System Design, User Cost and Electronic Usage of Journals
(Download full paper)Filed under research category: Information content economics
Tagged as: information_goods user_cost electronic_usage scholarly_journals information_pricing peak bundling incentive-centered_design
Authors
Gazzale, Robert S. and Jeffrey K. MacKie-Mason
Abstract
Dramatic increases in the capabilities and decreases in the costs of computers and communi-cation networks have fomented revolutionary thoughts in the scholarly publishing community. In one dimension, traditional pricing schemes and product packages are being modified or re-placed. We designed and undertook a large-scale field experiment in pricing and bundling for electronic access to scholarly journals: PEAK. We provided Internet-based delivery of content from 1200 Elsevier Science journals to users at multiple campuses and commercial facilities. Our primary research objective was to generate rich empirical evidence on user behavior when faced with various bundling schemes and price structures. In this article we explain the different types and levels of cost that users faced when accessing individual articles, and report on the ef-fect of these costs on usage. We found that both monetary and non-monetary user costs have a significant impact on the demand for electronic access. We also estimate how taking user costs into account would change the "optimal" (least cost) bundle of access options that an institution should purchase.
Citation
Presented at the Conference on Economics and Usage of Digital Library Collections, Ann Arbor, MI, 23-24 March 2000. Presented at the 28th Annual Telecom Policy Research Conference, Alexandra, VA, 23-25 September 2000.