Queuing for Expert Services

We consider a monopolist expert offering a service with a “credence” characteristic. A credence service is one in which the customer cannot verify, even after a purchase, whether or not the amount of prescribed service was appropriate; examples include legal, medical, or consultancy services, and car repair. This creates an incentive for the expert to “induce service,” that is, to provide unnecessary services that add no value to the customer, but that allow the expert to increase his revenues. We focus on the impact of an operations phenomenon on service inducement---workload dynamics due to the stochasticity of interarrival and service times. To this end, we model the expert's service operation as a single-server queue. The expert determines the service price within a fixed and variable fee structure and determines the service inducement strategy. We characterize the expert's combined optimal price structure and service inducement strategy as a function of service capacity, market potential, inducement opportunity, value of service and waiting cost. We find that service inducement is a means to dynamically skim customer surplus with state-independent prices and provision of slower service to customers that arrive when the expert is idle. We conclude with design implications of our results in limiting service inducement.

[1]  W. Whitt,et al.  Improving Service by Informing Customers About Anticipated Delays , 1999 .

[2]  Eric Delattre,et al.  Fixed fees and physician-induced demand: a panel data study on French physicians. , 2003, Health economics.

[3]  Ming-Deh A. Huang,et al.  Proof of proposition 1 , 1992 .

[4]  Asher Wolinsky,et al.  Competition in a Market for Informed Experts' Services , 1993 .

[5]  Wolfgang Pesendorfer,et al.  Second Opinions and Price Competition: Inefficiency in the Market for Expert Advice , 2000 .

[6]  Ingela Alger,et al.  A Theory of Fraud and Overtreatment in Experts Markets , 2006 .

[7]  Yuk-fai Fong,et al.  When Do Experts Cheat and Whom Do They Target , 2005 .

[8]  Leonard M. Adleman,et al.  Proof of proposition 3 , 1992 .

[9]  Kannan Srinivasan,et al.  Salesforce Compensation Scheme and Consumer Inferences , 2003, Manag. Sci..

[10]  Refael Hassin,et al.  THE ECONOMICS OF CHEATING IN THE TAXI MARKET , 1983 .

[11]  P. Naor The Regulation of Queue Size by Levying Tolls , 1969 .

[12]  Moshe Haviv,et al.  On balking from an empty queue , 2007, Queueing Syst. Theory Appl..

[13]  Rudolf Kerschbamer,et al.  On doctors, mechanics and computer specialists , 2005 .

[14]  Lynn S. Paine,et al.  Sears Auto Centers (A) , 1993 .

[15]  Jan A. Van Mieghem,et al.  Strategically Seeking Service: How Competition Can Generate Poisson Arrivals , 2004, Manuf. Serv. Oper. Manag..

[16]  Refael Hassin Consumer Information in Markets with Random Product Quality: The Case of Queues and Balking , 1986 .

[17]  Ingela Alger,et al.  A Theory of Fraud and Over-Consumption in Experts Markets , 2004 .

[18]  Suresh Radhakrishnan,et al.  Cost of congestion, operational efficiency and management accounting , 1996 .

[19]  René Bekker Finite-Buffer Queues with Workload-Dependent Service and Arrival Rates , 2005, Queueing Syst. Theory Appl..

[20]  F. A. Hayek The American Economic Review , 2007 .

[21]  David Callahan,et al.  The Cheating Culture: Why More Americans Are Doing Wrong to Get Ahead , 2004 .

[22]  M. Haviv,et al.  To Queue or Not to Queue , 2003 .

[23]  Rudolf Kerschbamer,et al.  On Doctors, Mechanics and Computer Specialists. Or Where are the Problems with Credence Goods? , 2001 .

[24]  Carl M. Harris,et al.  Queues with State-Dependent Stochastic Service Rates , 1967, Oper. Res..

[25]  Ming-Deh A. Huang,et al.  Proof of proposition 2 , 1992 .

[26]  William G. Ross The Honest Hour: The Ethics of Time-Based Billing by Attorneys , 1996 .

[27]  Laurens Debo,et al.  Queuing for Expert Services , 2004 .

[28]  Winand Emons,et al.  Credence Goods and Fraudulent Experts , 1997 .

[29]  Winand Emons,et al.  Credence goods monopolists , 1997 .

[30]  Seungjin Whang,et al.  Cost allocation revisited: an optimality result , 1989 .

[31]  Andrew Schotter,et al.  Honesty in a Model of Strategic Information Transmission , 1987 .

[32]  M. Darby,et al.  Free Competition and the Optimal Amount of Fraud , 1973, The Journal of Law and Economics.

[33]  U. Dulleck,et al.  On Doctors, Mechanics and Computer Specialists - the Economics of Credence Goods , 2005 .