that concepts about i) how to use foreign services, ii)
how to establish a business relationship between un-
known business parties in respect to contracts and ser-
vice delivery, iii) how to do clearing across market-
places and iv) how to establish a connection to other
marketplaces are not yet elaborated in detail and thus
have not been implemented.
Research has proven that achievements for mobil-
ity service marketplaces are low compared to other
sectors like banking, telecommunication or ship-
ping. These sectors combine services from different
providers which is exactly what connected mobility
also requires. Nearly all experts argue that this situ-
ation is due to the missing mass market for mobility
services. They claim that the young market requires
time to develop properly. The currentsituation is sim-
ilar to a death spiral: Without a mass market the re-
quirements are uncertain and uncertainty leads to low
investments. This reduces the effort put into the de-
velopment of new functionalities and services. This
chases away potentialend-customerswhich abates the
market’s growth straight from the very beginning.
Nevertheless, the experts forecast a change in peo-
ple’s individual mobility. The transportation mean
will not be of importance anymore. The importance
in future for individual mobility is i) how to get to
the destination (using different transportation types),
ii) be there on time, iii) having as little trouble as
possible and iv) with acceptable costs. Using differ-
ent means of transportation to complete a journey is
called intermodality. Nobis (Nobis, 2014) considers
intermodality as a potential trend towards sustainable
individual transportation. Intermodality can only be
achieved once the different mobility services are con-
nected with each other and service marketplaces are
predestined to establish this connectivity.
3.3.2 Future Trends and Requirements
The interviewed experts did not only discuss the cur-
rent state of the art of service marketplaces in the mo-
bility domain but also went into detail regarding fu-
ture service marketplace realizations. Insights into
ongoing efforts have been presented as well as their
personal opinions about future capabilities and re-
quirements discussed. The qualitative answers have
been gathered, compared, if applicable merged and
then transformed into a quantitative representation.
The quantitative results are presented in Figure 1.
The legend on top of Figure 1 shows the num-
ber of experts who have actually discussed a partic-
ular topic. The topics are presented on the left and
groupedinto fourcategories, namelyStandardization,
Centralization, Capabilities and Miscellaneous. The
categories arrangementserves only a good illustration
rather than any particular prioritization. The experts
did either agree or disagree upon a discussed topic.
If they did not completely agree or disagree their an-
swers have been ranked as conditional. Table 2 pro-
vides a brief summary of the numbers presented in
Figure 1. Only those topics are presented which have
been discussed by at least three experts to ensure the
incorporation of all three agreement level.
These interviewees who responded to intercon-
nectivity between service marketplaces agree uncon-
ditionally that it is necessary to connect service mar-
ketplaces. They furthermore agreethat the connection
should rely on a standardized protocol as well as the
elaboration of such a protocol is possible. Regarding
the marketplaces’ interconnectivity, only two-third of
the experts believe that it will be achieved by applying
a central architecture approach where every market-
place has only one single connection to a central man-
agement entity. This architecture is similar to the star-
topology in networks. The remaining third of the ex-
perts suppose that the marketplaces are either directly
connected to each other alike a full-mesh-topology or
that a mix of both approaches prevails. This state-
ment is contradicting because these experts have al-
ready agreed that a central marketplaceis necessary to
avoid multiple connections between service providers
and consumers. But for the higher level (marketplace
interconnectivity) they think that the fully connected
approach is more feasible or that it should be realized
first and then modified towards the central approach.
The minority of experts is convinced that the Eu-
ropean Union or any government will soon pass a
bill to regulate the marketplaces’ development. Only
two experts believe that the costs for transactions or
roaming, the protocol to be used and the connecting
to the marketplace itself should be regulated some-
how. Three experts claim that no regulations should
act upon the young domain. Three other respondents
point out that regulations will take place if i) the over-
all progress of the mobility domain is too slow, ii) the
competition among the marketplace operators is on
the end-customers’ expense or iii) the end-customers
face too many difficulties while using connected mo-
bility services.
Unlike the full approval for the standardized mar-
ketplace to marketplace protocol, only 93% of the re-
spondents think that a standardized protocol for each
service domain is possible. A majority of 84% of
the experts argue that a semantic approach for ser-
vice descriptions is too complicated to realize. It
would require to much effort - either from the par-
ticipants or the marketplaces. One interviewee em-
phasizes that semantic requires, for being even able
to develop a common domain language model, a lot