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The Power of Rankings: Quantifying the Effect of Rankings on Online Consumer Search and Purchase Decisions

Raluca Ursu

Stern School of Business, New York University, New York, New York 10012

Marketing Science 2018

Online search intermediaries, such as Amazon or Expedia, use rankings (ordered lists) to present third-party sellers’ products to consumers. These rankings decrease consumer search costs and increase the probability of a match with a seller, ultimately increasing consumer welfare. Constructing relevant rankings requires understanding their causal effect on consumer choices. However, this is challenging because rankings are endogenous: consumers pay more attention to highly ranked products, and intermediaries rank the most relevant products at the top. In this paper, I use the first data set with experimental variation in the ranking from a field experiment at Expedia to make three contributions. First, I identify the causal effect of rankings and show that they affect what consumers search, but conditional on search, do not affect purchases. Second, I quantify the effect of rankings using a sequential search model and find an average position effect of $1.92, which is lower than literature estimates obtained without experimental variation. I also use model predictions, data patterns, and a feature of the data set (opaque offers) to show rankings lower search costs, instead of affecting consumer expectations or utility. Finally, I show a utility-based ranking built on this model’s estimates benefits consumers and the search intermediary. Data and the online appendix are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mksc.2017.1072 .

DOI
10.1287/mksc.2017.1072
Volume
37 (4)
Pages
530-552
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
crossref