2016-01-12
Demand Heterogeneity and the Adoption of Platform Complements
Publication
Publication
ERIM report series research in management Erasmus Research Institute of Management
This paper offers a demand-based theory of how platform maturity affects the adoption of platform complements. We argue that differences between early and late adopters of the platform include willingness to pay for the platform-and-complement bundle, risk preferences, preference for novelty, and search behavior. These differences create heterogeneous demand conditions for complements that affect both average complement performance and variance in the types of complements that are more or less successful. Using a novel dataset of 2,921 sixth-generation console video games, we find that platform maturity has a negative relationship on video games’ unit sales. Furthermore, as the platform matures, we find that the sales disparity between new intellectual property (IP) games and games based on existing video game properties or media tie-ins grows to the detriment of new IP games. We find that the sales disparity between superstar games and flops also widens as the platform matures. These effects are accentuated by the introduction of a next generation platform, which further skews the complement’s customer pool as early adopters migrate away from the current generation platform. Robustness tests that control for unobserved heterogeneity help rule out alternative explanations and support our argument that these performance implications are truly driven by heterogeneity in demand.
Additional Metadata | |
---|---|
, , , , | |
hdl.handle.net/1765/79494 | |
ERIM Report Series Research in Management | |
ERIM report series research in management Erasmus Research Institute of Management | |
Organisation | Erasmus Research Institute of Management |
Rietveld, J., & Eggers, J. P. (2016). Demand Heterogeneity and the Adoption of Platform Complements (No. ERS-2016-003-STR). ERIM report series research in management Erasmus Research Institute of Management. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1765/79494 |