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The value of reputation on eBay: A controlled experiment
Author(s) -
Paul Resnick,
Richard Zeckhauser,
John Swanson,
Kate Lockwood
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
experimental economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.464
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1573-6938
pISSN - 1386-4157
DOI - 10.1007/s10683-006-4309-2
Subject(s) - reputation , identity (music) , value (mathematics) , business , advertising , willingness to pay , the internet , affect (linguistics) , marketing , microeconomics , economics , psychology , mathematics , computer science , statistics , sociology , social science , physics , communication , world wide web , acoustics
We conducted the first randomized controlled field experiment of an Internet reputation mechanism. A high-reputation, established eBay dealer sold matched pairs of lots—batches of vintage postcards—under his regular identity and under new seller identities (also operated by him). As predicted, the established identity fared better. The difference in buyers’ willingness-to-pay was 8.1% of the selling price. A subsidiary experiment followed the same format, but compared sales by relatively new sellers with and without negative feedback. Surprisingly, one or two negative feedbacks for our new sellers did not affect buyers’ willingness-to-pay. Copyright Economic Science Association 2006Field experiment, eBay, Reputation,

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