posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00authored byG Kazakevitch, Lioubov Torlina, S Hendricks
The example of the youth mobile phone market is used for pilot empirical testing of a model of consumers’ decision making, based on common features of consumer behaviour in mature markets of information and high technology products. Firstly, we discuss the key properties of mature high technology markets which affect market behaviour and strategies. These properties include: established customer and provider bases; the elements of both oligopolistic and monopolistic competition; very short product life cycle; considerable product differentiation; and using product quality, versioning and price discrimination as planning and marketing tools. Secondly, a model of consumers’ decision making in such markets is suggested on the assumption that a choice is to be made between the following options: to continue using the existing version of the product, to upgrade it with the current provider or to switch to another provider. Product price, quality characteristics, switching costs and network effects are demonstrated to be the variables affecting consumers’ decisions and therefore, these variables should be considered by competing providers when they choose production and marketing strategies. In conclusion, the results of the empirical study are discussed in the context of their possible application to other information and high technology markets.
History
Pagination
838 - 851
Location
Bangkok, Thailand
Open access
Yes
Start date
2005-07-07
End date
2005-07-10
ISBN-13
9789889855437
ISBN-10
9889855437
Language
eng
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2005, PACIS
Title of proceedings
Proceedings of the Ninth Pacific Asia Conference on Information Systems