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Why do competitors open their stores next to one another? - Jac de Haan

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    Why are gas stations always built right next to other gas stations?
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    Why is it that I can drive for a mile without finding a coffee shop
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    and then stumble across three on the same corner?
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    Why do grocery stores, auto repair shops and restaurants
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    always seem to exist in groups instead of being spread evenly throughout a community?
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    While there are several factors that might go into deciding where to place your business,
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    clusters of similar companies can be explained by a very simple story
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    called Hotelling's Model of Spatial Competition.
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    Imagine that you sell ice cream at the beach.
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    Your beach is one mile long and you have no competition.
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    Where would you place your cart in order to sell the most product?
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    In the middle.
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    The one-half-mile walk may be too far for some people
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    at each end of the beach, but your cart serves as many people as possible.
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    One day you show up at work just as your cousin Teddy is arriving at the beach
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    with his own ice cream cart. In fact, he's selling exactly the same type of ice cream as you are.
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    You agree that you will split the beach in half.
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    In order to insure that customer's don't have to walk too far
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    you set up your cart a quarter mile south of the beach center,
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    right in the middle of your territory.
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    Teddy sets up a quarter mile north of the center,
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    in the middle of Teddy territory.
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    With this agreement, everyone south of you buys ice cream from you.
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    Everyone north of Teddy buys from him, and the 50% of beachgoers in between
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    walk to the closest cart. No one walks more than a quarter of a mile,
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    and both vendors sell to half of the beachgoers.
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    Game theorists consider this a socially optimal solution.
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    It minimizes the maximum number of steps any visitor must take
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    in order to reach an ice cream cart.
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    The next day, when you arrive at work,
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    Teddy has set up his cart in the middle of the beach.
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    You return to your location a quarter mile south of center
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    and get the 25% of customers to the south of you.
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    Teddy still gets all of the customers north in Teddy territory,
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    but now you split the 25% of people in between the two carts.
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    Day three of the ice cream wars, you get to the beach early,
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    and set up right in the center of Teddy territory,
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    assuming you'll serve the 75% of beachgoers to your south,
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    leaving your cousin to sell to the 25% of customers to the north.
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    When Teddy arrives, he sets up just south of you
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    stealing all of the southerly customers, and leaving you with a small group of people to the north.
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    Not to be outdone, you move 10 paces south of Teddy to regain your customers.
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    When you take a mid-day break, Teddy shuffles 10 paces south of you,
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    and again, steals back all the customers to the far end of the beach.
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    Throughout the course of the day, both of you continue to periodically move south
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    towards the bulk of the ice cream buyers,
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    until both of you eventually end up at the center of the beach,
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    back to back, each serving 50% of the ice-cream-hungry beachgoers.
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    At this point, you and your competitive cousin have reached what game theorists call a Nash Equilibrium -
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    the point where neither of you can improve your position by deviating from your current strategy.
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    Your original strategy, where you were each a quarter mile from the middle of the beach,
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    didn't last, because it wasn't a Nash Equilibrium.
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    Either of you could move your cart toward the other to sell more ice cream.
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    With both of you now in the center of the beach,
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    you can't reposition your cart closer to your furthest customers
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    without making your current customers worse off.
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    However, you no longer have a socially optimal solution,
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    since customers at either end of the beach
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    have to walk further than necessary to get a sweet treat.
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    Think about all the fast food chains, clothing boutiques, or mobile phone kiosks at the mall.
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    Customers may be better served by distributing services throughout a community,
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    but this leaves businesses vulnerable to aggressive competition.
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    In the real world, customers come from more than one direction,
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    and businesses are free to compete with marketing strategies,
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    by differentiating their product line, and with price cuts,
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    but at the heart of their strategy, companies like to keep their competition
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    as close as possible.
Title:
Why do competitors open their stores next to one another? - Jac de Haan
Speaker:
Jac de Haan
Description:

View full lesson on ed.ted.com - http://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-do-competitors-open-their-stores-next-to-one-another-jac-de-haan

Why are all the gas stations, cafes and restaurants in one crowded spot? As two competitive cousins vie for ice-cream-selling domination on one small beach, discover how game theory and the Nash Equilibrium inform these retail hotspots.

Lesson by Jac de Haan, animation by Luke Rowsell.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:07

English subtitles

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