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How is the Mobile Internet Different?Anindya GhoseNew York University - Leonard N. Stern School of Business Avi GoldfarbUniversity of Toronto - Rotman School of Management Sang Pil HanCity University of Hong Kong (CityUHK) - Department of Information Systems June 4, 2012 Abstract: We explore how internet browsing behavior varies between mobile phones and personal computers. Smaller screen sizes on mobile phones increase the cost to the user of browsing for information. In addition, a wider range of offline locations for mobile internet usage suggests that local activities are particularly important. Using data on user behavior at a (Twitter-like) microblogging service, we exploit exogenous variation in the ranking mechanism of posts to identify the ranking effects. We show (1) Ranking effects are higher on mobile phones suggesting higher cognitive load: Links that appear at the top of the screen are especially likely to be clicked on mobile phones and (2) The benefit of browsing for geographically close matches is higher on mobile phones: Stores located in close proximity to a user’s home are much more likely to be clicked on mobile phones. Thus, the mobile internet is somewhat less “internet-like”: search costs are higher and distance matters more. We speculate on how these changes may affect the future direction of internet commerce.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 37 Keywords: Mobile Internet, Ranking Effects, Cognitive Load, Recency Effects, Local Interests, Microblogging, Social Media, Hierarchical Bayesian Methods JEL Classification: C11, C15, D12, D83, L10, M31 working papers seriesDate posted: December 31, 2010 ; Last revised: August 17, 2012Suggested CitationContact Information
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