soumya sen dept. of electrical & systems engineering university of pennsylvania
DESCRIPTION
Soumya Sen Dept. of Electrical & Systems Engineering University of Pennsylvania [email protected] www.seas.upenn.edu/~ssoumya Joint Work with: R. Guerin, K. Hosanagar. Exploring the Trade-offs between Functionality-rich Versus Minimalist Design: A Two-sided Market Analysis. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Soumya Sen
Dept. of Electrical & Systems EngineeringUniversity of Pennsylvania
[email protected]/~ssoumya
Joint Work with: R. Guerin, K. Hosanagar
9th December, 2010. University of Minnesota.
Exploring the Trade-offs between Functionality-rich Versus Minimalist Design: A Two-sided Market Analysis
• Success of new network technologies depends on:– Technological factors– Economic factors (e.g. price, costs, demand)
• Design choices should reflect our understanding of these factors– Analytical frameworks– What are the ‘qualitative’ insights from the model?
• Some Dimensions for Assessing Network Technologies:
– Topic 1: • Network Technology Adoption/ Migration (NetEcon’08, ToN’10)
– How can a provider help its technology (service) to succeed?
– Topic 2: • Network Infrastructure Choice (ReArch’09, WEB’10, ISR)
– What infrastructure should the new technology (service) be deployed on?– Understanding Trade-offs between Shared and Dedicated networks
– Topic 3: • Trade-offs between Functionality-rich versus Minimalist Designs
Background
2
Exploring the Trade-offs between Functionality-rich Versus Minimalist Design: A Two-sided Market Analysis
1. Research Motivation
2. Review of Two-sided Markets
3. Problem Formulation
4. Model
5. Solution Methodology
6. Results
7. Conclusions
Talk Outline
3
• Networks are becoming akin to services– Evolving from physical to virtual infrastructures
– Helped by progress in new technologies • e.g. Virtualization, Cloud computing, IP Multimedia Subsystem platform
– Network platforms to serve as software ecosystems
– Growing number of Internet intermediaries are providing different kinds of development platforms• Google and Microsoft want to build web platform -the powerful layer of basic services on top of which
everyone else builds their web sites and services
• Network Platforms are characterized by two customer segments or market sides– Application (Service) Developers – Consumers
• Platforms providers have to provide built-in functionalities in the platform– e.g., API, tool boxes, software modules – Availability of these software modules, APIs help to reduce app development costs of developers– But adding functionalities comes at a cost– A trade-off between functionality-rich versus minimalist design exists
Research Motivation
4
Related Work: Two-sided Markets (1)
5
Platform Infrastructure
Service Providers Users
Network Provider
F
bdpc
nd xc
• Network externalities: Katz and Shapiro (1985), Farrell and Saloner (1985)
• Two-sided markets definition– Cross-side externality: Bakos and Katsamakas (2008) – focus on design and ownership of platforms– Two-side externalities: Yoo (2002) -focus on B2B markets– Violation of Coase Theorem: Rochet-Tirole (2004)- “ A market is two-sided if, holding constant the total of prices
faced by the two parties, any change in the price structure would affect participation levels and the number of interactions on the platform”
• Two-sided platforms: Economides and Tag (2009) – focus on net neutrality debate• Pricing and Social Efficiency: Hagiu (2006)• Competition in two-sided markets: Armstrong (2004)• Pricing, subsidies: Armstrong and Wright (2004)
• Most closely related to our work:– Bakos and Katsamakas (2008)– Two-side externalities: Yoo (2002)
• Our focus on the interaction of how investments in functionalities by platform affect the application development costs, and therefore the platform’s design
Related Work: Two-sided Markets (2)
6
• Monopolist Platform Provider• Two-sides: Application Developers and Consumers
• Each market sides benefits from the participation of the other side– Cross-side externality benefits (e.g., Android, Xbox)
• Platform provider invests in platform functionalities – basic functionalities to `niche’ functionalities
• Trade-offs between platforms with functionality-rich and minimalist designs• Charges flat-fees to both market sides
Functionality Rich Design:– Pros:
• Attractive to developers• Indirect benefits to consumers• Allows platform to charge higher fees
– Cons:• Expensive to build
Minimalist Design:– Pros:
• Cheaper to build– Cons:
• Less attractive to developers• Indirectly less attractive to consumers• Lowers the platform’s profit potential
Problem Formulation (1)
7
• Developers create Applications (services) and generate advertisement revenues
• Services can be differentiated but they use the same set of underlying functionalities
• Note: Competition among developer apps can be allowed in the model
– Can be captured through negative network externalities among developers
– These negative network externalities will be proportional to the number of other developers present
– Quantitative values change, but not the qualitative findings
• Platform provider knows about this set of functionalities needed by the apps
– But may or may not provide all of them: The design decision (functionality-rich/minimalist)
Problem Formulation (2)
8
• In innovating apps, Developers will:
– Use the functionality as is, if already provided by the platform
– Otherwise, write their own software code to enable that functionality for their service
– The latter comes at an application development cost for developers (presence of cost heterogeneity)
• Consumers are application (service) users
– Benefit from the number of available applications (developers) on the platform (can be heterogeneous)
– Are oblivious to who provided the code for the functionality (i.e. do not experience any difference in the quality of platform provided verses developer provided functionalities)
– App downloads are transaction free
Problem Formulation (3)
9
• Timeline for a three stage sequential decision process is considered:
• Design Stage
• Platform decides the level of functionalities, F
• Pricing Stage
• Platform decides on the flat fees (prices) to be charged to the two sides, pc (consumers) and bd (developers)
• Adoption Stage
• A xc fraction of consumers and a nd fraction of developers join the network
• Consumers and developers who join are those that enjoy positive utility from joining the platform
Model Formulation
10
Design Stage(Platform provider
chooses F)
Pricing Stage(platform chooses flat
fees pc and bd)
Adoption Stage(nd developers and xc consumers join the
platform)
Decision Tim
eline
Dire
ction
of s
oluti
on
• Platform charges flat fees to both market sides– Users pay subscription fees– Developers pay certification and licensing fees
• Platform provider incurs a functionality development cost, C(F)– Functionalities are added from most basic to `niche’ ones– C(F) is monotonically increasing in F– C(F) is convex (concave) if the marginal cost of adding sophisticated (niche) functionalities is
increasing (decreasing)
• Consider F to be large, so the set of F is mapped onto an interval [0, Fmax] such that C(F) is continuous on the interval
Model : Platform Utility (1)
11
)(FCnbxpU ddccp
• α captures value that a consumer generates for the developer (cross-externality)• It accounts for advertising revenue (e.g. Facebook app iLike gets revenue from iTunes, Ticketmaster)
• bd is the flat fee developers pay to the platform– Android charges $25 market developer fee, Apple charges $99 licensing fee to distribute apps and $299 for ‘enterprise
programmers’ (iOS developer program)
• K(F) captures the baseline app development cost when F functionalities are provided by the platform (developers have similar baseline expertise in developing apps)
• φτ captures the heterogeneity among developers in development cost for apps (e.g., fixed costs, employee benefits)
• All system parameters are normalized w.r.t. τ• Assume• Development cost, K(F)
– More built-in functionalities, lower is this cost– K(F) is monotonically decreasing in F– K(F) is concave (convex) if the marginal cost of developing sophisticated (niche) functionalities is
increasing (decreasing)
• Developer utility when same side externalities are considered
Model : Developer Utility (2)
12
))(( FKbxU dcd
))(( FKbnxU ddcd
]1,0[
• q captures stand-alone benefits the platform provides to consumer
• β captures the value that a developer generates for the consumer (cross-externality)• θ captures the heterogeneity among consumers in how much they value the available apps,
• pc is the flat fee consumers pay to the platform
• All system parameters are normalized
• In some platforms, consumers may value the stand-alone qualities or brand name more• We consider the following alternative utility function to account for the case where users are
heterogeneous in their evaluation of stand-alone benefits, while valuing their cross-externalities equally• e.g. most players of games platform value the available number of games but can be more subjective
about the console characteristics and hardware features (captured by q)
Model : Consumer Utility (3)
13
cdc pnqU
cdc pnqU
]1,0[
• Amazon Web Services provides a variety of functionalities with available APIs – EC2 (computing), SimpleDB (database) Amazon S3 (storage), CloudFront
(content delivery)
• API complexity is a proxy for platform’s cost of building-in the functionality
• Forum Activity levels is a proxy for usefulness of the functionalities
• Functionalities that are most useful to developers are most difficult for platform to provide, `niche’ functionalities can be added at decreasing marginal cost to the platform.– Note the correlation in EC2, FPS, SimpleDB, RDS, SQS, SNS, DevPay
15
Source: http://www.elastician.com/2010/06/aws-by-numbers.html
Model : Examples (1)- Amazon Web Services
• IP Multimedia Subsystems Platform provides a way for delivering integrataed voice, video, data services in a reliable standardized services
• Low level APIs are developed by the platform first at high marginal costs, but low-level APIs are too complex for app developers to work with, and involves complexity of learning the platform architecture
• As High-level APIs are made available by the platform, the developers costs decrease significantly
16
Model : Examples (2)- IMS Platform
17
Solution Methodology: Adoption Stage
*1ˆ
d
cc n
px
)(ˆ * FKbxn dcd
)(
)1(**
**
FKnxb
nxp
dcd
dcc
• Consumers and developers are assumed to be:• Rational• Incentive compatible• Make simultaneous adoption decision, given
pc, bd and F
• At equilibrium:
Design Stage(Platform provider
chooses F)
Pricing Stage(platform chooses flat
fees pc and bd)
Adoption Stage(nd developers and xc consumers join the
platform)
Decision Tim
eline
Dire
ction
of s
oluti
on
18
Solution Methodology: Pricing Stage
10,10..
)(max
**
**
, **
dc
ddccpnx
nxts
FCnbxpUdc
8
)(4))(3(
16
))(4))(((
*
2*
FKb
FKp
d
c
Interior Solution:
Design Stage(Platform provider
chooses F)
Pricing Stage(platform chooses flat
fees pc and bd)
Adoption Stage(nd developers and xc consumers join the
platform)
Decision Tim
eline
Dire
ction
of s
oluti
on
8
)(4)(
22
*
*
FKn
x
d
c
Proposition 1: The optimal price levels (p*c, b*d) and the optimal adoption levels of consumers and developers (x*c, n*d) of the two-sided market, which maximizes the platform provider’s profit are given by:
Only Boundary constraints need to be satisfied, second order conditions are satisfied
19
Solution Methodology: Design Stage
8
)(
2
)()(
)(
)( 2***
*
*
FK
FnFK
FCd
Proposition 2: The optimal level of built-in functionalities (F*) for the platform which maximizes its profit is given by:
Design Stage(Platform provider
chooses F)
Pricing Stage(platform chooses flat
fees pc and bd)
Adoption Stage(nd developers and xc consumers join the
platform)
Decision Tim
eline
Dire
ction
of s
oluti
on
)(2
)]([)()( *
2**** FK
FKFnFC d
Second order condition needs to satisfy:
)()(
)( ***
*
FnFK
FCd
At the optima, the participation level of developers equals the ratio of rate of change in the costs to the platform and the developers.
• Using the conjugate pair theorem, we have:
• Proposition 3: Increase in cross-externality benefits provides incentives for the platform to invest in built-in functionalities
• How does F* change with the cost functions C(F) and K(F), i.e. when should a platform create a functionality-rich / minimalist design?
Analysis (1): Impact of cross-externalities on platform design
20
0
0
2*
2*
F
Usign
Fsign
F
Usign
Fsign
p
p
Impact of α and β on F*
• AWS example scenario• K(F) convex, C(F) concave• Basic functionalities help developers a lot (K’(F) is large -ve), marginal value to developers
from ‘niche’ functionalities is decreasing (K’(F) is small -ve →0 as F increases)• Cost of adding basic functionality is large, marginal cost of adding ‘niche’ functionality
decreases• Multiple maxima (Depending on K(F), the design should be minimalist or functionality rich)• Counterintuitive: For the K’(F) that initially decreases faster and slowly later on
(i.e. K(F)=0.25e-0. 43*F) the platform will invest in higher functionality level
Analysis (2): Presence of Multiple Maxima
21
• K(F) convex, C(F) convex• Basic functionalities help developers a lot (K’(F) is large -ve), marginal value to developers from
‘niche’ functionalities is decreasing (K’(F) is small -ve →0 as F increases)
• Multiple maxima (Depending on K(F), the design should be minimalist or functionality rich)• Counterintuitive: For the K’(F) that initially decreases faster and slowly later on (i.e. K(F)=0.5e -0.194*F)
the platform will invest in higher functionality level
Analysis (3): Presence of Multiple Maxima
22
• K(F) concave, C(F) convex
• Design depends upon boundary values as well as the rate of change of K(F)
• Non-intuitive platform functionality design outcome
Analysis (4): Complex design decisions
23
• IMS scenario• K(F) concave, C(F) concave
• F* is on the boundary, platform will be either minimalist or functionality-rich depending on the Fmax
Analysis (5): Boundary values
24
25
Alternative Utility Function: Robustness
2*
2*
)(4
)())(2()(
)(4
))()()(2(
q
FKqqb
q
FKqqp
d
c
Interior Solution:
2*
2*
)(4
))(2(
)(4
)()(2
q
qFKn
q
FKqx
d
c
Proposition 1: The optimal price levels (p*c, b*d) and the optimal adoption levels of consumers and developers (x*c, n*d) of the two-sided market, which maximizes the platform provider’s profit are given by:
Boundary constraints need to be satisfied, second order conditions require
cdc pnqU
2
2
q
)()(
)( ***
*
FnFK
FCd
Design Solution:
26
Alternative Utility Function: Robustness (1)
Using the conjugate pair theorem, we again have:
Proposition 3: Increase in cross-externality benefits provides incentives to the platform to invest in built-in functionalities
Proposition 4: Increase in platform’s stand-alone benefits decreases platform’s need to invest in higher levels of built-in functionalities
0
0
2*
2*
F
Usign
Fsign
F
Usign
Fsign
p
p
0*
q
Fsign
• K(F) convex, C(F) convex
• Non-intuitive behaviors still present• For the K’(F) that initially decreases faster and slowly later on (i.e. K(F)=0.5e -0. 35*F) the
platform will invest in higher functionality level
Alternative Utility Function: Robustness (2)
27
• We provide an analytical framework to investigate trade-offs in platform design
• Multiple design optima may arise
• The design decision can be complex and non-intuitive
• Design decision is based not only on the rate of change in costs from adding functionalities, but also the relative rate of change in platform’s and developer’s costs, as well as boundary values
• Robustness analysis:– Alternative demand function– Non-linear externality functions
• The model can help in providing design guidelines for network platforms
• Potential for future exploration
Conclusions
28
Thank you!