Competitive Diffusion in Social Networks: Quality or Seeding?
Arastoo Fazeli, Amir Ajorlou, Ali Jadbabaie

TL;DR
This paper models strategic competition between two firms in social networks, analyzing how they allocate limited budgets between product quality and seeding to maximize market share, revealing equilibrium behaviors and optimal strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a game-theoretic model of firm competition in social networks, characterizing Nash equilibria and analyzing the impact of budgets and network structures on strategic investments.
Findings
Firms invest more in quality when budgets are similar.
As budget gaps widen, firms focus more on seeding.
Seeding strategies depend on network topology and budget constraints.
Abstract
In this paper, we study a strategic model of marketing and product consumption in social networks. We consider two firms in a market competing to maximize the consumption of their products. Firms have a limited budget which can be either invested on the quality of the product or spent on initial seeding in the network in order to better facilitate spread of the product. After the decision of firms, agents choose their consumptions following a myopic best response dynamics which results in a local, linear update for their consumption decision. We characterize the unique Nash equilibrium of the game between firms and study the effect of the budgets as well as the network structure on the optimal allocation. We show that at the equilibrium, firms invest more budget on quality when their budgets are close to each other. However, as the gap between budgets widens, competition in qualities…
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