In: Economics
Case study: Microsoft – increasing or diminishing
returns?
In some industries, securing the adoption of an industry standard
that is favourable to one’s own product is an enormous advantage.
It can involve marketing efforts that grow more productive the
larger the product’s market share. Microsoft’s Windows is an
excellent example. The more customers adopt Windows, the more
applications are introduced by independent software developers, and
the more applications that are introduced the greater the chance
for further adoptions. With other products the market can quickly
exhibit diminishing returns to promotional expenditure, as it
becomes saturated. However, with the adoption of new industry
standards, or a new technology, increasing returns can persist.
Microsoft is therefore willing to spend huge amounts on promotion
and marketing to gain this advantage and dominate the industry.
Many would claim that this is a restrictive practice, and that this
has justified the recent anti-trust suit against the company.
Microsoft introduced Office 2000, a program that includes Word,
Excel, PowerPoint and Access, to general retail customers in
December 1999. It represented a considerable advance over the
previous package, Office 97, by allowing much more interaction with
the Internet. It also allows easier collaborative work for firms
using an intranet. Thus many larger firms have been willing to buy
upgrades and pay the price of around $230.
However, there is limited scope for users to take advantage of
these improvements. Office 97 was already so full of features that
most customers could not begin to exhaust its possibilities. It has
been estimated that with Word 97 even adventurous users were
unlikely to use more than a quarter of all its capabilities. In
this respect Microsoft is a victim of the law of diminishing
returns. Smaller businesses and home users may not be too impressed
with the further capabilities of Office 2000. Given the enormous
costs of developing upgrades to the package, the question is where
does Microsoft go from here. It is speculated that the next
version, Office 2003, may incorporate a speech-recognition program,
making keyboard and mouse redundant. At the moment such programs
require a considerable investment in time and effort from the user
to train the computer to interpret their commands accurately, as
well as the considerable investment by the software producer in
developing the package.
Questions
a. Is it possible for a firm to experience both increasing and
diminishing returns at the same time?
b. What other firms, in other industries, might be in similar
situations to Microsoft, and in what respects?
c. What is the nature of the fixed factor that is causing the law
of diminishing returns in Microsoft’s case?
d. Are there any ways in which Microsoft can reduce the undesirable
effects of the law of diminishing returns?
a)The firm experiences both economies of large scale and diseconomies of large scale as it expands its scale of operation.In the beginnning the economies are more than the diseconomies and the firm can overcome the diseconomies.So the firm experiences increasing returns to scale.But as the firm continues to expand its scale of operations the negative effects or diseconomies are more than the economies of higher scale.The firm cannot get over this diseconomies.So diminishing returns set in.So the firm cannot experience increasing and diminishing returns at the same time.This is applicable to the growth of individual firms over a period of time.
b)Industry which might be in similar situation like Microsoft may be computer industry.The computer industry like Microsoft, spend a large amount in developing technology and also in upgrading the quality of their product even though the quality of the last product produced maybe well developed.
c)Law of diminishing return states that marginal product of variable input will decrease in the short run as more of the input is used in production all other inputs remaining constant.We know that total product increases but at a decreasing rate after the first stage of production.Marginal product which is the change in total product as a result of change in input falls as the quantity of input increases.
d)The undesirable effects of diminishing returns can be reduced by Microsoft by adopting the economies of large scale production. By employing more inputs like labor and using more raw materials , the firm can increase output within the plant.Using more variable factor like labor will help Microsoft to upgrade their windows or MS office .They can also upgrade their marketing and promotional skills which in turn will lead to greater sales.