It turns out that the average rake at Priceline Group is even higher today, as they allow merchants to voluntarily bid up their rake for better placement in the network (you can see this in the table above). This is one of my favorite marketplace business model “tweaks.” You start with a low rake to get broad-based supplier adoption, and you add in a market-driven pricing dynamic that allows those suppliers who want more volume or exposure to pay more on an opt-in basis. This way no one leaves the network due to excessive fees, yet you end up with a higher average rake over time due to the competitive dynamic. And when prices go up due to bidding and competition, the suppliers blame their competition not the platform (part of the genius of the Google AdWords business model). This also allows you to extract more dollars from those suppliers who desire to spend more to promote themselves (without raising the tax on those that don’t).
Chicken and Egg Problem of Two-Sided Markets and Platforms: Getting Producers to bring in the Consumers
Designing your platform so that your producers can bring along consumers is a great strategy for seeding a platform while concentrating on only one side of the market.
All Markets Are Not Created Equal: 10 Factors To Consider When Evaluating Digital Marketplaces
Since Benchmarkâs investment in Ebay 15 years ago, we have been fascinated by online marketplaces. Entrepreneurs accurately recognize that the connective tissue of the Internet provides an opportun…
What’s a “market?”
According to Fred Wilson, a pure market requires:
- Massive liquidity
- True price transparency
- Open exchanges where anyone can trade
When you have these in place, people feel comfortable trading, a lot.
By this definition, real estate isn’t a true market.
In the U.K. the average home is only 915 square feet. In the U.S. the average new single-family home is 2,480 square feet.
Sky High and Going Up Fast: Luxury Towers Take New York
A tower being built on Park Avenue is part of Manhattan’s booming ultraluxury construction business, a trend that is warping the real-estate market and driving up overall costs.
Source: The New York Times
Source: Flickr / sunsetnoir
Tumblr Staff: News!
Everyone, I’m elated to tell you that Tumblr will be joining Yahoo.
Before touching on how awesome this is, let me try to allay any concerns: We’re not turning purple. Our headquarters isn’t moving. Our team isn’t changing. Our roadmap isn’t changing. And our mission – to empower creators to…
(via sequoiacapital)
Source: staff
Why Redfin, Zillow, and Trulia Haven't Killed Off Real Estate Brokers
Unlike travel agents, real estate brokers are still prevalent. Website Redfin’s attempts to grab market share show just how stubborn they can be
“Real estate, by far, is the most screwed up industry in America,” he told CBS News’s 60 Minutes in 2007. “We feel like things that Amazon or EBay (EBAY) or Yahoo! (YHOO) have done in other industries, we can do for the real estate industry.” Kelman [CEO of Redfin] now regards that statement as an error. “The biggest mistake I made in starting out at Redfin was bringing some Silicon Valley swagger into a traditional industry,” he says. “It was unnecessarily provocative.”
