编辑简介

IF 4.2 3区 管理学 Q2 BUSINESS
Vladimir Zwass
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The advantage of brushing hinges on the commission rate charged by the platform for a sale—and thus the fraudulent brushing strategy can be defeated. The authors' model surfaces the variety of contingencies and the level of platform-use charges that can help defeat brushing. Online reviews have brought forth a broad seam of research. These reviews are frequently a dialogue between the reviewing customer and the responding merchant. It has been long established that a skillful response to a service failure can serve the merchant well, even when confronting a significantly negative review. Yes, but do the responding merchants follow up on their promise of seeking redemption by action? Algorithms can determine from the future reviews whether the merchant’s response was made in good faith—or amounted to deception. Here, Xiaolin Li, Li Ma, Benjiang Lu, and Kexin Huang construct and exercise a novel indicator of consistency between a merchant’s words and deeds, as reflected in the follow-up reviews. The authors show both the obvious practical worth of such an index and the contribution to theory they make. Two subsequent articles in the issue address with formal modeling the always salient problem of pricing that underlies the market-making mechanisms. In the first article, Jianghua Wu and Chenchen Zhao focus on dynamic pricing, where online retailers have a seemingly incontrovertible advantage in the competition with the offline merchants. With randomized dynamic pricing, the consumers with a monetized higher valuation for the product would buy at a higher initial offering price, while others would wait for promotions. The authors present a pricing model comparing a set of outcomes for an online and offline retailers, or for an omni-channel retailer, in which the online sales feature a randomized pricing strategy. The results are directly applicable to the pricing strategies in dual-channel markets and push our knowledge forward. Co-creation of value by a firm and consumers is ever more exploited in the competitive marketplaces, where the companies are able to benefit from the explicit or inferred advice of its consumers, while strengthening the brand in their mindspace. Here, Siyuan Zhu, Shaofu Du, Tengfei Nie, and Yangguang Zhu present a formal model of collaborative innovation involving three parties: consumers contributing product reviews and design suggestions, a customer-review platform, and a manufacturer who acquires the consumers’ ideas from the platform. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

电子商务欺诈的面孔很多,都很丑陋。转念一想,随着“数字人”的到来,可能是模仿化身在玩弄目标的情绪,人脸甚至可能很有吸引力——这也是问题的一部分。本期IJEC的第一篇文章涉及不诚实的在线零售商制定的欺诈策略,旨在通过提高排名和上市位置来提高公司的知名度,从而夸大实际销售额。利用这种被称为刷单的欺诈技术,零售商向自己下假订单,目的是在潜在客户的搜索中更容易被发现。作者刘跃、蒋明辉和吴航建立了一个博弈论模型,展示了在电子商务平台上,诚实的零售商和刷单零售商之间的竞争中,刷单的经济结果。刷单的优势取决于平台对销售收取的佣金率,因此欺诈刷单策略可以被击败。作者的模型揭示了各种突发事件和平台使用费用的水平,这些费用有助于击败刷单。在线评论引发了广泛的研究。这些评论通常是评论客户和回应商家之间的对话。长期以来,人们一直认为,即使面临明显的负面评价,对服务失败的熟练反应也能为商家提供良好的服务。是的,但做出回应的商人是否履行了他们通过行动寻求救赎的承诺?算法可以从未来的评论中确定商家的回应是出于善意,还是相当于欺骗。在这里,李小林、李马、陆本江和黄可欣构建并运用了一个新颖的指标,来衡量商人的言行是否一致,这反映在后续评论中。作者们展示了这样一个指数的明显实用价值以及他们对理论的贡献。本期随后的两篇文章通过正式建模解决了做市机制背后始终突出的定价问题。在第一篇文章中,吴江华和赵专注于动态定价,在线零售商在与线下商家的竞争中似乎拥有无可争议的优势。在随机动态定价的情况下,对产品估值较高的消费者会以较高的初始发行价格购买,而其他人则会等待促销。作者提出了一个定价模型,比较了在线和线下零售商或全渠道零售商的一组结果,其中在线销售采用随机定价策略。研究结果直接适用于双渠道市场的定价策略,并推动我们的知识向前发展。在竞争激烈的市场中,企业和消费者共同创造价值的机会越来越大,在竞争中,企业能够从消费者的明确或推断建议中受益,同时在他们的思维空间中加强品牌。在这里,朱思远、杜少夫、聂腾飞和朱阳光提出了一个正式的合作创新模式,涉及三方:消费者提供产品评论和设计建议,客户评论平台,以及从平台中获取消费者想法的制造商。目前出版的是《2023年国际电子商务杂志》,第27卷,第2期,161–162https://doi.org/10.1080/10864415.2023.2184236
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editor’s Introduction
There are many faces of e-commerce fraud, all of them ugly. On second thought, with the arrival of “digital humans,” possibly as mimetic avatars playing on the target’s emotions, the faces can even be attractive—which is a part of the problem. The first article in this issue of IJEC deals with a fraud strategy enacted by dishonest online retailers and serving to inflate the actual sales volume in order to enhance the visibility of their firm by moving up its ranking and the listing position. Employing this fraud technique, called brushing, the retailer places fake orders to itself with the intent of being more readily found during a prospective customer’s search. The authors, Yue Liu, Minghui Jiang, and Hang Wu, build a game-theoretic model to show the economic outcomes of brushing in a competition between an honest and a brushing retailer on an e-commerce platform. The advantage of brushing hinges on the commission rate charged by the platform for a sale—and thus the fraudulent brushing strategy can be defeated. The authors' model surfaces the variety of contingencies and the level of platform-use charges that can help defeat brushing. Online reviews have brought forth a broad seam of research. These reviews are frequently a dialogue between the reviewing customer and the responding merchant. It has been long established that a skillful response to a service failure can serve the merchant well, even when confronting a significantly negative review. Yes, but do the responding merchants follow up on their promise of seeking redemption by action? Algorithms can determine from the future reviews whether the merchant’s response was made in good faith—or amounted to deception. Here, Xiaolin Li, Li Ma, Benjiang Lu, and Kexin Huang construct and exercise a novel indicator of consistency between a merchant’s words and deeds, as reflected in the follow-up reviews. The authors show both the obvious practical worth of such an index and the contribution to theory they make. Two subsequent articles in the issue address with formal modeling the always salient problem of pricing that underlies the market-making mechanisms. In the first article, Jianghua Wu and Chenchen Zhao focus on dynamic pricing, where online retailers have a seemingly incontrovertible advantage in the competition with the offline merchants. With randomized dynamic pricing, the consumers with a monetized higher valuation for the product would buy at a higher initial offering price, while others would wait for promotions. The authors present a pricing model comparing a set of outcomes for an online and offline retailers, or for an omni-channel retailer, in which the online sales feature a randomized pricing strategy. The results are directly applicable to the pricing strategies in dual-channel markets and push our knowledge forward. Co-creation of value by a firm and consumers is ever more exploited in the competitive marketplaces, where the companies are able to benefit from the explicit or inferred advice of its consumers, while strengthening the brand in their mindspace. Here, Siyuan Zhu, Shaofu Du, Tengfei Nie, and Yangguang Zhu present a formal model of collaborative innovation involving three parties: consumers contributing product reviews and design suggestions, a customer-review platform, and a manufacturer who acquires the consumers’ ideas from the platform. At issue are INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ELECTRONIC COMMERCE 2023, VOL. 27, NO. 2, 161–162 https://doi.org/10.1080/10864415.2023.2184236
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来源期刊
International Journal of Electronic Commerce
International Journal of Electronic Commerce 工程技术-计算机:软件工程
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
16.00%
发文量
18
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Electronic Commerce is the leading refereed quarterly devoted to advancing the understanding and practice of electronic commerce. It serves the needs of researchers as well as practitioners and executives involved in electronic commerce. The Journal aims to offer an integrated view of the field by presenting approaches of multiple disciplines. Electronic commerce is the sharing of business information, maintaining business relationships, and conducting business transactions by digital means over telecommunications networks. The Journal accepts empirical and interpretive submissions that make a significant novel contribution to this field.
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