Post by arfankj4 on Mar 7, 2024 14:55:42 GMT 8
It s unlikely people will ever decouple showrooming from buying milk online. If the recent explosion of digital disruptors is any indication however few companies or industries are immune from decoupling by enterprising entrepreneurs able to find ways to extract value from others established infrastructure. Established companies would do well to brace themselves for the attack of these fleas—or else risk going the way of the dinosaurs.
Mobile Money The Effect of Service Quality and Competition on Demand by Karthik Balasubramanian and David F. Drake Mobile money—the use of electronic money transfer through cellular Poland Mobile Number List networks—is rapidly expanding in developing countries especially among the unbanked. One persistent problem for mobile money agents however has been managing inventory and service quality. Using data from Kenya and Uganda two stages of mobile money market development the authors introduce an operations management lens for mobile money and explore the effects of competition and service quality on demand. Author Abstract The use of electronic money transfer through cellular networks mobile money is rapidly increasing in the developing world.
The resulting electronic currency ecosystem could improve the lives of the estimated billion people who live on less than a day by facilitating more secure accessible and reliable ways to store and transfer money than are currently available. The development of this ecosystem requires a network of agents to conduct cash for electronic value transactions and vice versa. This paper estimates the effect of competition and service quality on mobile money demand. In this setting service quality consists of service reliability lower stockout and system downtime rates pricing transparency and agent expertise.
Mobile Money The Effect of Service Quality and Competition on Demand by Karthik Balasubramanian and David F. Drake Mobile money—the use of electronic money transfer through cellular Poland Mobile Number List networks—is rapidly expanding in developing countries especially among the unbanked. One persistent problem for mobile money agents however has been managing inventory and service quality. Using data from Kenya and Uganda two stages of mobile money market development the authors introduce an operations management lens for mobile money and explore the effects of competition and service quality on demand. Author Abstract The use of electronic money transfer through cellular networks mobile money is rapidly increasing in the developing world.
The resulting electronic currency ecosystem could improve the lives of the estimated billion people who live on less than a day by facilitating more secure accessible and reliable ways to store and transfer money than are currently available. The development of this ecosystem requires a network of agents to conduct cash for electronic value transactions and vice versa. This paper estimates the effect of competition and service quality on mobile money demand. In this setting service quality consists of service reliability lower stockout and system downtime rates pricing transparency and agent expertise.