Technological competition: a path towards commoditization or differentiation? Some evidence from a comparison of e-book readers

Authors

  • Pierre-Jean BENGHOZI I3-CRG, Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, France
  • Elisa SALVADOR I3-CRG, Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, France and Iéseg School of Management, Paris campus, France

Keywords:

Creative industry, book-publishing industry, business model, e-book, repeated innovation

Abstract

Technological rivalry is recognized as a key dimension of competition and innovation strategies in the digital era. It is particularly important in strategies focused on disruptive and repeated innovations, where each step contributes to shaping the design of the offering, the structuring of the market and the value chain. These technological trajectories are built on the basis of tensions between two contradictory objectives: specialization aimed at creating proprietary systems and standardization aimed at supplying the overall market. In the former case, successive innovations support competition between exclusive and proprietary ecosystems. In the latter case, commoditized devices create opportunities for alternative actors to engage in innovation and value creation. The e-book reader market serves as a key example of the issues at stake in terms of technological rivalry among technology suppliers, digital platforms, and publishers.

 

Published

2022-11-07

How to Cite

Pierre-Jean BENGHOZI, & Elisa SALVADOR. (2022). Technological competition: a path towards commoditization or differentiation? Some evidence from a comparison of e-book readers. Systèmes d’information Et Management, 20(03). Retrieved from https://journaleska.com/index.php/sim/article/view/7123

Issue

Section

Articles