What was revolutionary about the transformation from analog to digital information?
With digital information, it was now possible to create endless and identitical (also qualitatively) copies
When does data becomes a disruptive factor?
When it can be stored, accessed, analyzed and (ideally) transmitted outside the device
Technology drives long-term trends - what are those 5 “trends”
Data
Automated learning and production
Conntected devices
Robotization
Interfaces
Technology drives long-term trends - Data
Former analogoues data becomes digitalized, allowing it to be stored, transmitted, processed and analyzed with unprecendeted fidelity and speed
Technology drives long-term trends - Automated learning and production
More data and faster computers allow the automation of knowledge discovery, decision making and reporting
Technology drives long-term trends - connected devices
New communication protocols and components allow devices to be connected to one another and by extension individuals
Technology drives long-term trends - Robotization
New materials, batteries, actuators and software enable the emergence of dexterous automated machines (robots)
Technology drives long-term trends - Interfaces
High quality images, video, 3D render, and sounds can be delivered with higher definition and realism creating new interfaces to interact with humans
Moore’s Law in today’s society
law remained in place for decades: computing power
companies used the predication to plan their business model
predication as a way to organize business
—> today: everything can compute i.e. Airpods, Laptops, charger, coffeemachines
—> combination of computer power and algorithm
What are economics of scale?
Economies of Scale refer to the cost advantages that result from large outputs.
What is positive feedback?
Positive Feedback refers to the positive effect of past adoption of a product or a standard on the current adoption of a product or standard.
What is market tipping?
Market tipping refers the increasing advantage of one market player that earns an initial advantage enabling it to take over most or all the market
—> Network effects and switching costs can lead to market tipping
What are networks effects
Network Effects are the increase (or decrease) in benefits that a user derives from a good or service when the number of users consuming this product or service increases.
What are indirect network effects?
Indirect Network Effects are the increase (or decrease) in benefits that a user derives from a good or service from complementary products and standards developed as a result of product adoption.
Value of a Network - Sarnoff’s Law
The value of a network is proportional to the size of the audience, N
Value of a Network - Metcalf’s Law
The value of a network is proportional the number of possible connections, which for large N is approximately the square of the number of connected users of the network, N2.
1. There is still no rigorous way to validate Metcalfe’s law and other related laws.
2. Networks grow at different rates over their lifetime and the value can deviate greatly from any law. There are a critical mass of users that increases value faster than Metcalfe’s law.
3. Network externalities can be positive or negative at different points in time or for different markets. Congestion and diminishing marginal utility are better captured by Brescoe’s law.
4. Data availability and quality for testing Metcalfe’s and other laws is still poor. 5.Value of a network depends on the definition of the market 6.Value of a network depends on the business model of the network, which can change over time
Value of a Network - Briscoe’s Law
Not all connections are equally valuable. Value of network is better approximated by N . log(N).
Value of a Network - Reed’s Law
The value of a network is proportional to the number subgroups possible, which for large N is close to 2 N(hochgestellt)
What is a platform?
A Platform is the set of rules, components, and technologies that creates value by facilitating a network of users to interact, connect, and transact*.
*This definition is in the specific context of network platform
What is a two - or multi-sided platform?
A Two- or Multi-sided Platform is a platform that connects two or more different types of users (further discussion and refining of the definition later)
Debate over definition: two or multisided platform
A Two- or Multi-sided Platform is an organization that creates value primarily by enabling direct interactions between two or more distinct types of users.
Two characteristics:
Each group of users is a customer of the platform in a meaningful way
The platform enables some direct interaction between the sides
Cross–group or network effects are not sufficient nor necessary for a multi-sided platform:
§ If we require cross-group network effects, the definition becomes under-inclusive: e.g., advertisement- based media
§ If we require cross-group network effects in only one direction, the definition becomes over-inclusive: e.g., retailers are not multi-sided platforms
What are platform functions?
Connectivity Point-to-point transfer of information or goods between two partners. The sender knows the identity of the receiver before the transaction
Variety Allows buyers with a need for variety to access suppliers with diverse assortments. The buyer knows the identity of the seller before the transaction
Matching Allows users of the network to access other users with specific characteristics. They don’t know the identity of the matched partner before the transaction.
Price Setting By matching traders the platform enables price formation.
Why are indirect network effects crucial for platforms?
Indirect Network Effects occur in networks with different types of units (buyers and sellers, two-sided markets), and refer to the benefits a member derives from increasing the number of members of a different type.
How do platforms make money?
Why can monopoly platforms create more value but can set higher prices
Part of anti-trust regulation seeks to control monopoly power, which can lead to higher prices and worse outcomes for society. But users value larger platforms, so a monopoly platform might be efficient. Is it?
Farronato, Fong and Fradkin (2021) explore this idea. They look at a merger between two platforms that specialize on pet-sitting and observe how users behave and how prices change.
They observe several cities and the original two platforms have different relative market share.
Why can monopoly platforms create more value but can set higher prices- Results from Farronato et al (2023)
“We find that the acquiring platform experiences network effects, as evidenced by increased participation of existing users who see their choice sets expand from the influx of users from the acquired platform.”
“However, on average at the market level, users are equally well off with one or two platforms, as evidenced by the constant number of transactions, match rates, and proxies for match quality. Combined with our evidence that platform prices did not increase post-acquisition, our results suggest that, on average, a single platform does not provide substantially larger consumer surplus than the sum of two competing platforms.”
What are implications? Prices don’t increase. Network effects are small
How to drive platform growth?
Critical mass (—> network effects work here). You need large number of customers because of network effects and market thickness. Use existing platforms or public data to get initial critical mass
Provide stand-alone value. Users join the platform even in the absence of network effects
Manage asymmetric information. Users fear the platform might not survive or not attract enough users on the other side. Use freemium and subsidies.
§ Manage risk. Users might not trust the other side
§ Increase compatibility. Users do not adopt technologies that are not compatible with current use. You need to increase interoperability and allow for easy migration.
Control disintermediation
What is open vs. closed dichotomy?
The Open vs. Closed dichotomy describes whether a participants needs to be authorized by a sponsor or a provider to participate in a platform, as well as how strict the rules of membership are.
Moving from products to platforms
A platform does not help a struggling product —> not every business needs to be a plattform
There is no need to go all-in. A platform can co-exist with non-platform products and service
Amazon —> Amazon Marketplace
Lego—Y Leg Mindstorm
Iphone—> App Store
Be willing to include competitors in the platform
Deter competitive imitation
Involve users
Whats the differences between platform sponsors vs. providers
Platform Sponsors design and hold rights to modify the platform and determine who can participate.
—> No obvious sponsor (Internet)
—> One sponsor (eBay, Skype, American Express)
—> Many sponsors (IEEE, Visa)
Platform Providers mediate the interaction among users, and serve as their primary point of contact.
—> One sponsor is the sole provider (Xbox)
—> One sponsor, many providers (Android, App Store)
—> Many sponsors, one provider (Orbitz) § Many sponsors, many providers (Visa, Linux)
We need to look in detail how digital is enabling these companies to succeed and scale up.
—> cost reduction
—> i.e. Uber in 1980s had not the economics, it was too expensive
—> you want to study trends / data traffic
What is a business model? What do we need?
A business model is a concise description of how an organization efficiently uses its resources to create value for its target customers and capture that value to deliver a return above the cost of capital.
business —> investment ( which costs sth) —> create a supply side to deliver benefit to customer
What do we need for a business model?
1. A description of the “demand side”
A description of the ability to supply that demand
description of how the operating profit will be generated, its
investment rate and potential growt
On what is a good framework based on?
Focus on the principles —> business is based on principles
A good framework is based on a fundamental business, psychological, or economic principle. We often see new frameworks emerge, but they are reincarnations of existing principles. So ...
What are efficiency gains led by technological trends?
—> five things to think about
Data—> Lower Search Costs: The cost of gathering information about a the product, the price and other aspect of the transaction is lower than ever
Data; search became easier / more transparent
Automated learning —> Lower Replication Costs: Digital products and digital features have a marginal cost close to zero;
Connected devices —> Lower Fulfilment Costs: Ordering, payment and distribution of goods is decreasing rapidly. Distributing digital goods is costless.
Robotization —> Lower Tracking / Targeting Costs: It has become easier to learn about individual needs and develop customized products. Targeting individuals with messages and tracking the response is now common; individualization
Interfaces —> Lower Verification Costs:The cost of veryfing the quality and performance of a product is decreasing. Buyers can verify the reputation of sellers and viceversa, i.e. user ratings at air bnb
What is the long tail business model?
-> based on market segmentation (horizontal), based on preferences
The Long Tail business model is to making a large assortment of niche product available and easily searchable.
first, cost of fulfilment + search cost go down —> allows for the emergene of long tails
long tail: we have the interest and we can the niche products
—> making money by focusing unique / niche things
What enables the long tail business model?
Search —> Customers can easily search across a very broad assortment
Replication —> Digital files have very low inventory costs
Fulfilment —> Digital files can be sent over digital channels; the logistics of physical has become highly automatized
Tracking —> Customers can received automated recommendations according to their tastes and behaviors
Verfication —> Customers can read product reviews; customers can check the reputation of third-party sellers
—> framework in terms of costs / effiency
What happens if costs go down, what would that enable / what new ideas emerges?
What is the fremium business model?
—> based on segmentation: vertical (quality)
The Freemium business model offers vertically differentiated versions of the product, with the basic version being offered at no cost to the customer.
-> one product at zero price
perceived quality - perceived price
How is the fremium model possible? Effiency gains
Replication —> Digital products have zero marginal costs
Fulfilment —>Digital files can be sent over digital channels at zero marginal costs
Tracking —> Customers can be segmentead according to value; Target customers to upgrade
What the advantages of freemium?
examples: Google Drive, ChatGDP, Spotify
—> idea of trial / learning: quality check, testing the product first
—> lock-in: one you use a platform, there is cost switching the platform
—> network effects i.e. Dropbox’s file sharing
—> Advertising
—> Data (whats the value of data / benefit)
What is a Digital channel (sometimes combined with fighting brand)
An own digital channel refers to the segmentation of the market into customers targeted via digital (branded) channel and customers targeted via traditional high-touch channels
example Dow Corning:
-> invented silcons (which are everywhere)
-> had a segmentation
-> had to lower the cost of service —> website launch
What should Dow Corning do? They were the biggest producer of silicones. Should they even pay attention to the commoditized part of the market? If yes, how
—> having 2 brands when selling higher and lower quality products, it makes sense
—> attract price senstive customers
—> high tech vs. high touch (B2B)
—> create two very business models and brands
high tech: not a high services, lower prices
What makes Digital channel (sometimes combined with fighting brand) possible?
Search —> Customers can easily find products without salespeople recommendations and help
Fulfilment -> Payment is automated, delivery is controlled and managed
Tracking —> Targeted offers
Verficiation —> Customers can check quality online
What is unbundling?
—> emerged in the 80s
—> Idea: Business= combination of things
—> Business functions: we need Invoation / Operation / Customer Management
everything combined in one bc of transactions costs i.e. negotiation contracts, personnel search costs
—> digital now allows parts of the company to talk to each other and lower transaction costs —> allows to have separate business models
—> i.e. food delivery is an example of unbundling the business model of restaurants
Unbundling is based on the idea that a business is composed of a few fundamental businesses that need to be coordinated. A digital technology takes over the customer interaction creating a direct relationship. Typically this relationship is scalable because the marginal cost to interact with customers is close to zero. They can then re-create the industry by unbundling the core infrastructure
Unbundling example Air Bnb
Hotels
Supply side: Hotels provides —> infrastructure / operations room (rooms)
Customer Management side (booking)
—> must run it as one business due to transaction costs
—> however, with digital —> makes transaction so much easier and allows to split business model
—> specilization and scale i.e. outsourcing the “back office”
1 Business for “rooms”
1 Business for “booking”
Air BnB
—> Business Model Customer Management side
—> relys on infrastructure providers -> hosts
Whats an access economy?
Access Economy business model is based on controlling the demand side of the business (i.e., the customer experience) and unbundling the supply side, typically by using underutilized or idle assets and labor.
—> i.e. Air BnB / Uber business models is own to customer relationship
—> outsourcing the infrastructure
What is a distribution channel?
The sets of interdependent organizations involved in the process of making a product or service available for use or consumption
—> intermediaries that help company produce / deliver the prodcut to the end user
What are channel functions?
Before transaction
—> pre-sale service (Informationto customer, Education, Promotion, Certification)
—> logistics ( company that takes care of Transportation of the productto the end customer, Assortment, Availability)
During the transaction
—> product transformation: Customization, BulkBreaking, Installation
After the transaction
—> transaction handling: Invoicing, Payment, Financing I Information: Negoiation
—> After-sale services: Fullfilment: Warranties, Repairs, Servicing I Informational: Support
—> Business model: which functions do you need and who takes care of what
—> online products: when I’m online which functions do I need to replace?
Distribution channel: Saturn sells JBL Headphones
—> Saturn take care of all of the channel functions
Distribution channel: Amazon sells Headphones
—> Online stores cannot provide rich product experiences
—> other functions are necessary:
subsitute the experience partially i.e. reviews
Amazon delivers the product
What are typcial strategies when considering a distribution channel / online retaile i.e. Amazon?
Join: Collaborate with Amazon Business on a 1P relationship (direct wholesale relationship with Amazon).
Fight: Exclude Amazon as a channel and build its capabilities and e-commerce platform.
Multichannel: Partner with Amazon while strengthening data integration from the wholesaler platforms.
Keep the status quo: Stick to the existing sales channels (sell through traditional wholesalers) and ignore Amazon.
what happened when digitzable goods entered distribution
—> Digitizable goods markets were disrupted early because of distribution
Even if digital Information is expensive to produce, it is cheap to reproduce, i.e. high fixed costs and low marginal costs. This is even true for paper-based information communication (i.e., books and newspapers).
It is not cheap to distribute non-digital goods
Pros and Cons of distributing over Amazon
Amazon
Pro
—> more access
Con
—> loss of control: price,
—> channel conflict: previous distributor
—> no (customer) service / no clear after-sales service
—> give power to Amazon
—> loss of data
Issues:
—> loss of control
—> knock offs: make its your brand
What is disintermediation?
Disintermediation is the use of a digital medium to remove of one or more intermediaries between a manufacturer or a distributor and its customers.
Example: Airlines selling direct to passengers i.e. buying airplane tickets directly by the airline
Example: Magazines selling subscriptions online
What are multichannel issues?
Store vs. online store
—> try on the headphones in the store, get customer servies & then go an buy it on amazon -> free riding of services by users
Manfucturer has two distribution channel:
high-service-high-cost channel (store)
low-service-low-service (online store)
—> high-service-high-cost channel will stop providing the service (which you need)
What are solutions for the multichannel issues?
—> is the most pressing issues for online channels
“persuade” information price; recommondation retail price ; show price in advertising (big companies with a lot of power)
Reward the high-cost channel via i.e. commission, backpayment / revenue sharing
Assortment, different assortment by quality / seasons
(i.e. more specialized /quality products are only in stores, more basic products online) by quality / seasons
Don’t sell online i.e. Luxury brands
Multichannel issues
Two onlines stores?
—> you want to be a monopolist when you sell your product
in the offline world, you give territorities for example 1 or 2 distributors in an area -> online is more difficult
Possible strategies:
“Branded variants” strategy: when there is not clear product line, online stores list different variants i.e. online store 1 lists variant 1, 3, 6 and online store 2 lists 2,4,5
—> usually happens in i.e. fashion, selective products
What is aggregation?
An aggregator is a business that brings together the offering of multiple business under one site or platform
Example: price comparison website
Example: news aggregator
Amazon marketplace
Ex. Buying a airplane ticket: Airlines —> websites like Skyscanner aggreagte the different airlines
What are generic distribution models?
Offline: Traditional store, with no online presence. Hardly exists any more
Pure digital: Goods are discovered, chosen and processed online. Direct delivery
owned multichannel: Two options for the customer. Not necessarily integrated or with identical offerings i.e. Gap
online info online: Website is for information and product
advertising. Purchased fulfilled at store i.e. Rolex
BOPS —> “Buy online pick up in the store” i.e. Ikea
Showrooming: Search, information and transaction occur in physical stores. Direct delivery i.e. Eyewear
Information and Fulfilment Matrix: Fulfilment BOPS
Consumers can easily search for information and compare prices, before placing an order. Best of both worlds:
Relative to a purely online setting, they get the immediate gratification of obtaining the item in the store, and don’t need to wait for the product.
Relative to purely physical stores, shoppers have a good overview of what products are available.
Sales in store actually go up [puzzle!] —> people buy online, but then they are in the store and buy other stuff
Variant: ROPS (research online, purchase in store)
Sales and Visits Before and After BOPS
Sales online went down in areas where there was a store with a BOPS policy
—> People like about BOPS tells them actually what is in the store (transparency)
Showroom
Products that require experience (touching, feeling, trying, etc.) are typically difficult to sell online. Typical solution: good system of mailing and return. (e.g. Zalando)
Open an offline retail location without inventory
Low investment
Easy to involve third parties
In the case of Warby Parker, they opened showroom
stores. Online sales within the online sales increased by 9% in locations close to the stores
Offline Showrooms in Omni-Channel Retail: Online Sales after implementation of a showroom
Showrooms overcome limitations of the online channel in selling products with uncertain fit, yet maintain the pooling benefits of centralized fulfilment
Wararby Parker showrooms opened in 20 locations. The researchers collect online sales data for 823 postal code
ine Showrooms in Omni-Channel Retail areas (ZIP codes) and compare them to the sales in similar postal code areas that did not see a showroom
Results
—> total sales go up, web sales go up, home-try-on goes down
Is omnichannel the inevitable evolution of channel management?
Single Channel:
Eitherpure online or pure offline
Multichannel:
Online and Offline options available
No connection between the channels
Cross-channel:
• Onlineand Offline options available
• Channel are integrated and probably share operations
• Somewhat consistent in terms of image
Omni-channel:
OnlineandOffline options available
Channelare integrated and consistent ——> online and offline channels are consistent
Seamless customer experience along the customer journey
Same assortment and price
What is omni-channel marketing?
Omni-channel refers to the synergetic management of the numerous available channels and customer touch-points (online and offline), in such a way that the customer journey across channels and the performance over channels is optimized.
What arere omni-channel characteristics?
Seamless experience across all channels and platforms
Focus on the whole customer journey
Unified customer journey
Consistency in message and visual identity
Consistency in prices
Tracking customer information
—> is it necessary? debabtable
today: different prices in different channels
What are M-Shoppers?
M-Shopper: Consumers who have used their smartphones in retail environments to assist with their shopping
—> today: most / all of it is ecommerce
—> idea of m-shopper is becoming weaker, there is no distinction anymore mobile- desktop shopper
Study de Haan:
Main hypothesis: “The conversion rate is higher when consumers switch from a more mobile to a less mobile device, compared with starting out on the less mobile device. “
—> Main hypothesis confirmed. In addition, they show that: The effect is stronger for “risky” products The effect is stronger for higher priced products The effect is weaker for categories where the customer has more experience
What are upcoming trends? How are they changing the customer journey?
Chatbots and automated messages
Augmented reality
Payment
Customer journey automation
Branded apps
Payments
—> 2 cylces: 1 approvement cycle and 1 money transfer cycle
Business Models: Payment Facilitators:
Whats the deal with stripe?
Any developer starting a new business (e-commerce, services, etc.) can use stripe, square or other provider to take care of payments:
complex transactions
billing
subscriptions
fraud
analytics
credit
Stripe:
difficulty for small business payment cycles —> stripes offers a solution
is a global player in comparison to other processors
has advantaged features
pricing is transparent
Business practices: What are closed-loop payment systems
Closed-loop systems control the whole payment system: they control the merchants that can participate and there are no links to banks.
They obtain insights on purchases because they observe all the data
Example: American Express
Example: Transit cards (Oyster, Chip card)
Example: Store cards (e.g., Starbucks) that serve also as loyalty programs
Hard to scale
—> payment system that does not involve the bank i.e. Mensa card, money is saved on the card
Pricing in the Digital Age: Free!
Related to the “Freemium” model
“Zero is almost another world. The difference between two cents and one cent is small, between one cent and zero
cents, however, enormous.” (Dan Ariely)
Digital products are provided for free because they the digital environment enables advertising and other revenue generating features, such as data commercialization
Free could be loss making, but necessary for creating network effects (Dropbox), barriers to entry (WhatsApp)
Pay-What-You-Wish
Cases:
—> Radiohead offered their album and asked to pay what they wished
—> due to low cost of replication of digital products
Why do sellers use this? PWYW
It is price discrimination (remember, this is a good thing)
It avoids ”menu costs” -> costs of changing prices i.e. changes prices in stores / data bases
It leads to large number of unit sales
It undermines competitors
PWYW: When does it work?
Low marginal costs
Fair minded user § Product can be sold at different prices
Strong relationship between buyers and sellers
Competitive market
PWYW: What drives higher prices paid?
Face to face interaction increases the average price paid
Fairness increases the average price paid (e.g., large vs small company)
Altruism matters (e.g., offer to donate)
PWYW: How to avoid freeloaders?
Make benchmarks salient
Downplay market norms and emphasize social norms (e.g., Disney photographs)
Emphasize the long-term
What is Bitcoin?
Bitcoin is a secure ledger -> “big spreadsheet who says who sent what to whom?”; public “for everyone to see / to alter”
Bitcoin controlled by anyone
sending money w/o a bank
How does Bitcoin work ( Digital Signature)
Bitcoin users have a public key and a private key.
The private key is combined with the message to create a “digital signature”.
The public key, can be used to verify that the digital signature is authentic.
Anyone can verify that the transaction came from Alice if they know her public key.
Notice that the message is involved in the creation of the signature, so any change of the message would invalidate
the signature.
Verfication of the transaction - Sufficient funds
Sufficient Funds
Alice wants to send 5 bitcoins to Bob.
The message must contain references to previous transaction where Alice received 5 bitcoins
And the transactions before that until the origin of those bitcoins
Verficiation of transcation - double spending
Every transaction can only be used once as input, so it cannot be used in other transactions.
Software checks the input against an index of “unspent” transactions.
Owning bitcoin means that there are unspent transactions that point to your name
—> but transactions are not immediate
Verfication of the transaction - The Block
Transactions are grouped into blocks.
Every 10 minutes, a new block is generated.
Blocks are ordered in time in a “Block Chain” or simply “blockchain”
Any node can collect unconfirmed transactions and put them into a block and submit it to the blockchain.
If all nodes are collecting unconfirmed transactions and making blocks, who decides which block is added next?
--> block has a name, in the block is the number of the previous name included (ordered)
—> a hash can go only one way, a unique combination of numbers and letters; transforming “KG” creates a hash, “Kg” the hash is newly created (any change will completely change the hash)
—> every block contains transactions, linked to the next block
What we need for bitcoin?
—> Digital signature
—> Transaction system controlls for sufficient funds
—> Blocks and Block chain
—> bitcoins get created by miners
What is money?
-functions of money
= Money is any object that is accepted as payment for goods and services and repayment of debts in a given socioeconomic context.
Functions:
Medium of exchange
Unit of account -> how much value a product has i.e. Euros, to coun value of things
Store of value ->
Bitcoin as money?
• Fungible -> one bitcoin/euro is the same amount as another bitcoin/euro
• Transferable -> able to move it around
• Divisible
• Durable
—> Theoretically it can be accepted as money: like stones, shells, gold or Euros.
—-> A little like gold: it belongs to the person who finds it.
—> A little like the Euro: it is accepted because we expected to be accepted in the future
Money in the back is insured
Bitcoin can be “taken”
—> almost like money
What are the benefits of blockchain?
—> blockchain = is a public data base which is immutable & decentralised
immutable. The blockchain cannot be changed. Attacks are detectable. Transactions are irrevocable.
Reliable. (Resilient) If a node in the network fails, the network continues operating. This ensures network
integrity and security.
Distributed Power. (Disintermediation ; Decentralization) No single party can control the system
Transparent. Transactions are visible to everyone.
Private. Transactions occur between wallets without the need of the individual identity.
(Distributed power + Transparency + Privacy) à freedom from censorship or state control.
Value as Incentive. The stakeholders that work on the system receive a reward.
Digital. Any digital good can be expressed as a transaction and thus into a blockchain.
Automated
Disadvantages Bitcoin ( proof-of-work)
Proof-of-work mining is energy intensive
Mining Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies consumes large amounts of energy, which has negative environmental consequences.
According to estimates, Bitcoin consumes as much energy as a country such as Israel or Greece (~60 TWh per year, Thailand, 200 TWhsource: digiconomist.net) We are back to 80- 100 TWh.
The consumption of energy has been growing steadily but has stabilised.
What are alternatives to proof-of-work?
Alternatives to proof-of-work consensus mechanism:
Validating transactions using Proof-of-Stake. Proof-of-stake distributes mining power across the network according to the coins currently own by each node.
Nodes with few coins cannot alter the chain
Nodes with many coins have no incentive to alter the chain
Applications Blockcain / Bitcoin: International movement of money using cryptocurrency
• Bank transfers: many banks involved, everyone takes a fee
• Remittances:
7-12% commission
Need for capital
• Exchange rate risk
Applications: (2) Altcoins and Tokens
—> fund a start up: fund a company & find investors / loan from the bank
—> instead of giving stock to an investor, they receive tokens
Applications: (3) Decentralized Finance
Decentralized finance is a set of protocols that enable a exchange market to function without an order book or a market maker
It uses an Automatic Market Maker (AMM)
Transactions are sent and encoded into a blockchain (e.g., Ethereum)
Rather than matching demand and supply, there is a transparent mathematical relationship between the asset reserves and the price is set according to those rules
No borrowing limits
Incentives to have the market price match the underlying price leads to arbitrage and efficiency
Application: (4) Identity Use Case in Know Your Customer Requirements
“KYC refers to a process by which banks and other financial institutions collect identification and contact information from current and potential customers.” - Binance
To prevent
money laundering
other illegal activities and the misuse of financial accounts
What are problems and advantages of using blockchain?
Problems with KYC:
- Double-recording of data
- Centralized by each bank
- Inconsistent process handling
Benefits of using blockchain:
+ Enhances the security of private data
+ Eliminates the possibility of unauthorized access to data
+ No double-recording
+ Cost-efficiency and consistency
Application: (5) Supply Chains and Provenance
Information sent by sensors allowing real time monitoring
Information about quality, location and security available
Interconnected system provides fast, non-invasive and non-destructive analysis
Benefits:
Reduction of waste in the cold chain (temperature control)
Data security guaranteed
Reduced cost due to constant control
Reduced downtime, lead time and stockouts
QR-Code System to prevent Counterfeit products
Application: (6) Stablecoins
Problem with cryptocurrencies: volatility
Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies that are pegged to a currency, a basket of currencies, commodities,
other cryptocurrencies, etc.
Tether (USDT), as it is the most liquid and heavily traded of the stablecoins, with a market cap of $4.1 billion in late 2019, accounting for nearly 80 percent of the total market cap of the stablecoin market. (Lyons and Viswanath-Natr 2019)
They require collateral
When the USD price of the stablecoin rises above parity, investors have an incentive to deposit dollars to
create new stablecoin tokens, and sell them in the secondary market. (Lyons and Viswanath-Natr 2019)
Facebook’s libra (launched 2020 and closed in 2022)
Some stable coins are controlled algorithmically. And they crash (biggest was Terra in May 2022). See the NBER paper “Anatomy of a Run: The Terra Luna Crash” https://www.nber.org/papers/w31160
Whats the purpose of communication?
Awareness Capture the attention of a customer to a product, service, or idea. -> bit more content-heavy
Information To convey factual information about a product, service, or idea.
Attitude To persuade consumers to change their attitude regarding a brand.
Call-to-action To persuade consumers to act through specific behavior.
-> when you see ads, think about whats their purpse
(search ads more cta-ads,
Customer Journey
6 M’s of adveristing
Mission -> objective, target customer
Market
Message
Media
Measurement
Money
Types of Media + Pros / Cons
Paid media -> brands pays the channel, i.e. display ads, search ads
Cons: low credibility, clutter
Pros: control, immediate
Owned media -> brand controls the channel i.e. website, blog, twitter account
Cons: low credibility, low reach
Pros: high control, versatile
Earned media -> customers are the channel i.e. eWOM, Buzz; most credible form
Cons: low control, can be negative
Pros: credible, cheap
Digital Advertising: Paid Media
-> Display (40%), one of the biggest forms
-> Search (30%)
-> Video (30%)
What is inbound marketing?
-> Inbound marketing: attracting and engaging customers by creating valuable content and experiences.
should provide a benefit i.e. educational YT-chaannel
Getting found via search (relevance + authority)
Content creation (e.g. blogs)
Optimize landing pages
YouTube Channel
Twitter Account, Facebook account, etc.
Chatbot: an interactive conversational tool that connects and supports customers that navigate a website. They are triggered by keywords, behaviors and other signals.
What is Native Advertising
-> pros / cons
-> legal stand
-> Advertorial: Advertising in the form of editorial content.
-> Native Advertising: Paid advertising in digital media that resembles the content of the site.
Pros: Better targeting (cost effective) and less intrusion.
Cons: Confusion, unethical, negative consequences for the publishe
Legally, it needs to be clear that the content has a commercial purpose or source. Ads should identifiable. Legal person behind should be clear.
Disclosure techniques:
Labels (“Sponsored”, “Promoted”, “Ads”)
Colors (background, headings)
Design (fonts, boxes, ...)
What are displays ads?
Contract between advertiser and publisher where the publisher agrees to show a fixed number of impressions (CPMs) to a specific demographic during a specific period of time for a fixed price.
Pricing example newspaper
-> Revenue management:
as a publisher, how do you price it?
-> too high: nobody buys the ads
-> too low: full of ads, not enough money
—> Revenue management in digital, becomes more difficult
What is guaranteed delivery?
-> Guaranteed Delivery Contract between advertiser and publisher where the publisher agrees to show a fixed number of impressions (CPMs) to a specific demographic during a specific period of time for a fixed price.
Advertisers wants to target a specific demographic through a particular type of website. Hundreds of variables to consider:
Demographics (age, gender, ...)
Context (location, mobile, time of day, ...)
Page type and dimensions
Duration and desired number of impressions is specified
Publisher takes the risk for number of impressions
Contract signed in advance (often months in advance)
Premium inventory at premium prices
Guaranteed delivery display ads: publisher’s problem
The publisher has an inventory of impressions where advertising can be placed Future inventory of impressions available for a campaign depends ont
traffic,
demographic mix,
ads used by other campaigns.
Future ad space inventory for a particular demograhic determines price (demand and supply!).
Future inventory is only known probabilistically and needs to be forecasted when accepting and writing a contract.
Maximize revenue while keeping the quality of the user experience.
Revenue management problem similar in nature to airlines, hotels, theatres.
At any point in time, publisher is allocating pageviews to ads to fulfill the active contracts. Difficult
problem with many constraints.
Guaranteed delivery display ads: Advertiser’s problem
Choose the right demographic and context
How specific should the demographic description be?
Can the demographic description be written and verified?
Creative
Match to the website
Who is responsible?
What is programmatic adverising?
-> probabaly 90% of todays ads
What are ad networks?
-> ad networks emerged (bigger service which collects ads from different services)
Original aggregators, deal with small advertisers
Sell remnant
Categorize ads and match them to the right publisher
Cut across multiple websites
Hundreds!
What are ad exchanges?
Exchange markets matching suppliers of impressions (publishers) to buyers of impressions (agencies)
Second price auction
Bulk buying also possible
Google, Yahoo, Facebook are big players.
i.e. NYT, load the webpages that has an ad (not definite yet), browser sends message to an exchange, the exchange delivers the profile (i.e. Google, Safari, browsing history), advertising advertisings auctioning of the ad space, winner sends to the plattform, NYT displays the ads
Role of demand-side platforms
Ad agencies do not have the expertise to use exchanges
Bidding process (what and how much?) is difficult, requires data and models.
Unique access to several exchanges
Budget and optimization
Trading desks
What is retargeting?
-> Showing display ads to individuals that have potential interest in your product or website because they have browsed or searched for it (pixel retargeting); sometimes retargeting is used when targeting individuals that are part of a specific list, typically subscribers, followers fans (list retargeting)
Useful for both awareness and conversion campaigns
Many third-party providers
Programmatic today
-> Open market: always available
-> closed market private + verything on the right side: need invitation
What is programmatic guaranteed?
Automated sells for guaranteed volume for a fixed price
One buyer
Premium
Volume and prices agreed in advance
What are search ads?
Search engines are the gateway to the Internet
In 2002 search engines starting selling paid
results (“sponsored”)
Words are “auctioned”. First auctions for key
words Goto.com, Google.com, etc.
Auctions
Auctions were introduced by Overture in 1997
First-price auctions do not have an equilibrium
For one slot, the solution is a second-price auction
For many slots, it gets complicated ...
Second-price auctions for many slots (Generalized Second Price Auction)
Two available ad slots with CTR 5% and 4% respectively
Three bidders with valuations $20, $18, $10 per click
-> Bidding “truthfully” is not a dominant strategy in GSP auctions. In fact, no dominant strategy exists for GSP auctions.
Click-through rates ad Quality Score
Measure probability of click (= quality of ad)
Should you show ads from eBay relative to website X? ctrebay = 0.001, ctrx = 0.01
Idea: (proportional to revenue for search engine)
Assign slots in (decreasing) order of ctri ・bid
Pay minimum bid needed to stay ahead:
pi = ctri+1 bidi+1/ctri
Search Ads: Auctions (Google AdWords simplified)
-> Bidder pays the minimum amount that would keep its rank
—> Google creates a Quality Score; to ensure paid high quality links for users
What is Search Engine Optimization
Search Engine Optimization Maximize the visits to a website by ensuring that the website shows up high on the organic results of a search engine via webpage design, choice of keywords, outgoing links and other technical features.
On-page SEO: First and foremost, find the right keyword.
Transactional keywords, Instructional keywords, Navigational keywords, Local keywords
There are tools to test them § Good keywords are high volume and high difficulty (e.g,. Four words) § Keywords should relate to your business
Also on-page SEO:
url, Title tag, Multimedia, Subheadings , Mobile
Off-page SEO: backlinks from blogs, fora, etc. Technical SEO:
Structure and internal links
Duplicate pages and broken links
Targeting and Privacy
A cookie (a.k.a, HTTP cookie, browser cookie, etc.) is a piece of data that is saved by a browser in an user’s device and is used to remember a state, or browsing information.
Same-site cookies (a.k.a first-party cookie) is information saved by the webpage the user is browsing. They are used to manage a session (actions, items in a shopping cart, etc.) and to keep users logged-in. They are not accessible by other websites.
Third-party cookies are not set by the website but by an adtech platform loaded onto the website. These cookies are accessible by other websites and are used to target advertising for products based on recent browsing and other identifiers.
Cookie blocking refers to third-party cookies.
Social media buttons generate third-party cookies
Re-targeting relies on third-party cookies
Most pop-ups that you see when you access a website relate somehow to cookies and similar tech
What are ghost ads?
Ghost ads is a technology to predict who in the control group would have seen the focal ad but did not. It uses a “simulated” assignment of ads before sending the ads to the programmatic advertising exchange. The result is a control group that matches the characteristics of the treated group.
Solves the problem of biased selection
It is more precise than the intent-to-treat approaches
It provides the right baseline
How does ghost ads work?
This setting is ideal and we could obtain the treatment effect by loooking at the groups in the top half of the figure: those who said the ad, vs. those would have seen the ad but did not
Intent-to-treat: Consumers are assigned to t conditions and we compare the two conditions irrespective of whether they saw the ad. Users who do not see the ad do not contribute to the measurement and only add noise
The problem of attribution
(multi-touch) Attribution Determining the causal impact of the different communication channels, events, touchpoints, or media on customer responses (e.g. conversion, visits, etc.)
What are wearout and weariness?
Wearout: The decrease in effectiveness of additional ads with repeated exposures. (Opportunity cost)
Weariness: Additional advertising exposure has a significant negative effect
(Business loss)
What are endogeneity issues?
Browsing behavior
Reach and frequency
Changes in browsing behavior
Stop if conversion
Definition of eWOM
eWOM as “any positive or negative statement made by potential, actual, or former customers about a product or company, which is made available to a multitude of people and institutions via the Internet.” (Hennig-Thurau et al., 2004)
Definition Social Media
Social Media as websites and internet-based applications that enable users to create and share content or to participate in social networking.
What are unique eWOM characteristics?
Dispersion
Enhanced volume
Persistence and observability
Salience of valence
Community engagement
Anonymity
What is dispersion?
= Dispersion: The extent to which product-related conversations are taking place across a broad range of communities (Godes & Mayzlin, 2004)
nature of platforms influence appearance and dynamics of eWOM
Persistence and observability?
Written word remains in public repository and is persistent
Message content and source becomes salient in evaluations of eWOM
Past eWOM impacts future eWOM
eWOM is endogenous: eWOM influences consumer purchase behavior and is at the same time the outcome of consumer purchases.
Salience of valence?
WOM can be misinterpreted as it is based on interaction between individuals
eWOM often has assigend numerical rating
What is uncertainity associated with eWOM?
Community engagement:
-> platforms support specialized, non-geographically bound consumer communities
-> vent frustration or learn from other consumers how to better use products/services
Anonymity:
-> self-interested behavior can reduce credibility and informativeness
-> deceptive company behavior
-> eWOM quality increasingly important (e.g. verified purchase reviews)
Selection effects and biases?
§ Online opinions reflect vocal minority
§ Under-reporting bias: opinions are more extreme
§ Rich-get-richer phenomenon
§ Self-selection: more experienced or those with high desire for being different avoid following the minority, less experienced go with popular opinion
How do receivers evaluate?
Receivers infer credibility and quality of information from
prior activity of sender
two-sidedness/valence (moderate) of eWOM
high response speed of sender
previous reviews of sender positively evaluated
depth (providing valuable information of specific domain) for receivers with decision-making orientation
breadth (comments across various domains) for consumers in learning mode
Heuristics:
Negative reviews have greater influence when many reviews are positive
- But sometimes negative reviews have less informational value as they convey individual emotion
- Variance of ratings: low rating products perceived as higher quality when variance is high
The power of eWOM and social media
Social capital and reputation (of communicators)
Review quality and online citizenship (of communicators)
Product and brand knowledge
Customer engagement
Purchase intention
Product sales (volume, revenues, stock prices)
Price premium and product spending § Trust and loyalty
Moderators of eWOM
Platforms:
Independent third party is more influential than seller website
eWOM on social media platforms is stronger when eWOM receivers can assess their own similarity to eWOM senders
Products:
Stronger effects for tangible goods new to the market,
for high involvement products,
and privately consumed, low-trialability products in less competitive industries
Fake Reviews
The credibility of reviews can be undermined by businesses leaving fake reviews for themselves and the competition
Some business hire people in Amazon Mechanical Turk to post 5 star reviews (0.25$ per review)
Luca and Zervas (2016) analyze Yelp data and find out that fake reviews are prevalent in low reputations resturants
Restaurants with more reviews are less likely to receive a fake review
Increased competition increases the likelihood of receiving a negative review. Entrants for different cuisines has no effect
Managing and leveraging eWOM
Respond to complaints and negative eWOM
But be aware that service interventions can encourage further complaints
Improved targeting based on customer‘s underlying relationship to firm § Possible benefits of motivating consumers and create space for their opinions
But should firms actively participate in eWOM?
Rather engage in conversations that address functional needs such as solving problems or offering technical advice
What is influencer marketing?
Influencer as individual or group who built their own audience through social media platforms and influence others.
Influencer marketing as using social media influencers as a communication channel in the marketing mix.
What are the four influencer types?
Scouting influencers
§ define target audience, e.g. broad mass vs. experts
§ aims of campaigns, e.g. brand awareness vs.
specific information
§ communication message
§ focus on domain breadth or social presence?
§ which of the four influencer types?
§ identify influencers of this type
§ watch dynamics
What is a social media listening?
Social media listening (SML) involves identifying and analyzing information about a target (e.g., company, product) on the internet.
SML became popular, with companies using internal or external resources to monitor and respond to online conversations and consumer trends.
Take Aways Social Media Listing
Social media is full of information and we should listen with a purpose, either hypothesis-driven or with a structured approach to knowledge discovery
Social media listening is important for new products and for marketing mix decisions
Text mining is still bringing new insights and making new sources of data available
Search trends hide information about future demand
You cannot tell a fad from a trend, you can only make educated guesses
Trends and Fads?
Different opinions and discussions were found in the popular press, blogs, and online forums regarding hair trends.
Trends like ombre, tie-dye, and rainbow hair gained attention and had both supporters and critics.
Text Mining and Market structure
Text mining techniques can be used to understand consumers' associative networks and market structure based on online discussions.
Semantic relationships between brands can be identified using metrics like lift, which measures the strength of association between two brands.
What is the customer journey?
A customer journey is the series of actions a customer takes to arrive at the moment of purchase, and the cognitive and emotional states along those steps (Lemon and Verhoef 2016, Schmitt 1999).
What is customer experience
Customer experience refers to the multidimensional construct that involves sensory, physical, cognitive and emotional responses from the customers during the interactions with a company or brand (adapted from Lemon and Verhoef 2016).
What are the customer journey steps?
Awareness
Interest
Consideration
Purchase
Experience
Post Exerpience
Customer Journey Steps: Before Purchase
Awareness has to do with all the underlying knowledge that customers has about their needs and available offerings. We can further distinguish between problem awareness, company awareness, brand awareness, product awareness, feature awareness.
Interest refers to an active state of search for alternatives, research of pros and cons, and specific distinguishing features. It may also involve planning about the purchase or scheduling.
Consideration is the stage where a set of competing offerings have been identified and they are evaluated and compared. The consideration set is not necessarily fixed, but in most cases the chosen alternative is already included at this stage. Around this stage there could be negotiations and quote requests.
Customer Journey Steps: During Purchase
Purchase is the moment where the customer chooses one product alternative. In some cases, it may include some final negotiation, in others it may involve third-party channel partners, etc.
The Experience stage encompasses the customer experience with the product or service. In the case of services, the experience could involve a rich interaction with the providing organization.
Customer Journey Steps: After purchase
We use the term Post-Experience to include all actions that occur as a result of the purchase and experience of the product. These could be “follow-up” interactions, customer advocacy and recommendations, and the establishing of repurchase relationships.
Steps of customer journey analysis?
Questions: What does the customer need to know?
Customer Actions: What are customers doing at this point?
Experience: What are the most important aspects of the customer experience
Touchpoints: How are customers interacting with us? Individuals, media, third-party
Information: What kind of information is reaching the customer?
Responsibility: Who is in charge of the customer journey at this point?
Firm actions: What are we doing?
Bottlenecks: What is stopping /delaying the customer to continue with the journey?
Metrics: Awareness
Loctite example
Awareness:
Problem -> Journey starts here; make people understand they have problem
Brand
Interest & Consideration -> in touch w/ expert
Study: Customer Journey / Channel
- Results : ultitarian & hedonic purchases
Hedonic-utility scale
Channels
Early to late process
Conversion rate
Consumers making hedonic purchases tend to utilize social media and product page views on the target retailer’s website more extensively.
Consumers making utilitarian purchases tend to use search engines, third-party reviews, deal sites, and product page views on the competing retailer’s website more frequently
The H/U effect on the usage of social media and third-party review sites tends to be stronger earlier in the customer journey. Conversely, the effect of H/U differences on search engines and deal site usage is stronger closer to the point of purchase.
Social and search is always high
Product page becomes more important later in the process
What is content marketing?
Content marketing is the creation of valuable content to entertain, inform, educate and inspire the target audience, in a way that creates engagement, attracts and retains customers and ultimately drive sales.
Notice that content marketing is not new to digital and brands have been providing content for a long time, especially in B2B
Original content marketing was used to create awareness and increase usage
In the digital domain, content can be distributed at very low cost, it provides value that customers seek within a cluttered advertising landscape,
Why is content marketing important in the digital domain?
It can be distributed at low cost
It provides intrinsic consumption value that make sought-after in a cluttered advertising landscape
It can fulfil different roles along the customer journey
It can be targeted
It can be shared
It can be created by the customers/users themselves
Type of content
(high involvment)
Educate (High involvement, functional) i.e. White Paper, E-books
The goal here is to explain the benefits of a product and how it links to the customers’ current and future needs
Appeals to rationality
Accurate
It requires the customers’ attention
and interest
Inspire (high involment, emtional/ hedonic) i.e. Branded video
The goal is to connect with the customer at an emotional level
Content to move and persuade
Empathy, authenticity, recognition and community are important factors
-low involvement
Inform (low involvement, functional) i.e. Infographics, Ratings
Offers objective information about products and prices
It allows customers to consider and compare alternatives
It summarises information and explains basic points
Entertain (low involvment, emotional hedonic) i.e. Games, Quizzes
The goal is to create awareness and build trust, turn visitors into fans
Typically humorous posts that appeal on a humorous basis.
Highly shareable content that can connect with a target audience.
There is a strong focus on authenticity and visual stimuli
Example: Accor hotels - two main problems for hotels
AirBnB
Booking.com
Trust building across channels
What is engagement?
Engagement in digital contexts refer to interactions of the user with a particular page or account.
What are outcome metrics?
Outcome Metrics refer to a market or financial result and measure current performance. Typical outcome metrics are revenue, revenue growth, gross margin, market share, average prices, etc.
What are impact metrics?
Impact Metrics link outcome metrics to marketing effort
What are process metrics?
Process Metrics refer to variables that measure the performance of the organization’s processes or the customer purchase process. These metrics should be causally linked to outcome metrics and used to predict future market performance. Typical process metrics are brand awareness, customer satisfaction, purchase intention, recommendation intention, etc
What is brand value vs customer value?
Brand Value refers to estimates of the value of a brand or the value of customers
Customer Value refers to estimates of the value of a brand or the value of customers
What is consent?
‘consent’ of the data subject means any freely given, specific, informed and unambiguous indication of the data subject’s wishes by which he or she, by a statement or by a clear affirmative action, signifies agreement to the processing of personal data relating to him or her;
How to ensure consent?
Data subjects must be given a real choice and control.
Subjects must be able to freely refuse processing without fear of detriment: the subject believes he or she will not face negative consequences.
Consent cannot be bundled with other provision of a contract, in fact disguising data processing that is not necessary for fulfilling the contract (conditionality).
Consent should be given separately for each purpose of the data processing and the extent of the processing (granularity)
The reason for the data processing must be specific, unambiguous and concise.
Ensure that consent is informed; subjects must understand what they are agreeing to.
GDPR: Rights
The following rights are highlighted by the law
Right of access: know whether data is being processed and obtain it partially or fully
Right to portability: receive the personal data in a structured commonly used machine-readable format
Right to be forgotten: erase all personal data if there are no legitimate grounds to keep it
Right to data breach notification: to be informed within a short time frame if there are security problems, or the risk of a security problem, with their personal data.
Does the GDPR affect commerical outcomes?
GDPR reduces the number of vendors in the short run and increases concentration
GDPR affects recorded outcomes via (1) user consent, (2) limiting marketing ability, and (3) privacy frictions.
Result: GDPR reduces recorded pageviews and e-commerce revenue by 12%.
Larger drops in users arriving from personalized marketing channels that are most directly impacted by the GDPR.
Under weak assumptions, the real effect of the GDPR reduced real website pageviews by 0.4% and real e-commerce
revenue by 0.6%
What is the privary paradox?
Privacy concerns: individual‘s beliefs about the risks and potential negative consequences associated with sharing information.
Privacy management: individual‘s adoption of privacy protective measures.
Barth and de Jong (2017): Users are concerned about their privacy but undertake little to protect their data. • risk-benefit
• biased risk assessment • no risk assessment
knowledge deficiency
benefit >> risk
failed evaluation of risk
Baruh, Secinti and Cemalcilar (2017): Using a meta- analysis find little evidence either way. But there is some evidence that users with strong privacy concerns share less information
Intrinsic vs instrument privacy preference
Privacy preference is the preference to control information about oneself
Intrinsic privacy preference: Privacy is a good in itself, an
element of human dignity and autonomy (moral /
philosophical view). Privacy is a final good.
Instrumental privacy preference: privacy is necessary to
protect one’s private information in market exchanges. Privacy is an intermediate good.
What is algorithmic bias?
Algorithmic Bias occurs when an algorithm using individual or group-level information produces outcomes that are disadvantage (or privilege) a certain group of people based on gender, race, class, sexual orientation, religion or age, therefore discriminating against that group. Algorithmic bias can occur even situations where the group identity (e.g., gender) is not included in the algorithm.
Algorithmic Bias
Promotion
Campaign targeting groups with specific characteristics
Example from Lambrecht and Tucker (2018). Career ads for STEM jobs were shown on Facebook. The ads did not stipulate gender, but
ended up being biased and shown more to male users. Why?
Price
Price discrimination is a prevalent practices and in most cases legal
Example: Orbitz
Example: Uber
Product
Facial recognition
Apple credit card
Epistemic bubbles and content
Distribution
• Amazon same-day delivery
What are causes and solutions for algorithmic bias?
Causes
Historical biases
Incomplete or unrepresentative data
Characteristics that interact with the algorithmSolutions
Audits and bias detection
Diverse teams
Including fairness in the optimization
Collect sensitive protected data
Computerisation Bottlenecks (Frey and Osborne 2013)
There are three main barriers to automation (computerisation)
1. Social Intelligence: Ability to persuade, care and negotiate.
2. Creativity: The ability to find or invent novel and valuable ideas and artifacts
3. Perception and Manipulation: Robots cannot match human perception and manipulation of objects in
highly unstructured environments.
Forces driving the technological change
Technical feasibility (innovation, integration, adaptation)
Cost of developing solutions (development + deployment; software + hardware)
Labor market dynamics
Economic benefits (cost savings? Increase production speed? Safety?)
Regulatory acceptance
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