Experts and Amateurs: The Role of Experience in Internet Auctions
The use of auctions as a pricing mechanism has grown dramatically over the last few years. The introduction of electronic auctions has significantly widened the pool of consumers who participate in auctions and increased the number of companies attempting to sell their products in an auction format....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Marketing letters 2000-11, Vol.11 (4), p.363-374 |
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description | The use of auctions as a pricing mechanism has grown dramatically over the last few years. The introduction of electronic auctions has significantly widened the pool of consumers who participate in auctions and increased the number of companies attempting to sell their products in an auction format. Previous empirical research on auctions has focused almost exclusively on the behavior of professional bidders in high stakes common value auctions or the behavior of students in laboratory experiments. We collect data on a large number of electronic auctions, across four product categories, to explore the behavior of consumers bidding in a real marketplace. In particular, we focus on the role experience plays in their bidding behavior to uncover whether consumer learning drives the bidding process towards outcomes described in the theoretical literature on auctions. We find that experience docs indeed lead to behavior which is more consistent with theory although the proportion of experienced bidders who behave in a manner inconsistent with theory remains quite large. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1023/A:1008141313927 |
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source | SpringerNature Journals; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing |
subjects | Auction markets Auctions Bidding Bids Consumer behavior Consumer behaviour Consumer goods Consumers Electronic commerce Experts Information technology Internet Nash equilibrium Neckties Pottery Pricing policies Staplers Studies Theory |
title | Experts and Amateurs: The Role of Experience in Internet Auctions |
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