When is Ours Better than Mine? A Framework for Understanding and Altering Participation in Commercial Sharing Systems
University of Pittsburgh · University of South Carolina
Abstract
Sharing systems are increasingly challenging sole ownership as the dominant means of obtaining product benefits, making up a market estimated at more than US$100 billion annually in 2010. Consumer options include cell phone minute-sharing plans, frequent-flyer-mile pools, bicycle-sharing programs, and automobile-sharing systems, among many others. However, marketing research has yet to provide a framework for understanding and managing these emergent systems. The authors conceptualize commercial sharing systems within a typology of shared goods. Using three studies, they demonstrate that beyond cost-related benefits of sharing, the perceived risk of scarcity related to sharing is a central determinant of its…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 34.79
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 43
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Business
- Attractiveness
- Sharing economy
- Scarcity
- Marketing
- Phone
- Product (mathematics)
- Typology