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Saudi Electronic University ECOM-101 E-commerce 2013, 9e Chapter 11 Social Networks, Auctions, and Portals 1)Social network participation is one of the most common usages of the Internet
Saudi Electronic University
ECOM-101
E-commerce 2013, 9e
Chapter 11 Social Networks, Auctions, and Portals
1)Social network participation is one of the most common usages of the Internet.
- The average user spends more time on Google+ than on Facebook.
- Sponsored community sites may be created by government, non-profit, or for-profit organizations.
- In C2C auctions, a business owns or controls assets and uses dynamic pricing to establish the price.
- According to the Internet Complaint Center (IC3), Internet auction fraud is the most commonly reported offense, generating over 25 percent of all complaints.
- Priceline's auctions are seller-biased.
- In a Dutch-Internet auction, the highest price wins.
- Keeping bid increments low increases the number of bidders and the frequency of their bids.
- Closed bidding permits price discrimination without offending buyers.
- Auction prices are always lower than prices in fixed priced markets.
- Consumers in auctions are driven solely by value maximization.
- Portals are among the most frequently visited types of sites on the Web.
- The value of portals to advertisers and content owners is primarily a function of the size of the audience the portal reaches and the length of time visitors stay on the site.
- Revenue per customer decreases as the audience focus of a portal moves from general audience to a more focused and targeted audience.
- Most of today's well-known portals began as search engines.
- One of the first online virtual communities was:
- The Well.
- Myspace.
- AOL.
- Salon.com.
- Which of the following was a primary feature of early online communities?
- chat
- network discovery
- widgets
- message boards
- Which of the following is a community of members who self-identify with a demographic or geographic category?
- practice network
- sponsored community
- affinity community
- interest-based social network
- iVillage.com is an example of a(n):
- interest-based social network.
- affinity community.
- sponsored community.
- practice network.
- A Web site designed to give parents of home-schooled children a common discussion area would be classified as a(n):
- interest-based social network.
- affinity community.
- practice network.
- sponsored community.
- Facebook is an example of a(n):
- interest-based social network.
- affinity community/social network.
- general community/social network.
- practice network.
- Which social network functionality allows users to easily post messages to the entire community?
- message board
- chat
- instant messaging
- Which social network functionality allows users to create Web pages that describe themselves?
- friends network
- profiles
- storage
- membership management tools
- pricing adjusts prices based on the location of the consumer.
- Personalization
- Utilization
- Trigger
- Fixed
- All of the following statements about social networks are true except:
- Yahoo visitors spend more than twice as much time on Yahoo as Facebook visitors spend on Facebook.
- Much more is spent on advertising on portals than on social networks.
- Facebook's share of the total social market is declining.
- The response to display ads on Facebook is lower than on portal sites.
- Which of the following types of dynamic pricing adjusts prices based on the merchant's estimate of how much the customer truly values the product?
- personalization
- trigger
- utilization
- fixed
- Adjusting the annual cost of automobile insurance based on mileage driven is an example of pricing.
- personalization
- trigger
- utilization
- fixed
- In 2011, the total worth of goods sold on eBay was approximately .
- $68 million
- $680 billion
- $6.8 billion
- $68 billion
- All of the following statements are true except:
- The market leader in C2C auctions is Craigslist.
- Auctions constituted a significant part of B2B e-commerce in 2012.
- Over a third of procurement officers use auctions to procure goods.
- In B2C auctions, established merchants offer items for sale using dynamic pricing techniques.
- Which of the following is an example of a specialized auction site?
- eBay
- uBid
- BidZ
- eBid
- All of the following are benefits of auctions except:
- more efficient price discovery.
- lower transaction costs.
- decreased price transparency.
-
- increased market efficiency.
- Which of the following is not a true statement?
- Auctions create market efficiency.
- Auctions eliminate inter-market price differences.
- The Internet has increased the liquidity of traditional auctions.
- Auctions make it more difficult for merchants to engage in price discrimination.
- Which of the following is not a risk or cost of Internet auctions?
- delayed consumption costs
- equipment costs
- price transparency
- trust risks
- The fact that participating in an Internet auction means that you will need to purchase a computer, learn to use it, and pay for Internet access, is an example of costs.
- equipment
- fulfillment
- delayed consumption
- monitoring
- All of the following are solutions to the problem of high monitoring costs except:
- seller rating systems.
- watch lists.
- proxy bidding.
- fixed pricing.
- In pricing, customers change their offers to buy based on both their perceptions of the seller's desire to sell and their own need for the product.
- trigger
- personalization
- utilization
- dynamic
- Which of the following allows the consumer to enter a maximum price and the auction software automatically bids up the goods to that maximum price in small increments?
- watch lists
- proxy bidding
- sealed bidding
- price matching
- A market that has many sellers and one or few buyers is likely to be:
- market neutral.
- seller-biased.
- buyer-biased.
- both seller- and buyer-biased.
- All of the following have the quality of neutrality except:
- one-on-one negotiations.
- stock exchanges.
- barter markets.
- reverse auctions.
- When there are few sellers but many buyers, a market will typically be:
- neutral (dominated by negotiation).
- seller-biased.
- buyer-biased.
- neutral, in the manner of a stock exchange.
- Which of the following is a common problem in sealed bid markets?
- bid rigging
- discriminatory pricing
- persistent bidding
- seller nonperformance
- When sellers agree informally or formally to set floor prices below which they will not sell on auction items, this is known as:
- discriminatory pricing.
- price matching.
- bid rigging.
- the uniform pricing rule.
- The stock market is an example of a(n):
- English auction.
- group buying auction.
- Dutch auction.
- double auction.
- Which of the following is not a characteristic of a Japanese auction?
- public ascending price auction
- seller bias
- multiple units
- highest bidder wins at a price just above second highest bid
- Which of the following is not a characteristic of a reverse auction?
- seller bias
- descending prices
- similar to sealed bid auctions
- winning bid is lowest-price provider
- All of the following types of auctions have a seller bias except:
- double auction.
- Dutch-traditional.
- Yankee auction-Internet.
- Dutch-Internet.
- All of the following types of auctions have a buyer bias except:
- English auction.
- sealed bid market.
- name your own price auction.
- group buying.
- All of the following types of auctions involve single units except:
- English auction.
- Dutch-Internet.
- Japanese auction.
- Vickrey auction.
- Which of the following types of auctions offers a neutral marketplace, without buyer or seller bias?
- sealed bid market
- English auction
- double auction
- name your own price auction
- A(n) , in which the highest bidder wins, is the most common form of auction.
- Dutch Internet auction
- Japanese auction
- English auction
- reverse auction
- Priceline.com is an example of a(n):
- English auction.
- Dutch auction.
- group buying auction.
- name your own price auction.
- Elance.com is an example of a(n):
- demand aggregator.
- auction aggregator.
- auction solution provider.
- professional service auction.
- Which of the following is not one of the top factors a business should consider when planning an Internet auction?
- type of product
- type of auction
- location of auction
- bid increments
- The profit a seller makes at auction is a function of all of the following except:
- arrival rate.
- auction length.
- the number of units for auction.
- bid increments.
- is the tendency to gravitate toward, and bid for, auction listings with one or more existing bids.
- Group buying
- Winner's regret
- Herd behavior
- Bid rigging
- Which of the following involves a concern that one will never know how much the ultimate winner might have paid, or the true value to the final winner?
- herd behavior
- winner's regret
- seller's lament
-
- loser's lament
- All of the following are situations in which markets fail to produce socially desirable outcomes except:
- information asymmetry.
- monopoly power.
- externalities.
- network effects.
- Which of the following involves e-mailing another seller's bidders and offering the same product for less?
- transaction interception
- bid siphoning
- shill bidding
- persistent bidding
- Threatening negative feedback in return for a benefit is an example of:
- feedback extortion.
- offensive shill feedback.
- defensive shill feedback.
- sending spam.
- Which of the following is not one of the three defining characteristics of a portal?
- commerce
- content
- auctions
- navigation of the Web
- Which of the following statements illustrates the network effects that portals are subject to?
- Specialized vertical market portals attract only 2-10 percent of the audience, while a few large megaportals garner most of the market.
- The value of the portal to advertisers and consumers increases geometrically as reach increases.
- The greater the amount of content provided by a portal, the greater its value to the community.
- The greater number of portals available, the greater the potential audience for each.
- The world's leading portal/search engine site, in terms of unique visitors, is:
- Yahoo.
- MSN/Bing.
- AOL.
- Google.
- MSN is an example of a:
- general purpose portal.
- vertical market portal based on affinity group.
- vertical market portal based on focused content.
- focused content search engine.
- Portals compete with one another on:
- search engine speed and results.
- reach and unique visitors.
- unique visitors and search engine speed.
- reach and depth.
- Which of the following is not one of the typical portal revenue sources?
- commissions on sales
- subscription fees
- tenancy deals
- referral fees
- Howard Rheingold, one of The Well's early participants, coined the term to refer to "cultural aggregations that emerge when enough people bump into each other often enough in cyberspace."
- A(n) offer members focused discussion groups, help, information, and knowledge related to an area of shared practice.
- pricing first appeared in the nineteenth century with the development of mass national markets and retail stores that could sell to a national audience.
- are markets in which prices are variable and based on the competition among
participants who are buying or selling the products.
- The term refers to the advantages conferred the larger an auction site becomes
in terms of visitors and products for sale.
- permit the consumer to monitor specific auctions of interest, requiring the consumer to pay close attention only in the last few minutes of bidding.
- The time spent watching and reviewing auction bids is a part of costs.
- is defined in the text as the average of prices for that product or service in a variety of dynamic and fixed-price markets around the world.
- If an auction uses a(n) , there will be multiple winners and they all will pay the same price.
- A(n) facilitates group buying of products at dynamically adjusted discount prices based on high-volume purchases.
- E-mailing buyers to warn them away from a seller is a type of auction fraud known as
.
- refers to the feeling that one has paid too high a price for an item won at auction.
- refers to the use of secondary user IDs or bidders who have no actual intention to buy to artificially raise the price of an item.
- help employees navigate to the firm's human resource and corporate content such as corporate news and announcements.
- portals, such as Yahoo, attempt to attract a very large audience and then retain the audience on-site by providing in-depth vertical content channels.
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