Standards Flashcards
1
Q
Motivations for standards
A
- Existence of network externalities - value of something increases as more and more people own it (fax machines)
- Avoidance of competing platforms - barriers to adoption, but may lead to best innovation winning (VHS vs. Betamax)
- Users prefer standards more than manufacturers do
2
Q
Types of standards
A
- Reference standard - metre, centimetre
- Similarity standard - minimum specification
- Management standard - total quality management
- COMPATABILITY STANDARD - MAKING SYSTEMS INTEROPERABLE
3
Q
Negotiating formal standards
A
- National standards bodies (BSI in UK, ANSI in USA)
- Committees send delegates to represent national interests in international bodies
- International committees negotiate consensus between national standards/members
4
Q
Problems with this process
A
- Poor user representation in such processes
- May take years to agree on a standard
5
Q
Conclusions
A
- Most firms are users of standards rather than procedures, many standards are anticipatory and all of the uses are not clear when specified
- Active participation in standardisation can be low. Attraction of having your patents embedded in standard is unattractive.
6
Q
VHS versus Betamax
A
- Beat was Sony, VHS was JVC
- Beta lost due to its large size and recording scale
- Standard in video technology adapted the VHS format, mostly due to marketing strategies and manoeuvring of JVC
- JVC had linkages to Granada and Thornhill, who were leading British TV operators. This led them to adapt the VHS format
- Japan saw technology in the USA and Europe and developed superior capabilities in mass production and distribution
- Beta and JVC were not compatible, they used different tape handling mechanisms and cassette sizes, as well as coding schemes that varied enough to ensure the two were non-interchangeable
- Sony experiences first mover advantages, but the market was so large that a window of opportunity was created, during which firms with compatible capabilities could challenge them (beta)
- Sony and Beta could not differentiate through basic features. So they could neither gain a technological advantage.
- Sony lost the battle by choosing to make smaller cassettes, that could only hold an hour or film, where beta chose larger cassettes that held 2 hours. People got to do what they wanted with the casettes, at a price they wanted to pay.