Competing with Piracy: A Multi-Channel Sequential Search Approach
Journal of Management Information Systems, Volume 30, Number 2, Fall 2013, pp. 159-184
30 Pages Posted: 24 May 2015
Date Written: April 1, 2013
Abstract
We consider an online market where consumers may obtain digital goods from two mutually exclusive channels: a legitimate channel consisting of many law-abiding retailers, or a piracy channel consisting of many piracy services. We analyze consumer choice, retailer strategy and piracy control using a sequential-search approach where information-acquisition is costly for some consumers (non-shoppers), yet costless for others (shoppers). Firstly, we show that a non-shopper’s channel choice is determined by a simple comparison of two reservation prices. Secondly, we analyze how piracy threats affect in-channel pricing among retailers. If the in-channel competition intensity among retailers is high, piracy does not affect retailer pricing. If the intensity is medium, retailers respond to piracy by giving up some shoppers and, surprisingly, raising prices. If the intensity is low, the legitimate channel loses both some shoppers and some non-shoppers to the piracy channel. Thirdly, we consider several mechanisms for fighting piracy and analyze their impacts on firm profit and consumer surplus. Reducing piracy quality and increasing piracy search costs are both effective in controlling piracy, yet they affect consumer surplus differently. Reducing the number of piracy services is less effective in controlling piracy.
Keywords: digital good, piracy, search, channel competition, price dispersion
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation