Competing with co-created products

被引:3
|
作者
Cohen-Vernik, Dinah [1 ]
Pazgal, Amit [1 ]
Syam, Niladri B. [2 ]
机构
[1] Rice Univ, Dept Mkt, Jones Grad Sch Business, 6100 Main St, Houston, TX 77005 USA
[2] Univ Missouri, Dept Mkt, Trulaske Coll Business, Columbia, MO 65211 USA
关键词
Co-creation; Competition; Customization; Spillovers; Game theory; SUPPLY CHAIN; USER DESIGN; NETWORKS; SPILLOVERS; INNOVATION; CUSTOMERS;
D O I
10.1016/j.ijresmar.2018.11.001
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
The practice of upstream firms (suppliers) and downstream firms co-creating products (goods or services) together has a long history in business markets. We analyze the strategic choices of two competing downstream firms who simultaneously decide whether or not to co-create with an upstream supplier. Within this framework we incorporate endogenous pricing and effort choices by the upstream supplier and the downstream firms. Downstream firms contemplating co-creation with a supplier are faced with a trade-off. On the one hand they can benefit from the supplier's innovation efforts and therefore obtain a better product. On the other hand, they are confronted with the adverse effect of their own innovation efforts spilling over to their rivals via the supplier who would sell the co-created product to all firms. Our model captures this tension and offers several insights. First, we show that all the channel members (the supplier and the firms) are getting higher profits when they all co-create together, as compared to the situation where there is no co creation and the Supplier alone designs the product. However, we also demonstrate that the abovementioned trade-offs provide an incentive for firms to deviate from this outcome, sometimes resulting in no-co-creation between the downstream firms and upstream supplier in equilibrium. Further, we show that in the competitive co-creation environment, ex-ante symmetric firms may pursue asymmetric strategies in equilibrium. The asymmetric equilibrium, in which only one of the two firms co-creates with the supplier, is obtained when the degree of price sensitivity to competitor's product in the consumer market is moderate. Third, we find two types of asymmetric equilibria. For moderately low degrees of price sensitivity, all parties prefer the asymmetric outcome. For moderately high price sensitivity, both firms prefer co-creation, but the supplier will refuse to co-create with one of them thereby enforcing the asymmetric outcome. Thus, a strategic supplier's role is critical in that it expands the region where the asymmetric equilibrium takes place, beyond the one preferred by the firms themselves. We also show that, when firms compete in the end-consumer market, the supplier may exert lower innovation effort when it co-creates with two firms as compared to one. This is not the case in the absence of competition between the downstream firms. Finally, and counterintuitively, a higher degree of product fit for the rival can actually benefit the co-creating firm in the asymmetric outcome, even though it improves its rival's product. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:63 / 82
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Scenarios for Graph Algorithmic Thinking Co-created with Teachers
    Bonani, Andrea
    Gennari, Rosella
    Mahlknecht, Giovanni
    [J]. METHODOLOGIES AND INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS FOR TECHNOLOGY ENHANCED LEARNING, 2022, 326 : 42 - 53
  • [22] Towards Citizen Co-Created Public Service Apps
    Emaldi, Mikel
    Aguilera, Unai
    Lopez-de-Ipina, Diego
    Perez-Velasco, Jorge
    [J]. SENSORS, 2017, 17 (06):
  • [23] Evaluating recovery colleges: a co-created scoping review
    Lin, Elizabeth
    Harris, Holly
    Black, Georgia
    Bellissimo, Gail
    Di Giandomenico, Anna
    Rodak, Terri
    Costa-Dookhan, Kenya A.
    Shier, Rowen
    Rovet, Jordana
    Gruszecki, Sam
    Soklaridis, Sophie
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH, 2023, 32 (04) : 813 - 834
  • [24] Technology and Religion: Remaining Human in a Co-created World
    Slattery, John
    [J]. THEOLOGY AND SCIENCE, 2011, 9 (04) : 471 - 473
  • [25] Customer engagement and co-created value in social media
    Quach, Sara
    Shao, Wei
    Ross, Mitchell
    Thaichon, Park
    [J]. MARKETING INTELLIGENCE & PLANNING, 2020, 38 (06) : 730 - 744
  • [26] ! Trade off Cybersecurity Concerns for Co-Created Value
    Hu, Tao
    Wang, Kai-Yu
    Chih, Wenhai
    Yang, Xiu-Hua
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COMPUTER INFORMATION SYSTEMS, 2020, 60 (05) : 468 - 483
  • [27] Market niches as dynamic, co-created resource domains
    Odlin, Denis
    Benson-Rea, Maureen
    [J]. INDUSTRIAL MARKETING MANAGEMENT, 2021, 95 : 29 - 40
  • [28] The effects of customer participation in co-created service recovery
    Dong, Beibei
    Evans, Kenneth R.
    Zou, Shaoming
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE ACADEMY OF MARKETING SCIENCE, 2008, 36 (01) : 123 - 137
  • [29] Co-created value: Multidimensional scale and nomological network
    Busser, James A.
    Shulga, Lenna V.
    [J]. TOURISM MANAGEMENT, 2018, 65 : 69 - 86
  • [30] The effects of customer participation in co-created service recovery
    Beibei Dong
    Kenneth R. Evans
    Shaoming Zou
    [J]. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 2008, 36 : 123 - 137