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Bundling Information Goods: Pricing, Profits, and Efficiency

TLDR
In this article, the authors study the optimal bundling strategies for a multiproduct monopolist, and find that bundling very large numbers of unrelated information goods can be surprisingly profitable.
Abstract
We study the strategy of bundling a large number of information goods, such as those increasingly available on the Internet, and selling them for a fixed price. We analyze the optimal bundling strategies for a multiproduct monopolist, and we find that bundling very large numbers of unrelated information goods can be surprisingly profitable. The reason is that the law of large numbers makes it much easier to predict consumers' valuations for a bundle of goods than their valuations for the individual goods when sold separately. As a result, this "predictive value of bundling" makes it possible to achieve greater sales, greater economic efficiency, and greater profits per good from a bundle of information goods than can be attained when the same goods are sold separately. Our main results do not extend to most physical goods, as the marginal costs of production for goods not used by the buyer typically negate any benefits from the predictive value of large-scale bundling. While determining optimal bundling strategies for more than two goods is a notoriously difficult problem, we use statistical techniques to provide strong asymptotic results and bounds on profits for bundles of any arbitrary size. We show how our model can be used to analyze the bundling of complements and substitutes, bundling in the presence of budget constraints, and bundling of goods with various types of correlations and how each of these conditions can lead to limits on optimal bundle size. In particular we find that when different market segments of consumers differ systematically in their valuations for goods, simple bundling will no longer be optimal. However, by offering a menu of different bundles aimed at each market segment, bundling makes traditional price discrimination strategies more powerful by reducing the role of unpredictable idiosyncratic components of valuations. The predictions of our analysis appear to be consistent with empirical observations of the markets for Internet and online content, cable television programming, and copyrighted music.

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Two-Sided Network Effects: A Theory of Information Product Design

TL;DR: A formal model of two-sided network externalities based in textbook economics-a mix of Katz and Shapiro network effects, price discrimination, and product differentiation is introduced, offering insights to regulators seeking to apply antitrust law to network markets.
Journal ArticleDOI

Two-Sided Network Effects: A Theory of Information Product Design

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce a formal model of two-sided network externalities based in textbook economics, a mix of Katz and Shapiro network effects, price discrimination, and product differentiation.
Posted Content

Strategic Bundling of Products and Prices: A New Synthesis for Marketing

TL;DR: Based on a review of the marketing, economics, and law literature, this article developed a new synthesis of the field of bundling, which provides three important benetits: clearly and consistently defining bundling terms and identifying two key dimensions that enable a comprehensive classitication of bunding strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Social Cost of Cheap Pseudonyms

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the problem of societal norms for cooperation and reputation when it is possible to obtain cheap pseudonyms, something that is becoming quite common in a wide variety of interactions on the Internet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strategic Bundling of Products and Prices: A New Synthesis for Marketing

TL;DR: Based on a review of the marketing, economics, and law literature, this paper developed a new synthesis of the field of bundling, which provides three important benefits: (a) clearly and consistently defining bundling terms and identifies two key dimensions that enable a comprehensive classification of the bundling strategies, and (b) formulates clear rules for evaluating the legality of each of these strategies.
References
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TL;DR: Ebsco as mentioned in this paper examines the arbitrage model of capital asset pricing as an alternative to the mean variance pricing model introduced by Sharpe, Lintner and Treynor.
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Efficient Mechanisms for Bilateral Trading

TL;DR: In this article, the seller's valuation and the buyer's valuation for a single object are assumed to be independent random variables, and each individual's valuation is unknown to the other.
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Reducing buyer search costs: implications for electronic marketplaces

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of buyer search costs in markets with differentiated product offerings is analyzed in the context of an electronic marketplace, and the allocational efficiencies such a reduction can bring to a differentiated market are formalized.
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