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Electronic Marketplaces and Price
Transparency: Strategy, Information Technology, and Success
Christina Soh, M. Lynne
Markus, and Kim Huat Goh
Abstract
Electronic marketplaces (EMPs) are widely
assumed to increase price transparency and hence lower product prices.
Results of empirical studies have been mixed, with several studies
showing that product prices have not decreased and others showing that
prices have increased in some cases. One explanation is that sellers
prefer not to join EMPs with high price transparency, leading highly
price transparent EMPs to fail. Therefore, in order to be successful,
EMPs might be expected to avoid high price transparency. But that
strategy creates a catch-22 for EMPs on the buy side: Why would buyers
want to join EMPs in the absence of price transparency and the benefit
of lower prices? We argue that successful EMPs must provide
compensatory benefits for sellers in the case of high price
transparency and for buyers in the case of low price transparency.
To understand how EMPs
could succeed, regardless of price transparency, we examined the
relationships among EMP strategy, price transparency, and performance
by analyzing all 19 EMPs that compete by selling a broad range of
standard electronics components. We found that all EMPs pursuing a low
cost strategy had high price transparency and performed poorly. All
EMPs that performed well pursued strategies of differentiation, but,
interestingly, not all successful EMPs avoided price transparency: Some
EMPs succeeded despite enabling high price transparency. We therefore
examined two differentiated EMPs in greater depth – one with high price
transparency, the other with low price transparency – to show how they
achieved strategic alignment of activities and resources and provided
compensatory benefits for their customers.
Keywords: Electronic marketplaces, electronic market
theory, electronic commerce, Internet, price transparency, strategic
alignment, electronic components industry
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