Author List: Goes, Paulo B.; Karuga, Gilbert G.; Tripathi, Arvind K.;
Information Systems Research, 2010, Volume 21, Issue 4, Page 907-924.
A growing number of vendors are using a sequence of online auctions to sell large inventories of identical items. Although bidding strategies and bidder behavior in single auctions have been extensively studied, limited research exists on bidding in sequential auctions. We seek to explain how bidders in such an environment learn from the information, and form and update their willingness to pay (WTP). Using a large data set from an online auction retailer, we analyze the evolution of the bidders' WTP as well as the effect of auction design on bidders' WTP in sequential auctions. We see our study in the context of a longitudinal field experiment, in which we were able to track actions of repeat bidders over an extended period of time. Our results show that bidders' WTP in sequential auctions can be explained from their demand characteristics, their participation experience in previous auctions, outcomes in previous auctions, and auction design parameters. We also observe, characterize, and measure what we call a modified demand reduction effect exhibited across different auctions, over time, by multiunit demand bidders. Our findings are important to enable better auction mechanism design, and more sophisticated bidding tools that explore the rich information environment of sequential auctions.
Keywords: bidding behavior; sequential online auctions; willingness to pay
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#91 0.589 auctions auction bidding bidders bid combinatorial bids online bidder strategies sequential prices design price using outcomes behavior theoretical computational efficiency
#220 0.083 research study different context findings types prior results focused studies empirical examine work previous little knowledge sources implications specifically provide
#247 0.075 online evidence offline presence empirical large assurance likely effect seal place synchronous population sites friends increases isomorphism rewards drop intermediaries
#225 0.054 information environment provide analysis paper overall better relationships outcomes increasingly useful valuable available increasing greater regarding levels decisions viewed relative
#193 0.052 time use size second appears form larger benefits combined studies reasons selected underlying appear various significantly result include make attention