Post by arfanho7 on Feb 24, 2024 5:04:48 GMT 1
Laboratory studies revealed that customers who observed process transparency perceived greater employee effort and thus were more appreciative of the employees and valued the service more. Employees who observed customer transparency felt that their work was more appreciated and more impactful and thus were more satisfied with their work and more willing to exert effort.
We find that transparency by visually revealing operating processes to consumers and beneficiaries to producers generates a positive feedback loop through which value is created for both parties. Publisher s link hbs.edu faculty Pages item.aspx Egypt WhatsApp Number List num FORTHCOMING STANFORD TECHNOLOGY LAW REVIEW Efficiencies and Regulatory Shortcuts How Should We Regulate Companies like Airbnb and Uber By Edelman —New software platforms use modern information technology including full featured web sites and mobile apps to allow service providers and consumers to transact with relative ease and increased trust.
These platforms provide notable benefits including reducing transaction costs improving allocation of resources and creating information and pricing efficiencies. Yet they also raise questions of regulation including how regulation should adapt to new services and capabilities and how to correct market failures that may arise. We explore these challenges and suggest an updated regulatory framework that is sufficiently flexible to allow software platforms to operate and deliver their benefits while ensuring that service providers users and third parties are adequately protected from harm that may arise.
We find that transparency by visually revealing operating processes to consumers and beneficiaries to producers generates a positive feedback loop through which value is created for both parties. Publisher s link hbs.edu faculty Pages item.aspx Egypt WhatsApp Number List num FORTHCOMING STANFORD TECHNOLOGY LAW REVIEW Efficiencies and Regulatory Shortcuts How Should We Regulate Companies like Airbnb and Uber By Edelman —New software platforms use modern information technology including full featured web sites and mobile apps to allow service providers and consumers to transact with relative ease and increased trust.
These platforms provide notable benefits including reducing transaction costs improving allocation of resources and creating information and pricing efficiencies. Yet they also raise questions of regulation including how regulation should adapt to new services and capabilities and how to correct market failures that may arise. We explore these challenges and suggest an updated regulatory framework that is sufficiently flexible to allow software platforms to operate and deliver their benefits while ensuring that service providers users and third parties are adequately protected from harm that may arise.