WSEAS Transactions on Computers
CCDC'09 Proceedings of the 21st annual international conference on Chinese control and decision conference
Seven principles for selecting software packages
Communications of the ACM
How to develop an open and flexible information infrastructure for the public sector?
EGOV'10 Proceedings of the 9th IFIP WG 8.5 international conference on Electronic government
Pricing strategies for tied digital contents and devices
Decision Support Systems
Impact of network effects and diffusion channels on home computer adoption
Decision Support Systems
A comparative study on marketing mix models for digital products
WINE'05 Proceedings of the First international conference on Internet and Network Economics
Organizational adoption of open source software
Journal of Systems and Software
The role of banks in the mobile payment ecosystem: a strategic asset perspective
Proceedings of the 14th Annual International Conference on Electronic Commerce
Information Resources Management Journal
Going it all alone in web entrepreneurship?: a comparison of single founders vs. co-founders
Proceedings of the 2013 annual conference on Computers and people research
Feasibility and a case study on content optimization services on cloud
Information Systems Frontiers
User satisfaction in competitive sponsored search
Proceedings of the 23rd international conference on World wide web
Hi-index | 0.02 |
From the Publisher:Information Goods -- from movies and music to software code and stock quotes - have supplanted industrial goods as the key drivers of world markets. Confronted by this New Economy, many instinctively react by searching for a corresponding New Economics to guide their business decisions. Executives charged with rolling out cutting-edge software products or on-line versions of their magazines are tempted to abandon the classic lessons of economics, and rely instead on an ever changing roster of trends, buzzwords, and analogies that promise to guide strategy in the information age. Not so fast, say authors Carl Shapiro and Hal R. Varian. In Information Rules they warn managers, "Ignore basic economic principles at your own risk. Technology changes. Economic laws do not." Understanding these laws and their relevance to information goods is critical when fashioning today's successful competitive strategies. Information Rules introduces and explains the economic concepts needed to navigate the evolving network economy. Information Rules will help business leaders and policy makers - from executives in the entertainment, publishing, hardware, and software industries to lawyers, finance professionals, and writers -- make intelligent decisions about their information assets.