Is It Beneficial to Recommend Differently Priced Products? Experimental Evidence from Online Recommender Systems
Posted: 26 Jun 2019 Last revised: 26 Mar 2024
Date Written: June 21, 2019
Abstract
Online recommendation systems recommend products with widely different prices than that of their focal products. While conventional wisdom suggests that consumers may prefer lower priced recommendations, prior literature also indicates that consumers may not accept such products if their prices fall outside the range of their reference prices. We empirically examine this question – how does recommending differently priced product affect their demand – with a field experiment on a US based fashion retailer's website. We find that recommending differently priced products decreases their purchase probability. We estimate several exacting specifications to show that our results are due to the differences in prices and not characteristics between the focal and recommended products. Based on our estimate, we simulate the demand for recommended products by replacing the differently priced recommendations for focal products with the similarly priced products. Such replacement translates into a 5 percent increase in the total sales. Overall, our study highlights that the relative price of recommended products could significantly influence their demand and therefore, it should be considered as an additional factor in design of recommendation algorithm.
Keywords: product recommendations, collaborative filtering, latitude of price acceptance, reference price, randomized field experiment
JEL Classification: D83
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation

