PlatformWarsInstructionsHW3.docx

Platform Wars

Platform Wars is your case, your simulation, and your homework this week. Note that the homework 3 assignment itself is at this bottom of this document.

The goal of this assignment is for you to really get a feel for:

· Why network effects are critical for some industries

· What kind of strategies are good for developing network effects

· Why there is such obscene profit potential in networks

· Trivia: The five largest market cap companies in the world all generate profit through network effects! (Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and Tencent)

For the assignment, you are going to do three things, in sequence:

1. Part I: First, you’ll read the Platform Wars case. Click here to access the pdf document. You only need to read the first ten pages.

2. Part II: Second, you will play the Platform Wars simulation. This is a simulation designed at MIT to replicate some of the strategic decisions inherent to fighting for market share in an industry that is characterized by strong network effects.

1. The Mission: Your mission is to make ridiculous bank in the Platform Wars game

2. Game Description: You are the CEO of Sony at the time Sony is introducing the Playstation 3 (PS3). You need to outcompete the other market entrant (aka XBox One) to capture both the console AND video game royalty markets.

3. Your Assignment: Play the game a number of times to try to record your highest score. Everyone must make at least one recorded attempt as part of their homework. If you log in per the instructions below, each of your runs will be recorded.

4. Game Play Notes: You are competing against a fairly aggressive and well-programmed computer AI. You can run as many rounds as you’d like to try to figure out how to best play the game. To repeat: you can play this game as many times as you want before class next week. Score is defined as the top cumulative profit in the game - you will see this on your balance sheet. Hint: $1B in cumulative profit is a decent, but not stellar, effort. If you’re getting less than $500M in profits, keep playing!

5. Steps to Play:

i. Click here to access the game.

ii. You'll be logging in under "Play as a Class."

1. For Log In ID, I have created a dummy account for everyone. It is your firstname and your last initial @gwu.edu. So my dummy account would be [email protected]. I am including all usernames and passwords at the bottom of this document as well.] Password will simply be: password

iii. When you log in, this is what your screen will look like:

iv. For each turn (represented as a “year” in the game), you will adjust three things:

1. Console Price. This is how much you are charging for the base console. Cheaper will get you more market share. More expensive will get you more profits.

2. Game Titles to Subsidize. If you pay to help developers develop games for your console, you can have better games and attract new users and grow your market share. Note: it’s expensive.

3. Royalty Paid by Game Maker

a. If you slide this right, you will get higher royalties from the game developers. I.e. they pay you more of a share of the revenue they get from selling games

b. If you slide it to the left, you lose revenues but you incentive game makers to build for your platform.

6. Hints:

i. You can see your market share relative to your competitor at each round

ii. You can see yours and their console price at each step (near top)

iii. You can see how many game titles are available for both your platform and your competitor’s platform if you scroll down. The balance sheet item is called “Games Available”

iv. There are ten years in each game

v. If you have any questions, you can email me or watch the full instruction video here. Instructions start at about 12:30, though the first twelve minutes are a good recap of network effects.

vi. Every full game you run will be recorded in our class logs. Go crazy. Shoot for the stars. It’s hard at first but there is some serious coin to be had by all. Like I said, $1B is a decent effort. I won’t tell you the all-time high score, but it is up there!

**This is your Homework 3 Assignment**

3. Part III: You will write a very short assignment (1 page max, 12 pt font, double-spaced) based on your platform wars experience.

1. First, write your highest score at the top of your assignment. No need for screenshots of your high score, though you can keep one for your records.

2. Second, describe the strategy you used for your highest scoring round. How did you leverage network effects to succeed? Use the concepts from the “2-Sided Markets” wiki as your framework (to support your answer).

3. Third, use the strategy you used in the simulation to show the strategic similarities and differences--with respect to network effects--between a video game platform like PS3 and Google’s core business product: Google Search. [Hint: for Google Search, one side of the network platform is users (searchers), and the other side is advertisers (Adwords).]

Example: You might say something like, “When Google first offered their search product, they gave away leprechauns and promised a free home exorcism to all early adopters. This strategy is consistent with Sony’s strategy…”

Login accounts & passwords

Last Name

First Name

Login Name

Password

Amin

Miral

[email protected]

password

Arjang

Sanam

[email protected]

password

Breitstein

Jenna

[email protected]

password

Chittela

Srinivas

[email protected]

password

Hart

Matthew

[email protected]

password

Less

John

[email protected]

password

Preketes

Frank

[email protected]

password

Shaunik

Alka

[email protected]

password

Bodas

Madhushri

[email protected]

password

Cartier

Cameron

[email protected]

password

Evans

Larry

[email protected]

password

Gaskins

Mark

[email protected]

password

Holmes

Kristy

[email protected]

password

Hounsell

Scott

[email protected]

password

Knight

Bijan

[email protected]

password

Laditan

Adedapo

[email protected]

password

McCarthy

John

[email protected]

password

Merchant

Anjila

[email protected]

password

Mitchell

Philip

[email protected]

password

Palomo

Angela

[email protected]

password

Plotnitskii

Serguei

[email protected]

password

Shah

Riddhi

[email protected]

password

Sisselman

Mickey

[email protected]

password

Toro

Angie

[email protected]

password

Valdes

Ingrid

[email protected]

password

Yoo

Don

[email protected]

password

Acholonu

Linda

[email protected]

password

Covey

Andrew

[email protected]

password

Gilmore

Krystal

[email protected]

password

Harrison

Ariel

[email protected]

password

Kramer

Jenny

[email protected]

password

Liggins

Lesley

[email protected]

password

Rao

Raj

[email protected]

password

Srinivasan

Vinay

[email protected]

password

Tobin

Matthew

[email protected]

password

White

Ian

[email protected]

password

Acevedo

David

[email protected]

password

Coward

Garrison

[email protected]

password

Gifford

Justin

[email protected]

password

Jaddou

Riva

[email protected]

password

Simmons

John

[email protected]

password

Sunderraj

Meena

[email protected]

password

Badr El Din

Hussein

[email protected]

password

Flynn

Tim

[email protected]

password

Landry

Manon

[email protected]

password

Slovin

Paul

[email protected]

password

Spigelmire

Chris

[email protected]

password

Warren

Judit

[email protected]

password

Ali

Mehvish

[email protected]

password

Bailey

Nina

[email protected]

password

Bobba

Lavanya

[email protected]

password

Bogacz

Luke

[email protected]

password

Breschi

Maddie

[email protected]

password

Early

John

[email protected]

password

Kendall

Nicholas

[email protected]

password

Laiyemo

Razaak

[email protected]

password

Lim

Anna

[email protected]

password

Luckittaro

Badee

[email protected]

password

Madhavan

Nina

[email protected]

password

Mavrakis

Sarha

[email protected]

password

Phillips

James

[email protected]

password

Weatherhead

Lauren

[email protected]

password