Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5075695 | Information Economics and Policy | 2016 | 14 Pages |
â¢Organic search results do not include information about seller characteristics.â¢A novel measure of the prominence of a retailer's name is proposed.â¢Revealed preference theory shows this measure summarizes retailer attributes.â¢Name prominence is as important as screen position in predicting organic clicks.
Organic product search results on Google and Bing do not systematically include information about seller characteristics (e.g., feedback ratings and prices). Consequently, it is often assumed that a retailer's organic traffic is driven by the prominence of its position in the list of search results. We propose a novel measure of the prominence of a retailer's name, and show that it is also an important predictor of the organic traffic retailers enjoy from product searches through Google and Bing. We also show that failure to account for the prominence of retailers' names-as well as the endogeneity of retailers' positions in the list of search results-significantly inflates the estimated impact of screen position on organic clicks.