Working Paper
Araman V., Calmon A., Fridgeirsdottir K. (2019). Pricing and Job Allocation in Online Labor Platforms. 2019/32/TOM
Problem Definition: The authors model, analyze, and optimize the operations of an online labor platform that
matches jobs to workers. The arrival of jobs and workers to the platform is stochastic and the job processing time is random. The platform chooses the fees per job and assigns jobs to workers with the goal of (i) maximizing platform revenues, (ii) minimizing the unpredictability in workers' profits, and (iii) minimizing any delay in processing the incoming jobs. Workers are sensitive to the revenue they make in the platform and, therefore, the worker arrival rate depends on the platform's pricing and job allocation
strategy.
Academic/Practical Relevance: The authors contribute to the fields of online platform operations and stochastic
systems. The asymptotically optimal policy that they introduce is simple and practical. This analysis provides new insights into the management of uncertainty in online platforms and how uncertainty impacts objectives (i), (ii), and (iii) above.
Methodology: The authors propose a continuous-time stochastic model that describes the mechanics of the platform. They introduce a policy that sequentially allocates jobs to workers in a rotating manner. The optimal
parameters of this policy are \corrected" versions of the fluid solution. Then, through an asymptotic
analysis, the authors prove that this policy is optimal as the platform scales. Finally, they examine the policy's
performance through a discrete event simulation.
Results: The authors introduce a policy class called Uniform Allocation (UA) and provide an analytical characterization of the platform's behavior and performance under this policy class. Then, they design a UA policy
that simultaneously optimizes objectives (i), (ii), and (iii) as the system scales. They obtain insights into
the UA policy's behavior through a discrete event simulation and find that it leads to similar profits but much lower worker income variability compared to other policies.
Implications: Their proposed pricing and assignment policy align objectives (i), (ii), and (iii) above. From
an academic standpoint, the authors demonstrate how the platform's revenue maximizing pricing and allocation
policies can also act as a form of risk pooling. From a practical standpoint, the authors determine that platform
revenue maximization is not incompatible with predictable profits and stable schedules for workers.
Download PDF