4.6 Article

Scalability in Platforms for Local Groceries: An Examination of Indirect Network Economies

Journal

PRODUCTION AND OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
Volume 31, Issue 1, Pages 318-340

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/poms.13536

Keywords

platform design and scalability; structural estimation; grocery food; network externalities

Funding

  1. US Department of Agriculture's National Institute of Food and Agriculture Opportunity [USDA-NIFA-AFRI-004915]

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This study examines the economic viability of online platforms for local foods subject to indirect network effects, finding that these platforms can serve as viable alternatives for the commercialization of local foods. However, it also reveals the existence of nonlinearity and non-monotonic effects in the strength of indirect network effects.
Despite a significant rise in consumer interest in local foods, supply constraints limit access to these products in many markets. Online platforms for local foods may help solve these constraints. However, to our knowledge, there is no empirical research on the economic viability of these platforms. We study this problem by analyzing a two-sided platform subject to indirect network effects. If present, these effects will create a virtuous cycle where consumers' demand for products sold through the platform rises in the number of vendors and suppliers' demand for product distribution through the platform increases in consumer demand. In the case of our study's platform, analyses reveal the existence of indirect network effects, as consumers prefer a variety of local vendors and vendors derive greater surplus from greater consumer demand. Therefore, platforms like the one we analyze may serve as viable alternatives for the commercialization of local foods, and could provide greater access to these products. Importantly, however, our analysis also reveals the existence of not only nonlinearities in the strength of indirect network effects, but also non-monotonic effects. Non-monotonicity derives from consumers' attraction to the platform marginally decreasing in the number of local vendors and from the existence of marginally increasing costs as more of these vendors join in. As a result, indirect network economies are subject to a cap imposed by the number of vendors participating in these platforms. Through counterfactual simulations, we evaluate the magnitude of this constraint and offer recommendations on how to minimize its impact.

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