2 research outputs found
Network Effects and Switching Costs In the Market for Routers and Switches
This research examines the impact of switching costs on vendor choice in
the market for routers and switches. We show that despite the use of
open standards which attempt to enhance interoperabilities for
equipments from different vendors, vendors in this market are able to
maintain high switching costs. Because routers and switches are
networked goods, switching costs may arise from prior investments made
at the same establishment and/or at other establishments within the same
firm. We study how the introduction of switches into the LAN market
affected vendor choice in routers. In particular, we provide evidence of
significant cross-product switching costs and sizeable shopping costs
when buyers purchase routers and switches simultaneously. However, we
also show that the introduction of switches may have temporarily reduced
switching costs for router buyers investing in switches