Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Anchored Inferential Learning: Platform-Specific Uncertainty, Venture Capital Investments by the Platform Owner, and the Impact on Complementors

View through CrossRef
Platform owners increasingly make corporate venture capital investments in complementors (e.g., app developers) to stimulate value creation, a practice we refer to as platform venture capital (PVC). Interested in the implications of PVC for other complementors, we investigate how PVC investments affect their product introduction and withdrawal decisions. Given that complementors confront platform-specific uncertainty concerning the strategic directions of the platform, which is asymmetrically set by the platform owner, we theorize that complementors leverage PVC investments as devices for anchored inferential learning. That is, because PVC investments are costly, visible, and consequential, complementors will infer them as credible indicators of the platform’s future focus. Consequently, we predict that complementors will seek out, and stick around, product categories of PVC investees. We further anticipate that these inclinations are weaker for complementors with greater platform ecosystem experience that place more emphasis on knowledge acquired via experiential learning, and stronger for complementors that center their business exclusively on the platform and therefore rely strongly on PVC to navigate platform-specific uncertainty. We provide quantitative evidence from the context of the Salesforce platform. Moreover, we draw on qualitative data from this context to unpack why complementors interpret PVC investments as a credible signal concerning the strategic direction of the platform. We highlight that complementors consider PVC as a form of middle-ground platform governance, where the platform owner is perceived as being committed to stimulating value creation in the platform ecosystem, while also inducing complementors to commit their efforts to the platform ecosystem.
Title: Anchored Inferential Learning: Platform-Specific Uncertainty, Venture Capital Investments by the Platform Owner, and the Impact on Complementors
Description:
Platform owners increasingly make corporate venture capital investments in complementors (e.
g.
, app developers) to stimulate value creation, a practice we refer to as platform venture capital (PVC).
Interested in the implications of PVC for other complementors, we investigate how PVC investments affect their product introduction and withdrawal decisions.
Given that complementors confront platform-specific uncertainty concerning the strategic directions of the platform, which is asymmetrically set by the platform owner, we theorize that complementors leverage PVC investments as devices for anchored inferential learning.
That is, because PVC investments are costly, visible, and consequential, complementors will infer them as credible indicators of the platform’s future focus.
Consequently, we predict that complementors will seek out, and stick around, product categories of PVC investees.
We further anticipate that these inclinations are weaker for complementors with greater platform ecosystem experience that place more emphasis on knowledge acquired via experiential learning, and stronger for complementors that center their business exclusively on the platform and therefore rely strongly on PVC to navigate platform-specific uncertainty.
We provide quantitative evidence from the context of the Salesforce platform.
Moreover, we draw on qualitative data from this context to unpack why complementors interpret PVC investments as a credible signal concerning the strategic direction of the platform.
We highlight that complementors consider PVC as a form of middle-ground platform governance, where the platform owner is perceived as being committed to stimulating value creation in the platform ecosystem, while also inducing complementors to commit their efforts to the platform ecosystem.

Related Results

Conceptual basis of formation of venture structures
Conceptual basis of formation of venture structures
Venture entrepreneurship guarantees high profitability for investors, has proven the effectiveness of the venture investment institute in developed countries as one of the effectiv...
Methods of evaluation of venture structures development
Methods of evaluation of venture structures development
A review of scientific sources, which reveal approaches to assessing the development of venture structures (for example, venture funds), suggests that the problem of assessing the...
VENTURE CAPITAL IN THE FINANCIAL SUPPORT SYSTEM OF INNOVATIVE ECONOMY
VENTURE CAPITAL IN THE FINANCIAL SUPPORT SYSTEM OF INNOVATIVE ECONOMY
In the article are considered the theoretical bases of venture financing. The economic essence and specificity of venture capital, as well as its main forms and influence on financ...
New Perspectives for 3D Visualization of Dynamic Reservoir Uncertainty
New Perspectives for 3D Visualization of Dynamic Reservoir Uncertainty
This reference is for an abstract only. A full paper was not submitted for this conference. Abstract 1 Int...
Study on Venture Capital Investments and its ability to stimulate Innovation and spur Economic Growth in India
Study on Venture Capital Investments and its ability to stimulate Innovation and spur Economic Growth in India
Objective: This paper examines the impact of Venture Capital Investments (VCI) on Innovation and Economic Growth in India. Venture Capital has emerged as a critical source of fundi...
Profitability Analysis of Leveraged Transactions
Profitability Analysis of Leveraged Transactions
Because the decision function is usually separated from the financing function, most venture analyses do not explicity encompass the source, the cost, or the repayment of the neces...
Reserves Uncertainty Calculation Accounting for Parameter Uncertainty
Reserves Uncertainty Calculation Accounting for Parameter Uncertainty
Abstract An important goal of geostatistical modeling is to assess output uncertainty after processing realizations through a transfer function, in particular, to...
The uncertainty–investment relationship: scrutinizing the role of firm size
The uncertainty–investment relationship: scrutinizing the role of firm size
PurposeThe objective of this paper is threefold. First, it aims to empirically study whether firm-specific/idiosyncratic uncertainty, macroeconomic/aggregate uncertainty and politi...

Back to Top