Business a.m.

Should Firms Encourage Their Customers to Vaccinate?

- Pavel Kireyev

PRIVATE FIRMS CAN BOOST their bottom line while promoting prosocial informatio­n. Outside of China, the first Covid-19 lockdowns were announced March 2020. Profession­als from science, academia, hospitals, government­s – all joined forces to find solutions to the crisis. Soon, a vaccine, and then a few more, were produced that could potentiall­y save billions of lives.

Yet, by late 2021, and more than 5 million deaths and 260 million infections later, only 38 percent of the global population has been fully vaccinated – still far from the 60-70 percent necessary for herd immunity, when most of the population is immune to the disease. The reasons why people aren’t fully vaccinated include social and economic factors like religion, a lack of informatio­n and awareness, individual hesitation and fears, limited financial resources, poor access to vaccines, government policy, a wait-and-see approach and so on.

While many studies have focused on what public health organisati­ons are doing to encourage vaccinatio­n, few have examined the role of private sector firms in nudging their customers. This is an important topic as it may help the world achieve that all-important herd immunity.

In our working paper (coauthored with Selim Turki, Olesya Borzdyko and Abderrahma­ne Boutaib from Careem), we describe a “natural experiment” that enabled us to understand if private firms can indeed help spread awareness, increase vaccinatio­n rates and potentiall­y enhance their own profits in the process.

A ridesharin­g app widget

The data for our study were provided by Careem, the largest ridesharin­g company in the Middle East (recently acquired by Uber). The sample included over 1.59 million trips taken by customers over a six-month period from January to June 2021. In March 2021, Careem released an informatio­n widget on its app to provide informatio­n about the closest vaccinatio­n centres, assistance with booking appointmen­ts and reminders.

Part of an app update, the informatio­n widget was only available for later app versions. We considered the timing of the update to be “quasi-random”. This means that it wasn’t equivalent to a randomised controlled trial or A/B test (which would have been unethical to conduct in this setting). However, the variation in the timing of the app update was likely independen­t of potential confoundin­g variables that may affect customer rides and vaccinatio­n behaviour.

We conducted several tests to reinforce this assumption. For instance, we focused only on users with automatic app updates (as manual updaters are more likely to do so when they plan on using the app more regularly). We also acquired a deep understand­ing of how app updates work (in iOS and Android) to ensure our results were robust. The quasi-random variation in app update timings across customers led us to some interestin­g findings regarding

the social and economic impact of this initiative.

Impact of a private business interventi­on

We found that the vaccine widget contribute­d to improving vaccinatio­n rates in the focal city by about 60 percent. This was similar to a 2021 study that saw an 84 percent increase in vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts as a result of a simple text-based interventi­on, in a different context and geography.

We couldn’t measure actual vaccinatio­ns because such data are private, but we were able to construct a proxy based on the number of visits made by customers to vaccinatio­n centres. Our results should be interprete­d in light of this constraint. They may be over-estimated if customers travelled to vaccinatio­n centres for reasons other than getting vaccinated. But they may also be under-estimated. For instance, the widget may have motivated customers to go to a vaccinatio­n centre, but they may have used another means of travel, such as walking or their own

vehicle.

Economic benefits to a private firm

Interestin­gly, Careem also experience­d an uptick in profits from customers who had the widget during the test period. We found that approximat­ely 12,000 additional trips could be attributed to the widget in that timeframe. Customers who had been to vaccinatio­n centres twice took almost one additional trip per week on average. This suggests that once vaccinated, customers felt it was safer to travel around, which increased the number of trips and associated profits. This simple informatio­nal widget did not offer any trip discounts or other incentives, yet it led to a 7.67 percent increase in ridesharin­g usage.

On a broader level, the provision of vaccine informatio­n by Careem can be viewed as a CSR initiative. While most studies have focused on costly CSR initiative­s, our research team measured the economic impact of a relatively costless interventi­on (akin to a

“nudge”). By simply communicat­ing useful vaccinerel­ated informatio­n to their customers, Careem helped alter customer behaviour while inducing desirable outcomes for the business. A smartphone and a widget that costs next to nothing can empower the public and private sectors to become a joint force for good in raising vaccinatio­n rates, socio-economic conditions permitting. With negligible implementa­tion costs, this profitable interventi­on could be applied to other prosocial causes.

Pavel Kireyev is an Assistant Professor of Marketing at INSEAD.

Vivek Choudhary is an Assistant Professor of Informatio­n Technology and Operations Management at Nanyang Technologi­cal University.

Zhaoyan Liu is a PhD Student in the Department of Analytics & Operations of National University of Singapore.

“This article is republishe­d courtesy of INSEAD Knowledge(http://knowledge.insead.edu). Copyright INSEAD 2021

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