Market Entry and Competition Under Network Effects

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Feng, Yinbo; Hu, Ming
署名单位:
Shanghai University of Finance & Economics; University of Toronto
刊物名称:
OPERATIONS RESEARCH
ISSN/ISSBN:
0030-364X
DOI:
10.1287/opre.2022.0275
发表日期:
2024
页码:
2467-2487
关键词:
social-influence product variety search IMPACT
摘要:
We consider a three-stage game in which, first, a large number of potential firms make entry decisions, then those who choose to stay in the market decide on the investment (quality) level in each product, and last, customers with heterogeneous preferences arrive sequentially to make (random) purchase decisions based on product quality and historical sales under the network effect according to a discrete choice model. We characterize such a random purchase process and show that a growing network effect always contributes to more sales concentration ex post on a small number of products. Perhaps surprisingly, we further show several phase-changing phenomena regarding equilibrium outcomes with respect to the network effect's strength. In particular, the equilibrium product variety (respectively, quality investment) first decreases (respectively, increases) and then increases (respectively, decreases) as the network effect grows. Specifically, when the strength of the network effect is below a threshold, an increasing network effect would shift more sales toward those products with higher quality, preventing more products from entering the market ex ante and inducing firms to adopt the high-budget equilibrium strategy by making a small number of high-quality products, which is consistent with the blockbuster phenomenon. When the strength of the network effect is above the threshold, the network effect would easily cause the market to be concentrated on a few products ex post; even some low-quality products may have a chance to become a hit. Interestingly, in this case, when the network effect is growing, the ex ante equilibrium product variety will be wider, and firms adopt the low- budget equilibrium strategy by making a (relatively) large number of low-quality products, a finding consistent with the long tail theory. We then establish the robustness of the previous main insights by accounting for endogenized pricing and multiproducts carried by each firm.