Most of the work on context-aware recommender systems has focused on demonstrating that the contextual information leads to more accurate recommendations. Little work has been done, however, on studying how much the contextual information affects the business performance. In this paper, we study how including context in recommendations affects customers' trust, sales, and other crucial business-related performance measures. To do this, we delivered content-based and context-aware recommendations through a live controlled experiment with real customers of a commercial European online publisher. We measured the recommendations' accuracy anddiversification, how much customers spent purchasing products during the experiment, the quantity and price of their purchases, and the customers' level of trust. We show that collecting and using contextual information in recommendations affects business-related performance measures, such as company sales, by improving the accuracy and diversification of recommendations, which in turn improves trust and, ultimately, business performance results.
In CARSs we trust: How context-aware recommendations affect customers' trust and other business performance measures of recommender systems / Panniello, Umberto; Gorgoglione, Michele; Tuzhilin, Alexander. - In: INFORMATION SYSTEMS RESEARCH. - ISSN 1047-7047. - STAMPA. - 27:1(2016), pp. 182-196. [10.1287/isre.2015.0610]
In CARSs we trust: How context-aware recommendations affect customers' trust and other business performance measures of recommender systems
PANNIELLO, Umberto;GORGOGLIONE, Michele;
2016-01-01
Abstract
Most of the work on context-aware recommender systems has focused on demonstrating that the contextual information leads to more accurate recommendations. Little work has been done, however, on studying how much the contextual information affects the business performance. In this paper, we study how including context in recommendations affects customers' trust, sales, and other crucial business-related performance measures. To do this, we delivered content-based and context-aware recommendations through a live controlled experiment with real customers of a commercial European online publisher. We measured the recommendations' accuracy anddiversification, how much customers spent purchasing products during the experiment, the quantity and price of their purchases, and the customers' level of trust. We show that collecting and using contextual information in recommendations affects business-related performance measures, such as company sales, by improving the accuracy and diversification of recommendations, which in turn improves trust and, ultimately, business performance results.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.