Curating Local Knowledge: Experimental Evidence from Small Retailers in Indonesia
Author(s) -
Patricio S. Dalton,
Julius Rüschenpöhler,
Burak Uras,
Bilal Zia
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of the european economic association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.792
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1542-4774
pISSN - 1542-4766
DOI - 10.1093/jeea/jvab007
Subject(s) - nudge theory , facilitator , marketing , business , key (lock) , psychological intervention , best practice , complement (music) , qualitative property , public relations , economics , psychology , social psychology , computer science , political science , management , biochemistry , chemistry , computer security , machine learning , psychiatry , complementation , gene , phenotype
Business practices and performance vary widely across businesses within the same sector. A key outstanding question is why protable practices do not readily diffuse. We conduct a field experiment among urban retailers in Indonesia to study whether alleviating informational and behavioral frictions can facilitate such discussion in a cost-effective manner. Through quantitative and qualitative fieldwork, we curate a handbook that associates locally relevant practices with performance, and provides idiosyncratic implementation guidance informed by exemplary local retailers. We complement this handbook with two light-touch interventions to facilitate behavior change. A subset of retailers is invited to a documentary movie screening featuring the paths to success of exemplary peers. Another subset is offered two 30 minute personal visits by a local facilitator. A third group is offered both. Eighteen months later, we find significant impacts on practice adoption when the handbook is coupled with the two behavioral nudges, and up to a 35% increase in profits and 16.7% increase in sales. These findings suggest both informational and behavioral constraints are at play. The types of practices adopted map the performance improvements to efficiency gains rather than other channels. A simple cost-benefit analysis shows such locally relevant knowledge can be codified and scaled successfully at relatively low cost.
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