Product diffusion through on-demand information-seeking behaviour

Abstract

Most models of product adoption predict S-shaped adoption curves. Here we report results from two country-scale experiments in which we findlinearadoption curves. We show evidence that the observed linear pattern is the result of active information-seeking behaviour: individuals actively pulling information from several central sources facilitated by modern Internet searches. Thus, a constant baseline rate of interest sustains product diffusion, resulting in a linear diffusion process instead of the S-shaped curve of adoption predicted by many diffusion models. The main experiment seeded 70 000 (48 000 in Experiment 2) unique voucher codes for the same product with randomly sampled nodes in a social network of approximately 43 million individuals with about 567 million ties. We find that the experiment reached over 800 000 individuals with 80% of adopters adopting the same product—a winner-take-all dynamic consistent with search engine driven rankings that would not have emerged had the products spread only through a network of social contacts. We provide evidence for (and characterization of) this diffusion process driven by active information-seeking behaviour through analyses investigating (a) patterns of geographical spreading; (b) the branching process; and (c) diffusion heterogeneity. Using data on adopters' geolocation we show that social spreading is highly localized, while on-demand diffusion is geographically independent. We also show that cascades started by individuals who actively pull information from central sources are more effective at spreading the product among their peers.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Feb 01, 2018
Source ID
10.1098/rsif.2017.0751

Entities

People

  • Asif Iqbal
  • Christoph Riedl
  • David Lazer
  • Geoffrey Canright
  • Johannes Bjelland
  • Kenth Engø-Monsen
  • Pål Roe Sundsøy
  • Taimur Qureshi

Organizations

  • Harvard University
  • Northeastern University
  • Office of Naval Research

Tags

Readers

  • Aerosol Science/Aerosol Physics
  • Economics
  • Team-Based Human-Centered Cognitive Task Decision Making and Information Performance.