(Press-News.org) Scalping gets a bad rap. For years, artists and concert promoters have stigmatized ticket resale as a practice that unfairly hurts their own sales and forces fans to pay exorbitant prices for tickets to sold-out concerts. But is that always true?
A new study by Victor Bennett, assistant professor of management and organization at the USC Marshall School of Business, along with colleagues at New York University and the Harvard Business School, finds that resale markets like Craigslist can add value to tickets sold by concert venues and Ticketmaster. "Cannibalization and Option Value Effects of Secondary Markets: Evidence From the U.S. Concert Industry" will be published in the Strategic Management Journal.
Suppose you are interested in a Bruno Mars and Pharrell Williams concert that is three months away. You're not 100 percent sure you'll be able to make it: what if you get sick, or what if you're traveling for work?
"If a customer faces too much uncertainty, he or she may be unwilling to purchase a ticket," Bennett said. "On the other hand, a customer who is reasonably certain of reselling the ticket on Craigslist may be more likely to purchase it. Such security increases the number of customers willing to buy from Ticketmaster, effectively bidding up the price."
You might also decide to buy tickets early from Ticketmaster if that Bruno Mars and Pharrell Williams concert is in high demand and might sell out, because tickets on Craigslist are going to be bid way up.
"For really hot shows, sometimes tickets are resold for five or 10 times their face value," Bennett said. "But on a show that hasn't sold out," he continued, "a lot of times the scalpers are just trying to make back as much of their money as they can, so they may even charge less than face value."
Concert tickets are resold regularly, Bennett explained, because ticket buyers decide that they can no longer attend or because the tickets were bought with the intention of reselling them or were released directly by an artist or promoter.
Websites like TicketsNow, StubHub and Craigslist make it extremely easy to match buyers and sellers. Bennett specifically looked at ticket prices to measure whether firms benefited from or were hurt by the entry of Craigslist, the leading classified-ad service in any medium and the ninth-most-visited website in the United States, with about 60 million unique U.S. visitors each month.
Through this study, Bennett determined that markets like Craigslist can impact prices in markets like Ticketmaster, but they do not always have the same effect. Following Craiglist's entry to the market, concerts by popular artists saw a significant increase in price, while those by less-popular artists saw a significant decrease.
"By 'most popular shows,' I mean the shows that are more popular than promoters thought they were going to be — it's when the venues sell out," Bennett said.
If Lady Gaga plays in a 50,000-seat venue and she only sells 48,000 tickets, then markets like Craigslist don't help Ticketmaster. But they can help a small indie band that is playing a 100-seat theater and thought it was only going to sell 80 tickets but ended up getting on the radio and selling 150 tickets.
"The most popular shows are now making more money," Bennett said, "and that's kind of a rich-get-richer effect."
INFORMATION: END
Scalping can raise ticket prices
Marshall professor's research shows Craigslist's impact on Ticketmaster
2014-07-25
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Burn scars in Eastern Russia
2014-07-25
The burn scars on this false-color image from the Terra satellite show the different areas that have been affected by this year's rash of wildfires in Eastern Russia. The burn scars show up as reddish-brown splotches of color against the green background. The wildfires have broken across the remote parts of Eastern Russia in the Sakha Republic. Even in this false-color image from the MODIS instrument, it is still possible to see the smoke rising from the fires that continue. Two recent image features noted below show the devastating number of fires that have plagued ...
Anti-inflammatory drug can prevent neuron loss in Parkinson's model
2014-07-25
An experimental anti-inflammatory drug can protect vulnerable neurons and reduce motor deficits in a rat model of Parkinson's disease, researchers at Emory University School of Medicine have shown.
The results were published in the Journal of Parkinson's Disease.
The findings demonstrate that the drug, called XPro1595, can reach the brain at sufficient levels and have beneficial effects when administered by subcutaneous injection, like an insulin shot. Previous studies of XPro1595 in animals tested more invasive modes of delivery, such as direct injection into the brain.
"This ...
New EMS system in Arizona dramatically improves survival from cardiac arrest
2014-07-25
WASHINGTON -- A new system that sent patients to designated cardiac receiving centers dramatically increased the survival rate of victims of sudden cardiac arrest in Arizona, according to a study published online yesterday in Annals of Emergency Medicine.
"We knew lives would be saved if the hospitals implemented the latest cutting edge guidelines for post-cardiac arrest care and we were able to get cardiac arrest patients to those hospitals, similar to what is done for Level 1 trauma patients," said lead study author Daniel Spaite, MD, Director of EMS Research at the ...
Tropical Storm Genevieve forms in Eastern Pacific
2014-07-25
The seventh tropical depression of the Eastern Pacific Ocean formed and quickly ramped up to a tropical storm named "Genevieve." NOAA's GOES-West satellite captured an infrared image of the newborn storm being trailed by two other areas of developing low pressure to its east.
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) noted that Tropical Storm Genevieve was born on July 25 at 5 a.m. EDT. At that time, Genevieve had maximum sustained winds near 40 mph (65 kph). It was located near 12.2 north latitude and 134.4 west longitude, about 1,490 miles (2,400 km) east-southeast of South ...
Climate change increases risk of crop slowdown in next 20 years
2014-07-25
BOULDER -- The world faces a small but substantially increased risk over the next two decades of a major slowdown in the growth of global crop yields because of climate change, new research finds.
The authors, from Stanford University and the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), say the odds of a major production slowdown of wheat and corn even with a warming climate are not very high. But the risk is about 20 times more significant than it would be without global warming, and it may require planning by organizations that are affected by international food ...
Whitehead Institute researchers create 'naïve' pluripotent human embryonic stem cells
2014-07-25
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (July 24, 2014) – For years, researchers and patients have hoped that embryonic stem cells (ESCs)—capable of forming nearly any cell type in the body—could provide insight into numerous diseases perhaps even be used to treat them. Yet progress has been hampered by the inability to transfer research and tools from mouse ESC studies to their human counterparts, in part because human ESCs are "primed" and slightly less plastic than the mouse cells.
Now Thorold Theunissen, Benjamin Powell, and Haoyi Wang, who are scientists in the lab of Whitehead Institute ...
Scientists test nanoparticle 'alarm clock' to awaken immune systems put to sleep by cancer
2014-07-25
(Lebanon, NH, 7/25/14) — Researchers at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Norris Cotton Cancer Center are exploring ways to wake up the immune system so it recognizes and attacks invading cancer cells. Tumors protect themselves by tricking the immune system into accepting everything as normal, even while cancer cells are dividing and spreading.
One pioneering approach, discussed in a review article published this week in WIREs Nanomedicine and Nanobiotechnology, uses nanoparticles to jumpstart the body's ability to fight tumors. Nanoparticles are too small to imagine. One billion ...
Clearing cells to prevent cervical cancer
2014-07-25
Boston, MA – A study published online in the International Journal of Cancer earlier this month describes a novel approach to preventing cervical cancer based on findings showing successful reduction in the risk of cervical cancer after removal of a discrete population of cells in the cervix.
The findings come from a study that looked at squamocolumnar junction cells, or SCJ cells. These cells reside in the cervical canal and have been implicated as the origins of cervical cancer. A research team co-led by Christopher Crum, MD, director, Brigham and Women's Hospital ...
Manipulating key protein in the brain holds potential against obesity and diabetes
2014-07-25
DALLAS -- A protein that controls when genes are switched on or off plays a key role in specific areas of the brain to regulate metabolism, UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers have found.
The research potentially could lead to new therapies to treat obesity and diabetes, since the transcription factor involved – spliced X-box binding protein 1 (Xbp1s) – appears to influence the body's sensitivity to insulin and leptin signaling. Insulin and leptin are hormones central to the body's regulation of food intake and sugar disposal, and obesity and diabetes are conditions ...
Why do men prefer nice women?: Responsiveness and desire
2014-07-25
People's emotional reactions and desires in initial romantic encounters determine the fate of a potential relationship. Responsiveness may be one of those initial "sparks" necessary to fuel sexual desire and land a second date. However, it may not be a desirable trait for both men and women on a first date. Does responsiveness increase sexual desire in the other person? Do men perceive responsive women as more attractive, and does the same hold true for women's perceptions of men? A study published in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin seeks to answer those questions. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Remote work “a protective shield” against gender discrimination
How air pollution and wildfire smoke may contribute to memory loss in Alzheimer’s disease
UAF scientist designing satellite to hunt small space debris
Innate immune training aggravates inflammatory bone loss
An ancient RNA-guided system could simplify delivery of gene editing therapies
Mayo Clinic recognized as ‘World’s Best Hospital’ by Newsweek for the seventh straight year
Self-driving cars learn to share road knowledge through digital word-of-mouth
Medicaid extension policies that cover all immigrants in a post-COVID world reduce inequities in postpartum insurance coverage
Physical activity linked to lower risk of dementia, sleep disorders, other diseases
Columbia’s Public Health School launches Climate & Health Center
$4.9 million grant enables test of psychedelic MDMA as enhancement for PTSD therapy
Emerging treatments for social disconnection in psychiatric illness
Leading the charge to better batteries
Consequences of overplanting rootworm-resistant maize in the US Corn Belt
The distinct role of Earth’s orbit in 100-thousand-year glacial cycles
Genome-based phylogeny resolves complicated Molluscan family tree
Studying locusts in virtual reality challenges models of collective behavior
ACC, AHA issue new acute coronary syndromes guideline
Scientists match Earth’s ice age cycles with orbital shifts
Quantum interference in molecule-surface collisions
Discovery of a common ‘weapon’ used by disease-causing fungi could help engineer more resilient food crops
University of Oklahoma researcher to create new coding language, computing infrastructure
NASA’s Hubble provides bird’s-eye view of Andromeda galaxy’s ecosystem
New ocelot chip makes strides in quantum computing
Computing leaders propose measures to combat tech-facilitated intimate partner violence, human trafficking, and child exploitation
Sometimes, when competitors collaborate, everybody wins
EU Flagship project DORIAN GRAY to use pioneering AI and avatar technology to uncover links between cardiovascular disease (CVD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) to improve healthy ageing and survi
SHEA encourages rescheduling postponed Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) Meeting
Study proposes a new theoretical framework for understanding complex higher-order networks
Archaeology: Vesuvian ash cloud turned brain to glass
[Press-News.org] Scalping can raise ticket pricesMarshall professor's research shows Craigslist's impact on Ticketmaster