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Reward the inductor or inductee? The effect of the inductee's altruism on a shopping guide platform

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TLDR
In this article, the effect of an inductee's altruism on referral reward programs (RRPs) on an online shopping guide platform to determine the optimal RRP and referral reward allocation under a Cashback and Referral RRP was highlighted.
Abstract
This study highlights the effect of an inductee's altruism on referral reward programs (RRPs) on an online shopping guide platform to determine the optimal RRP and referral reward allocation under a Cashback and Referral RRP.,The authors consider a Stackelberg game with a platform, seller, inductor and inductee, where the inductee's altruism plays a vital role in determining the optimal RRP in equilibrium.,The authors show that the conditions under which it is optimal to reward the inductor only or reward both inductor and inductee are equal or unequal depending on the degree of the inductee's altruism. Suppose the platform is unable to dynamically decide the commission fee. In that case, the platform may not always be involved in RRPs and will gradually reduce the rewards for inductees as the altruism increases.,This study focuses on a free-to-consumers model where sellers pay membership fees. Thus, this study has limitations regarding other pricing schemes such as a model in which consumers pay a fee while sellers do not or a model in which both types of users pay fees.,This analytical work can help platforms optimize referral reward strategies and referral reward allocation considering the influence of an inductee's altruism.,In a Cashback and Referral RRP on a shopping guide platform, the authors provide applicable conditions for the platform to involve in the RRPs when rewarding an equal bonus for the inductor and inductee first. Further, the authors show the optimal referral reward strategy and referral reward allocation when giving the different bonuses to the inductor and inductee.

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The Strength of Weak Ties

TL;DR: In this paper, it is argued that the degree of overlap of two individuals' friendship networks varies directly with the strength of their tie to one another, and the impact of this principle on diffusion of influence and information, mobility opportunity, and community organization is explored.
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Social Ties and Word-of-Mouth Referral Behavior

TL;DR: In this paper, the relational properties of tie strength and homophily were employed to examine referral behavior at micro and macro levels of inquiry, showing that weak ties displayed an important bridging function allowing information to travel from one distinct subgroup of referral actors to another subgroup in the broader social system.
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TL;DR: In this article, a parsimonious measure of brand attachment was developed and validated from a measurement perspective, test the assumptions that underlie it, and demonstrate that it indicates the concept of attachment.
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