Publication Type

Journal Article

Version

publishedVersion

Publication Date

1-2003

Abstract

The last decade has witnessed a shift from a focus on the value created by a single firm and product to an examination of the value created by networks of firms (or product ecosystems) in which assets are comingled with external entities. The authors examine these market-based assets in the context of network markets and propose an Integrated Networks model in which three types of networks-user, complements, and producer-add value or enhance the attractiveness of the associated focal product. The authors empirically test the proposed model by surveying information technology professionals on their resource allocation decisions regarding the Unix and Windows NT operating systems. The findings suggest that the value added by these three networks is significantly and positively associated with resources allocated by business customers to competing products. The results also show that the three networks mediate the relationship between stand-alone product performance and resource allocation.

Discipline

Marketing

Publication

Journal of Marketing

Volume

67

Issue

1

First Page

29

Last Page

45

ISSN

0022-2429

Identifier

10.1509/jmkg.67.1.29.18586

Embargo Period

10-12-2014

Additional URL

https://www.jstor.org/stable/30040509

Included in

Marketing Commons

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