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Frictionless Commerce? A Comparison of Internet and Conventional Retailers

TLDR
The authors empirically analyzes the characteristics of the Internet as a channel for two categories of homogeneous products (books and CDs) using a data set of over 4,500 price observations collected over a period of 9 months.
Abstract
There have been many claims that the Internet represents a new "frictionless market." Our research empirically analyzes the characteristics of the Internet as a channel for two categories of homogeneous products -- books and CDs -- using a data set of over 4,500 price observations collected over a period of 9 months. We compare pricing behavior at 37 Internet and conventional retail outlets. We find support for the hypothesis of increased efficiency in Internet channels on several dimensions, but we also find evidence of considerable price dispersion. We find that prices on the Internet are 8-15% lower than prices in conventional outlets, depending on whether taxes, shipping and shopping costs are included. Additionally, we find that Internet retailers' price adjustments over time are up to 100 times smaller than conventional retailers' price adjustments -- presumably reflecting lower menu costs in Internet channels. However, we also find substantial price dispersion across retailers on the Internet. Prices for books and CDs differ by as much as 47% across Internet retailers at any one time and the dispersion of posted prices on the Internet is equal to or greater than comparable measures of dispersion across conventional retailers. Moreover, the Internet retailers with the lowest prices do not receive the most sales for either books or CDs. The observed dispersion is not easily explained as a response to existing models of search costs. However, price dispersion on the Internet may be explained by retailer heterogeneity with respect to factors such as branding and consumer "trust." We note that branding and trust may play an enhanced role on the Internet because of the spatial and temporal separation between buyer, seller, and product in Internet channels for books and CDs.

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Citations
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TL;DR: The proposed model integrates trust and perceived risk, which are incorporated given the implicit uncertainty of the e-commerce environment, and is justified by placing all the variables under the nomological TRA structure and proposing their interrelationships.
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A trust-based consumer decision-making model in electronic commerce: The role of trust, perceived risk, and their antecedents

TL;DR: A theoretical framework describing the trust-based decision-making process a consumer uses when making a purchase from a given site is developed and the proposed model is tested using a Structural Equation Modeling technique on Internet consumer purchasing behavior data collected via a Web survey.
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Impact of Online Consumer Reviews on Sales: The Moderating Role of Product and Consumer Characteristics

TL;DR: This article examined how product and consumer characteristics moderate the influence of online consumer reviews on product sales using data from the video game industry and found that online reviews are more influential for less popular games and games whose players have greater Internet experience.
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The Resurgence of Growth in the Late 1990s: Is Information Technology the Story?

TL;DR: The authors found that a surge in the use of information technology capital and faster efficiency gains in the production of computers account for about two-thirds of the speed-up in productivity growth between the first and second halves of the 1990s.
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The four levels of loyalty and the pivotal role of trust: a study of online service dynamics

TL;DR: A four-dimensional scale of loyalty that reflects Oliver's [Satisfaction, a Behavioral Perspective on the Consumer, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1997] conceptualization of a sequential loyalty chain is proposed, operationalized, and tested as discussed by the authors.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Stability in Competition

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that if the purveyor of an article gradually increases his price while his rivals keep theirs fixed, the diminution in volume of his sales will in general take place continuously rather than in the abrupt way which has tacitly been assumed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monopolistic competition with outside goods

TL;DR: In this article, a model of spatial competition in which a second commodity is explicitly treated is presented, and it is shown that a zero-profit equilibrium with symmetrically located firms may exhibit rather strange properties.
Journal ArticleDOI

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Price and Advertising Signals of Product Quality

TL;DR: This paper presented a signaling model based on the ideas of Phillip Nelson, in which both the introductory price and the level of directly "uninformative" advertising or other dissipative marketing expenditures are choice variables and may be used as signals for the initially unobservable quality of a newly introduced experience good repeat purchases play a crucial role in their model.
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Hassle free in e commerce

The paper discusses the characteristics of the Internet as a channel for retail, finding evidence of increased efficiency but also substantial price dispersion. The term "hassle-free" is not mentioned in the paper.