Recognizing Lock-In - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Recognizing Lock-In

Description:

Title: Recognizing Lock-In Author: Hal Varian Last modified by: hal Created Date: 2/9/1998 1:49:44 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Company – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:53
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: HalVa7
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Recognizing Lock-In


1
Recognizing Lock-In
  • Hal R. Varian

2
Recognizing Lock-In
  • Users cost of switching products/suppliers in
    tech industries can be large
  • Compare
  • Ford v. GM
  • Mac v. PC

3
Whats the difference?
  • Durable investments in complementary assets
  • Hardware
  • Software
  • Wetware
  • Switching one component may involve switching all
  • Supplier wants to lock-in customer
  • Customer wants to avoid lock-in
  • Basic principle Look ahead and reason back

4
Examples
  • Bell Atlantic and ATT
  • 5ESS digital switch used proprietary operating
    system
  • Large costs to change programming
  • But even larger costs to change HW
  • Computer Associates
  • Legacy software for IBM mainframes

5
More examples
  • Windows and Office
  • Individual switching costs learning new software
  • Collective switching costs file formats for
    exchanging work
  • Online bill payments
  • Other examples

6
Small Switching Costs Matter
  • Phone number portability
  • Landlines
  • Cellphones history of portability
  • Email addresses
  • All providers make it hard to switch
  • Forwarding services ACM, alumni, etc.
  • Lock-in costs on a per customer basis

7
Pricing and switching costs
  • With no switching cost
  • Highest price you can charge user cost of next
    best alternative
  • Alternative could be go without or buy from a
    competitor
  • With switching cost
  • Highest price you can charge user cost of next
    best alternative user switching cost
  • Examples
  • Automobile parts
  • Cell phone additional services
  • Printer ink

8
Impact of competition
  • Before choice is made environment may be very
    competitive (cell phones)
  • Competition leads to low prices
  • After choice is made you may have few
    alternatives
  • Lack of competition leads to high prices
  • Smart buyer looks at both the before choice and
    after-choice situation
  • Smart seller looks at user switching costs as an
    asset

9
Competition for locked-in customers
  • Competitors can compensate user for switching
  • Earthlinks EasySwitch
  • Word for Wordperfect users
  • But competitors may have cost of acquiring new
    customers as well
  • What matters is user alternative supplier
    switching costs

10
Impact of competitors customer switching costs
  • Customer C switches from A to "same position"
    with supplier B Total switching costs Cs
    costs B's costs of new customer
  • Example
  • Switching ISPs costs customer 50, new ISP 25
  • New ISP make 100 on customer, worth
    compensating usr
  • New ISP makes 70 on customer, not worth
    compensating user

11
Profits and Switching Costs
  • Profits from a customer total switching costs
    quality advantages
  • Why? Because price can exceed supply cost by
    amount of user switching costs
  • Profit my price my supply cost
  • Profit competitors price quality advantage
    switching cost supply cost

12
Commodity market
  • All products are same (e.g., local phone service)
  • Profit per customer total switching costs per
    customer
  • Use of this rule of thumb to value your installed
    base of customers
  • Decide how much to invest to get lock-in
  • Evaluate a target acquisition
  • Make product and design decisions that affect
    switching costs

13
Examples
  • NYTimes, June 11, 2002
  • Earthlink acquires People PC customers for 80
    apiece, half of what the company pays to acquire
    dialup customers.
  • McKinsey Quarterly, March 2002
  • Estimates sensitivity of checking account
    customers to bank charges

14
Types of Switching Costs
  • Durable purchases and replacement
  • Brand-specific training
  • Information and data
  • Personalized suppliers
  • Search costs
  • Loyalty programs
  • Contractual commitments

15
Durable Purchases
  • After purchase supplies, maintenance
  • Photocopying machines
  • Watch out for multiple pieces of hardware
  • Supplier will want to stagger vintages
  • Contract renewal is sensitive time
  • Technology lock-in v. vendor lock-in

16
Ink Jet Printers
17
Brand-specific Training
  • How much is transferable?
  • Software
  • Wetware and retraining costs can be huge
  • Berkeley Financial System, Izio v Catalyst v
    Sakai
  • Competitors want to lower switching costs
  • Quattro Pro help for Lotus users
  • MS Word help for WordPerfect users
  • Earthlink Easy Switch

18
Information and Databases
  • Datafiles
  • Insist on standard formats
  • Control of data can be valuable
  • Ameriserve example in fast food industry
  • high-labor turnover
  • supplier manages inventory information
  • big costs to switching to alternative supplier!

19
Personalized Suppliers
  • Advertising, legal, accounting firms
  • Pentagon
  • Dual sourcing for tech and strategy reasons
  • Infotech examples
  • Intel and AMD chip socket design
  • Xerox Interleaf and Adobe

20
Search Costs
  • Customer cost in finding new supplier
  • Supplier costs in finding and servicing new
    customer
  • promotion, closing deal, setting up account,
    credit risks
  • Example Credit Cards
  • 100 million in receivables sells or about 120
    million
  • Market valuation of credit card loyalty

21
Loyalty Programs
  • Constructed by firm
  • Frequent flyer programs
  • Frequent coffee programs
  • Much easier to do now that most transactions are
    computer mediated
  • Nonlinear reward structure is important to induce
    switching rather than diversification

22
Contractual Commitments
  • Requirements contract Purchase supplies from
    one supplier
  • Beware of evergreen contracts that renew
    automatically
  • Magazine subscriptions
  • Cell phone renewals retention specialists
  • AOL contract cancelation

23
Suppliers and Partners
  • Both sides may be locked in
  • Railroad spur lines
  • Customized software
  • IPOs
  • Bilateral monopoly problem
  • Game of Chicken
  • _at_home and ATT

24
Follow the Lock-in cycle
Brand Selection
Sampling
Lock-In
Entrenchment
25
Lessons
  • Switching costs are ubiquitous
  • Customers may be vulnerable to lock-in
  • Value your installed base
  • Watch for durable purchases
  • Be able to identify 7-types of lock-in
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com