Why give away something for nothing? Investigating virtual goods pricing and permission strategies
- 10 December 2010
- journal article
- Published by Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) in ACM Transactions on Management Information Systems
- Vol. 1 (1), 1-22
- https://doi.org/10.1145/1877725.1877729
Abstract
With the rapid increase of virtual goods created for virtual world exchanges and the record growth of user-to-user transactions in these in-world economies, an important question is how a creator sets prices for a virtual good so as to maximize her profit from her creation. Virtual goods share similar economic properties (such as substantial production cost and negligible marginal cost) with other types of digital goods. However, one aspect that distinguishes a virtual good is that consumers in a virtual world may want to use multiple copies of the identical good at the same time , and such simultaneous use of multiple copies of the identical good increases a consumer's utility . In this research, we focus on the COPY permission of virtual goods. We develop an economic model to examine under what conditions the COPY permission setting leads to the highest profit for the creator of a virtual good, and what the pricing strategies are in a dynamic setting when such permission choices are present. Theoretical and practical implications of the research are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Free trial or no free trial: Optimal software product design with network effectsEuropean Journal of Operational Research, 2010
- Optimal pricing for information goods with piracy and saturation effectEuropean Journal of Operational Research, 2007
- Consumer Search and Retailer Strategies in the Presence of Online Music SharingJournal of Management Information Systems, 2006
- Do Artists Benefit from Online Music Sharing?*The Journal of Business, 2006
- Pricing Information Goods in the Presence of CopyingSSRN Electronic Journal, 2002
- Buying, Sharing and Renting Information GoodsJournal of Industrial Economics, 2000
- Shared Information GoodsThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1999
- Coase versus Pacman: Who Eats Whom in the Durable-Goods Monopoly?Journal of Political Economy, 1995
- Durable-Goods Monopoly with Discrete DemandJournal of Political Economy, 1989
- Private Copying, Appropriability, and Optimal Copying RoyaltiesThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1989