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Migration to Open-Standard
Interorganizational Systems: Network Effects, Switching Costs,
and Path Dependency
Kevin Zhu, Kenneth L.
Kraemer, Vijay Gurbaxani, and Sean Xu
Special Issue on Standards
Abstract
As firms seek to
improve coordination through the use of electronic interorganizational
systems (IOS), open standards are becoming increasingly
important. To better understand the process of standards
diffusion, we investigate firms’ migration from proprietary or
less-open IOS (i.e., electronic data interchange or EDI) to
open-standard IOS (i.e., the Internet). Theoretical work in
economics suggests that network effects are a determinant of network
adoption, yet the extant literature falls short of empirical testing of
the theory. We develop a conceptual model that features network
effects, expected benefits, and adoption costs as prominent
antecedents. We examine the model on a large data set of 1,394
firms. The empirical results demonstrate the significant impacts
of network effects on open-standard IOS adoption. We find that
adoption costs are a significant barrier to open-standard IOS adoption,
but EDI users and nonusers treat this very differently: EDI users
are much more sensitive to the costs of switching to the new
standard. This finding illustrates that experience with older
standards may create switching costs and make it difficult to shift to
open and potentially better standards, a phenomenon called “excess
inertia” in technology change. Further testing the underlying
factors that contribute to network effects and adoption costs, we find
that trading community influence is a key driver of network effects,
while managerial complexity, as opposed to financial costs, is a key
determinant of adoption costs. Overall we believe that this
study, based on a rigorous empirical analysis of a unique international
data set, provides valuable insights into a set of key factors that
influence standards diffusion.
Keywords: Open standards,
standards diffusion, network effects, path dependency,
interorganizational systems, Internet, electronic data interchange,
economics of standards
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