Article ID: | iaor2007537 |
Country: | Netherlands |
Volume: | 41 |
Issue: | 4 |
Start Page Number: | 764 |
End Page Number: | 786 |
Publication Date: | May 2006 |
Journal: | Decision Support Systems |
Authors: | Sundararajan Arun, Viswanathan Siva, Aron Ravi |
Keywords: | marketing, e-commerce |
Electronic commerce has enabled the use of intelligent agent technologies that can evaluate buyers, customize products, and price in real-time. Our model of an electronic market with customizable products analyzes the pricing, profitability and welfare implications of agent-based technologies that price dynamically based on product preference information revealed by consumers. We find that in making the trade-off between better prices and better customization, consumers invariably choose less-than-ideal products. Furthermore, this trade-off has a higher impact on buyers on the higher end of the market and causes a transfer of consumer surplus towards buyers with a lower willingness to pay. As buyers adjust their product choices in response to better demand agent technologies, seller revenues decrease since the gains from better buyer information are dominated by the lowering of the total value created from the transactions. We study the strategic and welfare implications of these findings, and discuss managerial and technology development guidelines.