132 ENTREPRENEURSHIP
reducing the costs of searching, transacting, monitoring, and decision making. These are
real costs to the consumer and the consumer will pay to have them reduced or eliminat-
ed. In theory, as each consumer might have a different set of costs, a new version of the
product or e-business Web site can be created for each consumer.
Novelty is created by bundling the features and benefits of the e-businesses’ products
and services. Each product or service can have an element of difference or novelty, but
even if the product or service lacks such novelty, the bundle can be novel or unique in
some way. Because every customer (in theory) will want a different bundle, this type of
customization is a value driver.
The value driver, complementarity, is a function of the bundles, but may go further.
It may refer to the complementarities of partners or technologies, and include the net-
work effects of complementarity of customers and vendors.
Last, Amit and Zott include the concept of lock-in, which is similar to previous
descriptions including brand loyalty, loyalty programs, and dominant technology.
STRATEGY AND INDUSTRY ENVIRONMENTS
Not all ventures enter the same industry. How much difference does the industry itself
make in determining strategy? The answer is, “quite a lot.” Entrepreneurs can sig-
nificantly add to the success of their strategies by understanding the industry environ-
ment they are entering. A static description of industry structure was presented in
Chapter 3. However, industry environments are static only in the short term; over a
longer period of time they evolve. This evolution is called the industry life cycle. The
industry life cycle progresses through four stages: emerging, transitional, maturing, and
declining.
The industry life-cycle progression is not the same for all industries. The length of
Contracts and subscriptions
Durable purchases
Brand-specific training
Information and databases
Specialized suppliers
Search costs
Loyalty programs
Damages for breaking the contract or ending the
subscription before it expires
Replacement of the equipment; switching cost declines
as equipment ages
Customers have to learn a new system, process or
technique; loss of productivity during training period
Data conversion costs, potential for losing data; larger
databases equal higher costs of conversion
Search of finding new supplier; new supplier may not have
precisely the same capabilities and quality of older
supplier
Aggregate of buyer and seller costs
Lost benefits from program; need to start over with another
company’s program
TABLE 4.4 Lock-In and Switching Costs for Customers
Types of lock-in Switching costs