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Hal R. Varian. Pricing Information. Britannica v. Encarta. Britannica : 200 years, $1,600 for set 1992: Microsoft purchased Funk & Wagnalls to create Encarta Britannica response Sales dropped 50% between 1990 and 1996 Online subscription at $120 CD first for $200, then $70-$125
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Hal R. Varian Pricing Information SIMS
SIMS Britannica v. Encarta • Britannica: 200 years, $1,600 for set • 1992: Microsoft purchased Funk & Wagnalls to create Encarta • Britannica response • Sales dropped 50% between 1990 and 1996 • Online subscription at $120 • CD first for $200, then $70-$125 • Free access, Summer 1999 • Offer subscriptions to libraries • Adopt Wikipedia model
SIMS Wikipedia v Encarta • Wiki – developed by Ward Cunningham circa 1994-95 • Wikipedia started 2001 by Larry Sanger and Jimmy Wales • Currently 2.7 million articles (in English) • 256 other languages, 21 with more than 50 thousand articles • Microsoft’s response: “looking for volunteers to keep Encarta up to date.” • "Microsoft offers cash" • "Paid entries in Wikipedia?“
SIMS Production Costs of Information • First-copy (fixed) costs dominate • Sunk costs: not recoverable • Variable costs small; no capacity constraints • Microsoft profit margins of 92% • Leads to significant supply-side economies of scale and scope
SIMS Economies of Scale and Scope • Traditional supply-side economies (cost effects) • Economies of scale • cost of incremental units less than average cost • equivalently: average cost is declining in units produced • often due to fixed costs • Economies of scope • cost of producing additional products reduced • often due shared resource • E.g., Google infrastructure allows them to offer additional services at relatively low cost (e.g., Google Scholar)
SIMS Economies of Scale and Scope • Demand side (revenue effects) • Economies of scale • value of product increases with number of users • often due to network externalities • Economies of scope • value of product depends on availability of other products • systems effects: DVD player + disk, hardware + software • Interoperability/compatibility • Windows + MS Office • Google calendar + Gmail • due to branding, reputation, etc • Virgin Air, Virgin phone, etc.
SIMS Implications for Market Structure • Scale + scope on cost/revenue sides imply: market cannot be "perfectly competitive” • bidding wars lead to downward price spirals • Britannica, Encarta, Wikipedia • spreadsheet wars in mid-80s • Two sustainable structures • Dominant firm/monopoly with entry barrier such as cost advantage, network effects (e.g., Microsoft) • Differentiated product (e.g., magazines) • …and combinations of above
SIMS Example of commoditized information • CD ROM phonebooks: 1986: Nynex charged $10,000 per disk for NY directory • Nynex employee + consultant started rival product • Hired Chinese workers at $3.50 daily wage • Partnership broke up • Bidding war between ProCD and Digital Directory Assistance (Bertrand competition) • Competitive price reductions • Price forced to marginal cost
SIMS Other examples of commoditization? • What are some other examples of information commoditization?
SIMS What to do to achieve sustainability • Exploit economies of scale and scope on demand side and supply side • Supply side/cost strategy • …but if everyone tries to do it, watch out • …first-mover (really best-mover) advantage • Demand side strategy • build a network/community: eBay, YouTube • move to advertising model • differentiate your product • add value to the raw information to distinguish yourself from the competition • target specific markets (as with social networking sites) • compare MySpace, Facebook
SIMS Cost Strategies for Commodity Business • Reusability: sell the same thing over again • Baywatch, Reuters, FoodTV, SciFi channel • Reduces average cost • Look for supply-side economies • scale: natural in info business • scope: often arises
SIMS Revenue Strategies for Commodity Business • Differentiate your product • West Publishing and page numbers • Google API to Maps: User Created Content • Look for demand-side economies • scale: network effects (e.g., via community) • scope: interoperability, branding, reputation, bundling
SIMS First-mover Advantages • Avoid greed • Respond to threat quickly and decisively • Example: Intuit and Microsoft • Limit pricing to discourage entry • highly credible with high sunk costs to entry • Play tough • Discourage future entry • Microsoft: “Embrace and extend…” • Engage in constant innovation (Amazon, Google) • Value to incumbent of controlled experiments • Example of MSN search
SIMS Hard to do for Incumbent • May not recognize threat till too late • CP/M • Wordstar • VisiCalc • AOL
SIMS Personalize Your Product • Personalize product, personalize price • Search-based advertising • Google, Yahoo, MSN chief players • Pay per click model • Auction off the best positions • Very effective ads due to high relevance • Very high margins due to low marginal cost • Will explore in detail later…
SIMS Know Your Customer • Registration • Required: NY Times • Billing: Wall Street Journal • Yahoo/Microsoft: collect addresses • Allows demographic targeting via ZAG • Know user behavior • Observe queries • Observe clickstream • Yahoo and Microsoft: behavioral targeting • "Online retailers are watching you"
SIMS Logic of Pricing • Quicken example • 1 million wtp $60, 2 million wtp $20 Price (Dollars) $60 $40 $20 1 2 3 Quantity(Millions)
SIMS Quicken example • Assumes only one price • Charging different prices gives $100 million • But how do you get at extra value? • Answer: market segmentation/price differentiation • Quicken Basic • Quicken Deluxe • Quicken Premier • Quicken Home and Business • But how to segment?
SIMS Forms of Differential Pricing • Personalized pricing • Sell to each user at a different price • Versioning • Offer a product line and let users choose • Group pricing • Based on group membership/identity
SIMS Personalized Pricing inTraditional Industries • Airlines and yield management • Direct mail and catalogs • Britannica experiment • Victoria’s Secret • Supermarket scanners • Profit margin more than doubled 1993-1996 • More effective than newspaper advertising due to targeting
SIMS Promotional Pricing • Sales, coupons, rebates • Only worthwhile if these segment market – some use, some don’t • Offer credible signal of price sensitivity • By proving you are price sensitive, get a lower price • But by same token are a nuisance • "Rebates expiring"
SIMS Personalized Pricing: new techniques on the Internet • Auctions • Ebay, Priceline, Dovebid,etc. • Will discuss in later lecture • Huge lock-in for auction markets due to network effects • Buyers want to be where sellers are and vice versa • Compare eBay US and Yahoo Japan auctions
SIMS Group Pricing • Price sensitivity: traditional • low price to more elastic (sensitive) demand • Network effects, standardization • value of good goes up if your group adopts • significant switching costs for organization • site licenses offer big discount because of this • Product endorsement/viral market • “click here to email to a friend”
SIMS Group pricing: price sensitivity • International pricing • US edition textbook: $70 • Indian edition textbook: $5 • Problems raised by Internet • Localization as partial solution • Keyboards, languages, etc. • Grey market in cameras and warantees
SIMS Sharing as group pricing • Transactions cost of sharing • History of video rental • Only video sales • Rise of video rental • Pricing for ownership • Revenue sharing model • Academic journals • Library price (for shared copies) • Individual price • Now: bundling
SIMS Summary • Understand cost structure • Commodity market: be aggressive, not greedy • Avoid commoditization if you can: differentiate product and price • Understand consumer • Continual experimentation • Personalize products and prices