Dynamic Models of Reputation and Competition in Job-Market Matching
Jon Kleinberg, Sigal Oren

TL;DR
This paper models the strategic decisions of firms in job-market matching, focusing on reputation dynamics, candidate quality trade-offs, and how these factors influence market efficiency over time.
Contribution
It introduces a dynamic, multi-period model capturing reputation effects, candidate quality trade-offs, and strategic competition among firms in the job market.
Findings
Long-term reputation effects can improve market efficiency when candidate quality differences are small.
High differences in candidate quality may lead to reputation considerations reducing efficiency.
The model highlights the complex interplay between short-term gains and long-term reputation building.
Abstract
A fundamental decision faced by a firm hiring employees - and a familiar one to anyone who has dealt with the academic job market, for example - is deciding what caliber of candidates to pursue. Should the firm try to increase its reputation by making offers to higher-quality candidates, despite the risk that the candidates might reject the offers and leave the firm empty-handed? Or should it concentrate on weaker candidates who are more likely to accept the offer? The question acquires an added level of complexity once we take into account the effect one hiring cycle has on the next: hiring better employees in the current cycle increases the firm's reputation, which in turn increases its attractiveness for higher-quality candidates in the next hiring cycle. These considerations introduce an interesting temporal dynamic aspect to the rich line of research on matching models for job…
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