Estimating assortment size effects on platforms: Leveraging imperfect geographic targeting for causal inference

Author:

Wang Yang1,Luo Xueming2,Lin Zhijie3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Independent Researcher, Verona, Wisconsin, USA

2. Department of Marketing, Fox School of Business, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA

3. Department of Management Science and Engineering School of Economics and Management, Tsinghua University, Haidian District, Beijing, China

Abstract

Customers of two‐sided platforms may succumb to choice overload due to the frequently overwhelming assortment in such markets. We investigate the effect of assortment size on consumers' purchase probability using a unique click‐stream dataset from a large peer‐to‐peer meal delivery platform. To resolve the key endogeneity challenge that assortment size may be larger in areas where consumers experience greater utility from purchase, we introduce a novel causal inference strategy that exploits a common but imperfect geographic targeting tool employed by the platform: limiting kitchens to a set of fixed delivery radii. We argue and show through simulation exercises that true assortment size effects on purchase probability can be estimated when we employ clustering algorithms to recover and account for neighborhoods that may be targeted by suppliers. Applying our causal inference strategy to the home‐cooked delivery setting, we find that purchase rate effects of assortment size are rapidly diminishing. In fact, our findings suggest that up to 18% of active users experience choice overload. These effects persist despite accounting for potential pricing, assortment variety, and personalization confounds and are robust to nonparametric specifications and accounting for unobserved heterogeneity in assortment effects. We further document the novel moderating role of new‐to‐user and off‐platform options on assortment size effects.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Wu Jiapei Award for Information Economics

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management of Technology and Innovation,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Management Science and Operations Research

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