure share using incumbent make important
#291 0.067 local global link complex view links particularly need thought number supports efforts difficult previously linked achieving simple poor individual rise
#112 0.065 services service network effects optimal online pricing strategies model provider provide externalities providing base providers fee complementary demand offer derive
#128 0.065 dynamic time dynamics model change study data process different changes using longitudinal understanding decisions develop temporal reveal associated state identifies