Bandwagon effects in high-technology industries / Jeffrey H. Rohlfs.
2001
HC110.H53 R64 2001eb
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Title
Bandwagon effects in high-technology industries / Jeffrey H. Rohlfs.
Author
ISBN
9780262256889 (electronic bk.)
0262256886 (electronic bk.)
9780262254304 (electronic bk.)
0262254301 (electronic bk.)
0585436126
9780585436128
9780262182171
0262256886 (electronic bk.)
9780262254304 (electronic bk.)
0262254301 (electronic bk.)
0585436126
9780585436128
9780262182171
Publication Details
Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ©2001.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xiv, 256 pages) : illustrations
Call Number
HC110.H53 R64 2001eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
338.4/762/000973
Summary
Economists use the term "bandwagon effect" to describe the benefit a consumer enjoys as a result of others' using the same product or service. The history of videocassettes offers a striking example of the power of bandwagon effects. Originally there were two technical standards for videocassettes in the United States: Beta and VHS. Beta was widely regarded to have better picture quality, but VHS could record longer television programs. Eventually the selection of Beta cassettes shrank to zero, leaving consumers no choice but to get on the VHS bandwagon. The most successful bandwagon, apart from telephone service, is the Internet.In this book, Jeffrey Rohlfs shows how the dynamics of bandwagons differ from those of conventional products and services. They are difficult to get started and often fail before getting under way. A classic example of a marketing failure is the Picturephone, introduced by the Bell System in the early 1970s. Rohlfs describes the fierce battles waged by competitors when new services are introduced, as well as cases of early agreement on a single technical standard, as with CDs and CD players. He also discusses the debate among economists and policy analysts over the advantages and disadvantages of having governments set technical standards. The case studies include fax machines, telephones, CD players, VCRs, personal computers, television, and the Internet.
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OCLC-licensed vendor bibliographic record.
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