Next: Introduction
2
Paid Placement Strategies for Internet Search Engines
Hemant K. Bhargava
Juan Feng
Smeal College of Business
Penn State University
118 Beam Building
University Park, PA 16802
jif1@psu.edu
Copyright is held by the author/owner(s).
WWW2002, May 7-11, 2002, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA.
ACM 1-58113-449-5/02/0005.
Abstract:
Internet search engines and comparison shopping have recently
begun implementing a paid placement strategy, where some content
providers are given prominent positioning in return for a
placement fee. This bias generates placement revenues but creates
a disutility to users, thus reducing user-based revenues. We
formulate the search engine design problem as a tradeoff between
these two types of revenues. We demonstrate that the optimal
placement strategy depends on the relative benefits (to providers)
and disutilities (to users) of paid placement. We compute the
optimal placement fee, characterize the optimal bias level, and
analyze sensitivity of the placement strategy to various factors.
In the optimal paid placement strategy, the placement revenues are
set below the monopoly level due to its negative impact on
advertising revenues. An increase in the search engine's quality
of service allows it to improve profits from paid placement,
moving it closer to the ideal. However, an increase in the
value-per-user motivates the gatekeeper to increase market share
by reducing further its reliance on paid placement and fraction of
paying providers.
Search engines, information gatekeepers, paid placement,
bias
Next: Introduction
Juan Feng
2002-02-25