Title: Vaporware: a tug of war between market freezing and cannibalisation

Authors: Yongchuan Bao

Addresses: Department of Marketing, College of Business and Economics, California State University, 800 N. State College Blvd, Fullerton, CA 92870, USA

Abstract: Vaporware is a misleading preannouncement strategy. The established view about such a marketing strategy is that it is commonly used by dominant firms. The literature also suggests that firms engage in vaporware in order to deter the entry of potential competitors. This study challenges these conventional wisdoms and shows that the optimality of the vaporware strategy depends on the tradeoff between the market freezing effect and the cannibalisation effect. Specifically, the study finds that vaporware is only optimal for a firm with a sufficiently low market share and for a new product with a sufficiently high quality improvement over the existing product. To eliminate the vaporware incentive, this study proposes a signalling price mechanism. The analysis shows counterintuitively that a lower price signals better product delivery capability.

Keywords: vaporware; new product preannouncement; signalling game; market share; product quality; market freezing; cannibalisation; technology marketing; marketing strategy; signalling price mechanism; product delivery; delivery capability; price signals.

DOI: 10.1504/IJTMKT.2008.018860

International Journal of Technology Marketing, 2008 Vol.3 No.2, pp.116 - 136

Published online: 20 Jun 2008 *

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