GNSIECMay 29

Measuring Social Media Network Effects

arXiv:2507.0454595.8h-index: 39
AI Analysis

This research provides the first large-scale empirical measurement of local network effects in the digital economy, offering insights for platform design and policy makers regarding the value generated by social media connections.

This study quantified local network effects on major social media platforms (Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, X) using choice experiments with 19,923 US users. It found that local network effects explain 8.1-23.7% of platform value, which ranges from $78 to $101 per consumer per month, contributing to an annual US consumer surplus of $53B to $215B per platform.

Network effects -- the utility gains from additional consumers of a good -- are widely regarded as critical to the digital economy. Yet recent theory and evidence suggest that local network effects -- the economic value created by specific social network connections -- drive value in networked online platforms. Using incentive-compatible online choice experiments with 19,923 Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and X users in the United States, we provide the first large-scale empirical measurement of local network effects in the digital economy and measure heterogeneity in connection value across platforms. Platform value ranges from \$78 to \$101 per consumer per month, with 8.1-23.7% explained by local network effects. We find that 1) stronger ties are more valuable on Facebook and Instagram, while weaker ties are more valuable on LinkedIn and X; 2) work connections are most valuable on LinkedIn and least on Facebook, and job-seekers value LinkedIn significantly more and Facebook significantly less; 3) men value connections to women significantly more than to other men, particularly on Instagram, Facebook, and X, while women value connections to men and women equally across platforms; 4) consumers value connections on any platform more if they are also connected on other platforms, suggesting that platforms are complements, not substitutes; 5) white consumers disproportionately value same-race connections on Facebook while, on Instagram, connections to alters eighteen or younger are valued significantly more than any other age group -- two patterns not seen on other platforms. Each platform generates between \$53B and \$215B in annual US consumer surplus. These results suggest that social media generates significant value, that local network effects drive a substantial fraction of it, and that the sources and contours of these effects vary across platforms, consumers, and connections.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes