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Article
Partitioning Sorted Sets: Overcoming Choice Overload While Maintaining Decision Quality
All Faculty Scholarship
  • Benedict C.G. Dellaert, Erasmus University Rotterdam
  • Tom Baker, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School
  • Eric J. Johnson, Columbia Business School
Publication Date
12-5-2017
Abstract

We investigate the joint use of partitioning and sorting as a choice architecture to overcome consumer choice overload in large product sets. Partitioning first presents a small initial set of alternatives with the option to click through to see the remaining alternatives. Sorting presents alternatives in order of attractiveness based on a user model that is helpful to the decision-maker. We propose that Sets with Partitioning and Sorting (SPSs) improve consumers’ choice outcomes by increasing their focus on the most attractive alternatives and their use of more compensatory decisions. Results from two controlled survey-based experiments and a field study in the domain of health insurance support this positive impact of SPSs when sorting quality is high. However, there is also a potential harmful effect of partitioning when sorting quality is low. We discuss implications of our findings and propose a practical approach to select partitioning size depending on sorting quality.

Keywords
  • Choice architecture,
  • Partitioning,
  • Sorting,
  • Decision Making,
  • Product Recommendations
Citation Information
Benedict C.G. Dellaert, Tom Baker and Eric J. Johnson. "Partitioning Sorted Sets: Overcoming Choice Overload While Maintaining Decision Quality" (2017)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/tom-baker-jd/70/