Title: Pricing and the Internet
1U10988The Economics of the Internet (ENET)
- Lecture 6
- Pricing and the Internet
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
2Todays objectives
- to identify some of the issues raised in relation
to Pricing and the Internet - to focus specifically on questions relating to
dynamic pricing on the Internet - and
distinguishing it from differential pricing
(which is essentially a form of price
discrimination)
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
3Reading and further references
- Some key references are given on slides at the
end of this presentation - For more details see the links6.html file -
available on the ENET web site
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
4 Preliminary Interactive Interchange Please
answer YES or NO to each of the following
- Do do you know what each of the following are?
- willingness to pay
- reservation price
- consumer surplus
- value-based pricing
- static, posted or menu-driven pricing
- reverse auctions
- pricebots
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
5 Some issues concerning Pricing and the Internet
- Charging for Internet access and use - flat-rate
or more complex charging system based on use? - What pricing model for out-sourced web hosting?
- From free to fee - must we pay for online
content and services? - Frictionless commerce? - have shopbots and
shopping comparison sites made online prices more
competitive? - Differential Pricing - how has the Internet has
enabled sellers to fight back? - Dynamic pricing - what is it and how is it being
implemented?
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
6 Setting the scene 4 scenarios
- In a stable market for a uniform product - a
seller who can segment the market can charge
different consumers different prices
(third-degree price discrimination) - e.g.
computer software - In the market for a perishable (time-sensitive)
product the price can be varied over time to
ensure that all the product is sold e.g. fruit,
airline seats - In a market with unpredictable demand and supply
movements the price can be varied over time to
keep track of these movements and to ensure that
revenue is maximised - e.g. share prices - In the market for a unique or rarely traded
product the seller can use an auction to get the
best price e.g. antiques
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
7 Differential pricing and dynamic pricing the
essential differences
- Differential pricing relates the price to the
customer (or group of customers) - - variations across customers
- Dynamic pricing relates the price to changing
market conditions (shifts in demand and supply
curves - or changing customer preferences) - - variations over time
- Both can be described as flexible pricing systems
and both can make use of web -based software
agents
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
8 Dynamic pricing versus static pricing the
essential differences
- Static (posted, catalogue or menu pricing)
- The seller attempts to determine the best price
for the product before selling - the price
remains fixed (except in the face of severe
demand or supply shifts) - Dynamic pricing (responsive pricing)
- The seller constantly monitors supply and demand
conditions and regularly modifies the price to
respond to changing conditions - the aim is to
minimise disequilibrium transactions
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
9 Differential pricing - segmenting the market
- segmenting the market by objective customer
characteristics - by age, demographic or other
factor (e.g. business/consumer) - involuntary
selection - segmenting the market via voluntary
self-selection - customer decides which version
is worth it - versioning - a form of customisation
especially relevant for online information
(digital) goods - the additional costs of
producing different versions can be very small
while the additional revenue extracted from
consumers can be large - by differentiating the products suppliers
decrease their substitutability
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
10 Differential pricing - other tactics
- product bundling - e.g servicing or training
programmes - loyalty programs - to increase switching costs
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
11 Dynamic pricing - a definition
- A dynamic pricing model is defined as the buying
and selling of goods and services in free markets
where the prices fluctuate in response to demand
and supply and changing customer preferences - Srivastava (2001) - my underlining
- Dynamic pricing takes advantage of real-time
market and customer information to customise the
offer. Other related terms revenue or yield
optimization. An old idea in new clothes.
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
12 Dynamic pricing - an old idea given a new boost
- In traditional markets the high transactions
costs associated with dynamic pricing mechanisms
have limited their adoption (except in specific
circumstances - e.g. shares and commodities) - But the Internet provides instant and cheap
communication and information updating - Hence the development of online auctions and
other dynamic pricing systems on the web
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
13 Dynamic pricing with intelligent software (1)
- Early efforts were based around Excel
spreadsheets, dynamically linked to information
sources, that could be used as a decision support
tool - Now intelligent software is available
commercially that can track market conditions and
automatically change prices. Examples of
companies supplying this software are Talus (now
part of Manugistics), Azerity, Maxager and PROS
Revenue Management - Experiments are being conducted with intelligent
software agents (pricebots) - see Kephart et
al (2000) on the IBM Information Economics
project - could move beyond just pricing - humans
could delegate responsibility to agents who
negotiate with each other.
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
14 Dynamic pricing with intelligent software
(2)problems
- todays dynamic pricing software is only as good
as the information fed into it - which is not
always current and even enthusiasts admit that it
can depend on sales force staff entering the data
and they ..do a pretty wimpy job, to be honest
(Fred Jones, whose company MicroTechnologies,
uses Azeritys ProChannel software agent) - hence the interest in developing pricebots that
autonomously collect and update information - but there are concerns about potential pitfalls -
their collective behavior may not closely
resemble that of humans (Kephart et al.)
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
15 Dynamic pricing with intelligent software
(3)simulation experiments
- market simulators can be used to determine the
best agent strategies for each type of market
(see Morris 2001 who describes the Learning
Curve simulator) - Better than purely theoretical solutions that may
be difficult to apply - numerical results easier
to interpret. - Inputs market scenariobuyer bahaviour seller
strategies - Types of seller strategies explored by Learning
Curve - Derivative Following
- Myopically Optimal
- Dynamic Programming
- Reinforcement learning
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
16 Dynamic pricing - did Amazon experiment?
- stories circulating on bulletin boards and mail
lists that Amazon was charging customers
different prices for the same product, perhaps
based on customer profiles (frequency of purchase
on Amazon, date of last purchase etc.) - ManagingChange.com carried out a survey (July
2001-June 2003) to test for links between prices
and these factors - asked for responses on 4
items (a book, a music CD, a video DVD and a PDA) - no evidence that price was linked to any of these
characteristics (or whether customer had browser
cookie enabled) but there were lots of price
fluctuations - perhaps sales promotions or
seasonal effects? - In any case would this really be dynamic
pricing or just differential pricing?
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
17Types of dynamic pricing
- One buyer, one seller
- negotiation/haggling
- One buyer, many sellers
- Reverse auctions (e.g.B2B procurement and
sourcing) - One seller, many buyers
- Forward auctions (e.g. C2C via eBay, B2B for
disposing of old stock) - Many sellers, many buyers
- Aggregation systems
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
18 Types of auction
- English auction - open cry - bids increase
- Dutch auction - opening price gradually
discounted - Vickrey auction - sealed bids - winner offers the
highest amount but pays 2nd highest amount - Used in disposing of excess inventories
- Used in valuing unique or rarely traded products
- Revenue Equivalence Theorem
- Reverse auctions for procurement - invitation to
bid to supply inputs - RFQ (Request For Quote
sales) - Online systems for C2C auctions - eBay
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
19Request for Quote (RFQ) systems
- Buyer posts an RFQ for a product meeting certain
minimum requirements - Sellers respond with a single closed bid within
agreed time period - possible subsequent renegotiation
- example for B2C is Lycos Merchant Match
(Request-a-Quote) - they use their
request-response technology to search for
offers - they e-mail quotes to you within 24 hours
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
20 eBay
- C2C auction system
- you place a bid for the item you want (maximum
amount) - eBay bids for you up to your limit
- reviews are available to help you rate sellers
- most sellers accept payment by PayPal
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
21 Priceline.com
- Priceline.com is not a shopping service - it is a
bidding service. (Reverse auction) .Customers
are asked for their highest bid (maximum WTP) -
priceline searches for a suitable deal - airlines use it as an independent clearing house
to unload cheap last minute deals (they dont
like to advertise this) - also available are car
rentals, holidays and hotel rooms - Founded by the excellently named Jay Walker
- Walker calls it his buyer-driven commerce
business model - But customers have to be flexible - may have to
compromise on product specification
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
22 Dynamic pricing - inhibiting factors
- Moral and ethical issues Customers may perceive
it to be unfair for firms to charge different
people different prices (although they have done
for many years - price discrimination and
discounting) - Unacceptable excessive price variations? - too
much variation in price may be counterproductive
- customers may not accept it - May cut across established customer relationships
- Set up costs - there may be a high set up cost in
terms of purchasing and customising the software
and integrating it into the business - will it be
worth it? - Not always appropriate to product and market -
for example where distribution cost is high
relative to other costs
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004
23Thats all folks!
The Economics of
the Internet Guy Judge, February 2004