Online auction business model
We have all visited a site on the net that allows it's users
to auction off their own items. Of the many auctions sites
around, a few stand out:
- eBay
- eBay is the worl's largest online auction site. Like most
auction companies, eBay does not actually sell goods that it owns
itself. It merely facilitates the process of listing and displaying
goods, bidding on items, and paying for them. It acts as a marketplace
for individuals and businesses who use the site to auction off goods
and services.
- Trademe
- Trademe is the New Zealand equivilent of eBay, and was the
most popular website in the country for 2005. Trade Me shares many
features with other online auction websites, such as the American
auction giant eBay. Some of these features include "Buy Now", "Auto
bidding" and the Safe Trader escrow service. Members in New Zealand can
become "Address Verified" by confirming their street-address, and the
site may block unverified members from bidding. Significantly, despite
its global reach, eBay has failed to make a sizeable penetration in the
geographically isolated New Zealand market.
Several types of online auctions are possible. In an English
auction the initial price starts low and is bid up by successive
bidders. In a Dutch auction, multiple identical items are offered in
one auction, with all winning bidders paying the same price -- the
highest price at which all items will be sold (treasury bills, for
example, are auctioned this way). Almost all online auctions use the
English auction method.
Strengths of the business model
The strategic advantages of this business model include:
- No time constraints. Bids can be placed
at any time (24/7).
Items are listed for a number of days (usually between 1 and 10, at the
discretion of the seller), giving purchasers time to search, decide,
and bid. This convenience increases the number of bidders.
- No geographical constraints. Sellers and
bidders can
participate from anywhere that has internet access. This makes them
more accessible and reduces the cost of "attending" an auction. This
increases the number of listed items (ie.: number of sellers) and the
number of bids for each item (ie.: number of bidders). The items do not
need to be shipped to a central location, reducing costs, and reducing
the seller's minimum acceptable price.
- Intensity of social interactions. The
social interactions
involved in the bidding process are very similar to gambling. The
bidders wait in anticipation hoping they will "win" (eBay calls the
successful bidder the "winner"). Much like gambling addiction,
many bidders bid primarily to "play the game" rather than to obtain
products or services. This creates a highly loyal customer segment for
eBay.
- Large number of bidders. Because of the
potential for a
relatively low price, the broad scope of products and services
available, the ease of access, and the social benefits of the auction
process, there are a large numbers of bidders.
- Large number of sellers. Because of the
large number of
bidders, the potential for a relatively high price, reduced selling
costs, and ease of access, there are a large number of sellers.
- Network economies. The large number of
bidders will
encourage more sellers, which, in turn, will encourage more bidders,
which will encourage more sellers, etc., in a virtual spiral. The more
the spiral operates, the larger the system becomes, and the more
valuable the business model becomes for all participants.
- Captures consumers' surplus. Auctions
are a form of first degree price discrimination. As such, they attempt
to convert part of the consumers' surplus (defined as the area above
the market price line but below the firm's demand curve) into
producers' surplus. On-line auctions are efficient enough forms of
price discrimination that they are able to do this.
Tags:
Auction, Auctions, Business, Business Model, Online, Web Design
Related Items:
Comments / Replies
Add Comment / Reply
This website follows the ideas of the No Nofollow, I Follow, DoFollow, No-NoFollow movement.
Leave a helpful comment and you will get a link without NoFollow (U Comment, I Follow).
Online Auctions Says:
27 November, 2006 at 12:34 am
Does your country have a reverse auction site like they have in North America? Thanks.