100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Summary - Platform Economics and Marketing (BMME193) | textbook, readings, cases & guest lectures £5.58   Add to cart

Summary

Summary - Platform Economics and Marketing (BMME193) | textbook, readings, cases & guest lectures

 12 views  0 purchase
  • Module
  • Institution

This concise summary of 21 pages contains all the readings (textbook + articles), case studies & guest lectures of the elective course Platform Economics and Marketing (BMME193). By learning this summary you are fully prepared for the exam. The textbook summarized is: Platform strategies : a guid...

[Show more]
Last document update: 4 months ago

Preview 3 out of 21  pages

  • May 1, 2024
  • May 17, 2024
  • 21
  • 2023/2024
  • Summary
avatar-seller
Summary Platform Economics and Marketing
Readings (textbook + articles), case studies & guest lectures1

Session 1 - Multisided platforms and network effects
Introduction - textbook
• Platform = entity that brings together economic agents with complementary needs and facilitates
interaction among them
o Positive network effects: value of interaction increases with number of participants
o Platform operates as a physical or virtual infrastructure
o One-sided platforms (social networks) and two-sided (or multi-sided) platforms
• Most platforms are digital but in the past also offline markets
• Platforms are intermediaries whose primary role is to manage network effects
• Not a platform when solutions don't put users in contact with one another
o Value should be dependent on how many users adopt the platform
• Platforms enable transactions while pipelines control them
• Platforms fare better than pipelines in terms of motivation and adaption
o Control paradox: control is important but platforms rely on others to get things done
o Pipelines fare better than platforms in terms of coordination
• Can combine platform and pipeline models: Amazon is a hybrid pipeline/platform model
• Pipelines can be platformized in two ways
o Encouraging interactions among existing customers: review and rating system
o Opening the doors to third parties

CH. 1 Understanding and activating network effects - textbook
• Network effects: when economic agents enjoy benefits that depend on decisions of other agents
o Positive: value of interaction increases when more agents participate in interaction
o Make interaction harder to organize: economic agents fail to consider the effects of their decisions
on other agents → external effects
• Platforms create value by managing network effects
o Platforms make agents realize the value they generate for one another
o Platforms reduce a variety of transaction costs, help participants coordinate their needs and
facilitate their interaction
• Two basic types of network effects:
o Same-side network effects (single groups of users)
o Cross-side network effects
• When platform links distinct group of users: two-sided platform or multi-sided platform
o Choosing how many sides to link is a major strategic decision for platforms
• Network effects make decisions of platform users interdependent
o Platform users care about participation and usage decisions of other users when they make their
own decisions
• Linkage map: tool to help you identify and understand various network effects - 3 kind of boxes
o 4 boxes on top-left: various types of network effects
▪ Cross-side network effects group 1 to 2 & 2 to 1, same-side network effects group 1 & 2
▪ First: 'sign' of network effects: positive (+), negative (-), or negligible (∅, unchanged value)


1
Exam tip: make sure to study the lecture slides as well. In the exam of 2024 there were lots multiple questions
referring to examples that were discussed during the lectures.

1

, ▪ Second: identify mechanisms whereby extra user adds/reduces value for others
• Explain the how & why
o Box on the right: 'hidden' network effects - effects that are not (yet) active on platform
▪ Effects for agents not directly connected to the platform but important for some users
o Box on the bottom: platform's external effects - effects on other stakeholders than own users
▪ Other effects that the platform may induce for non-users
o Example Linkage map of Airbnb: (understand how users affect one another)




• Linkage map shows who can affect whom, and how, on your platform (and beyond)
• Strategies to activate network effects: attract users to platform and allow smooth interaction
o Two crucial questions: attract which users first? And through which strategies?
o Discovery and matchmaking: provide effective tools to find 'match' - powerful search engine, filters
o Trust building and risk mitigation: rating and review system
o Transaction facilitation: provide users with services such as payment, security, logistics, etc.
o Digital technologies allow to cut into costs of these functions: AI-powered algorithms, rating systems
• Positive feedback loop: a self-enforcing process that magnifies the initial change
→ positive cross-side network effects
o Makes platform grow with little or no additional effect: like a snowball or flywheel
o Evaluate by measuring the time it takes for platform to reach a given number of users
• Negative feedback loop: positive cross-side network effects also imply if side A leaves, side B also leaves
o Make users hard to retain: therefore timing is of the essence for platform management
• Feedback loops heavily depend on users' expectations: chicken-and-egg problem, cold start, ghost town
o Optimistic expectations: believe that users on the other side will join, therefore join as well
o Pessimistic expectations: believe no user on the other side will join and don't join either
o What is expected turns out to be right: self-fulfilling prophecies
• Value proposition: value that users derive from a platform is interdependent
→ Value grows with the number of users
• Value creation: great deal of value is co-created by users themselves with platform as facilitator
o Positive feedback loops generate 'free value' and pessimistic expectation may impede value creation
o Create value by differentiating from competitors & take advantage of complementary market forces
• Value capture: how network effects shape the entire range of platform strategies

2

, Peer-to-Peer Markets - By Einav, Farronato, Levin [Focus on section 1 & 2]
1. Introduction
• Peer-to-peer markets (eBay, Etsy, Airbnb) allow sellers to experiment with prices, selling mechanisms,
and strategies
• Peer-to-peer businesses make trade off between two objectives
o Designing market mechanisms that efficiently elicit and incorporate dispersed information
o Minimizing various forms of transactions costs to keep user experience convenient
2. Market design: search, pricing, and trust
• Goal is to create trade between large numbers of fragmented buyers and sellers
o Requires solving several core market design problems
2.1. Matching buyers and sellers
o Centralized process: Uber - customers specify service, drivers choose to respond, Uber needs to ensure
enough drivers
▪ Transaction costs are low for riders and drivers
o Decentralized process: Airbnb - facilitate individual product choice, when sellers are diverse
▪ Main challenge is to create streamlined and informative search process
o Presentation of search results matter: twice as likely to click on top position than one position down
2.2. Pricing mechanisms
o Auctions: allow prices to respond to market conditions - proxy bidding, surge-pricing algorithm,
proprietary algorithm
▪ Use has declined because of rising competition - instead fixed prices or hourly rates
2.3. Trust and reputation
o Trust can derive from up-front inspection, reputation, and external enforcement
o Use external regulations: limiting entry, certifying quality, or insuring against bad transactions
o Reputation or feedback mechanisms: easy to set up online, do have shortcomings - two-sided reviews
3. Peer production and traditional industries
3.1. Peers versus professional sellers
o Professional seller: has up-front costs to create # units of capacity and marginal costs - hotel, inventory,
employees
▪ Advertising advantage as they can spread fixed advertising cost over large number of sales
o Flexible or peer seller had unit capacity, pays no up-front costs, and has marginal costs
3.2. When is peer production efficient?
o If up-front costs of capacity are low or there are high marginal costs: peer entry will be difficult
o Higher capacity costs, means a larger price premium, and more frequent low-end marginal costs help
peer sellers
o Flexible sellers benefit the most from lower fixed costs
o Variability in demand favors peer production: best to have some capacity which operates only part of
the time
3.3. The rise of peer-to-peer markets
o New marketplace of platform requires investment cost: charging fees to recover investment
o Fixed fees or fees per transaction
4. Regulation of peer-to-peer markets
4.1. Entry and licensing standards
o Cities often tax and regulate number of hotel rooms, limit use of residential property, and cap the
number of taxis
o Regulation largely exists to protect consumers from unscrupulous operators or adverse market forces
4.2. Flexible workers and employment regulation
o Variability in demand can favor flexible work arrangements

3

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller Daniquedhs. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for £5.58. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

72349 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy revision notes and other study material for 14 years now

Start selling
£5.58
  • (0)
  Add to cart