Learning to Grow from Peers : Experimental Evidence from Small Retailers in Indonesia

Business practices and performance vary widely among local peers. This paper identifies key determinants of such heterogeneity among a sample of small urban retail shops in Indonesia, and experimentally tests whether learning about the best practic...

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Main Authors: Dalton, Patricio S., Ruschenpohler, Julius, Uras, Burak, Zia, Bilal
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/163271562607211906/Learning-to-Grow-from-Peers-Experimental-Evidence-from-Small-Retailers-in-Indonesia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32053
id okr-10986-32053
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-320532022-09-05T00:22:35Z Learning to Grow from Peers : Experimental Evidence from Small Retailers in Indonesia Dalton, Patricio S. Ruschenpohler, Julius Uras, Burak Zia, Bilal SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES EFFICIENCY GAINS PEER KNOWLEDGE SOCIAL LEARNING BUSINESS PRACTICE PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH FIRM PRODUCTIVITY BUSINESS GROWTH Business practices and performance vary widely among local peers. This paper identifies key determinants of such heterogeneity among a sample of small urban retail shops in Indonesia, and experimentally tests whether learning about the best practices of local peers is valuable for business growth. Through extensive baseline quantitative and qualitative fieldwork, the study develops a handbook that associates specific business practices with performance and provides detailed implementation guidance informed by exemplary local shop owners. Instead of offering formal training or in-depth counseling, this handbook is simply distributed to a randomly selected sample of shop owners and complemented with three experiential learning modules: one group is invited to watch a documentary video on experiences of highly successful peers, another is offered light in-shop assistance on the implementation of the handbook, and a third group is offered both. Eighteen months after the intervention, the study finds no effect of offering the handbook alone, but significant impact on practice adoption when the handbook is coupled with experiential learning. On business performance, the study finds sizable and significant improvements as well, up to an increase of 35 percent in profits and an increase of 16.7 percent in revenues. The types of practices adopted map these performance improvements to efficiency gains rather than other channels. The analysis suggests that these interventions are simple, scalable, and highly cost-effective. 2019-07-11T15:39:37Z 2019-07-11T15:39:37Z 2019-07 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/163271562607211906/Learning-to-Grow-from-Peers-Experimental-Evidence-from-Small-Retailers-in-Indonesia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32053 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8933 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper East Asia and Pacific Indonesia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES
EFFICIENCY GAINS
PEER KNOWLEDGE
SOCIAL LEARNING
BUSINESS PRACTICE
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
FIRM PRODUCTIVITY
BUSINESS GROWTH
spellingShingle SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES
EFFICIENCY GAINS
PEER KNOWLEDGE
SOCIAL LEARNING
BUSINESS PRACTICE
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
FIRM PRODUCTIVITY
BUSINESS GROWTH
Dalton, Patricio S.
Ruschenpohler, Julius
Uras, Burak
Zia, Bilal
Learning to Grow from Peers : Experimental Evidence from Small Retailers in Indonesia
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Indonesia
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8933
description Business practices and performance vary widely among local peers. This paper identifies key determinants of such heterogeneity among a sample of small urban retail shops in Indonesia, and experimentally tests whether learning about the best practices of local peers is valuable for business growth. Through extensive baseline quantitative and qualitative fieldwork, the study develops a handbook that associates specific business practices with performance and provides detailed implementation guidance informed by exemplary local shop owners. Instead of offering formal training or in-depth counseling, this handbook is simply distributed to a randomly selected sample of shop owners and complemented with three experiential learning modules: one group is invited to watch a documentary video on experiences of highly successful peers, another is offered light in-shop assistance on the implementation of the handbook, and a third group is offered both. Eighteen months after the intervention, the study finds no effect of offering the handbook alone, but significant impact on practice adoption when the handbook is coupled with experiential learning. On business performance, the study finds sizable and significant improvements as well, up to an increase of 35 percent in profits and an increase of 16.7 percent in revenues. The types of practices adopted map these performance improvements to efficiency gains rather than other channels. The analysis suggests that these interventions are simple, scalable, and highly cost-effective.
format Working Paper
author Dalton, Patricio S.
Ruschenpohler, Julius
Uras, Burak
Zia, Bilal
author_facet Dalton, Patricio S.
Ruschenpohler, Julius
Uras, Burak
Zia, Bilal
author_sort Dalton, Patricio S.
title Learning to Grow from Peers : Experimental Evidence from Small Retailers in Indonesia
title_short Learning to Grow from Peers : Experimental Evidence from Small Retailers in Indonesia
title_full Learning to Grow from Peers : Experimental Evidence from Small Retailers in Indonesia
title_fullStr Learning to Grow from Peers : Experimental Evidence from Small Retailers in Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Learning to Grow from Peers : Experimental Evidence from Small Retailers in Indonesia
title_sort learning to grow from peers : experimental evidence from small retailers in indonesia
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/163271562607211906/Learning-to-Grow-from-Peers-Experimental-Evidence-from-Small-Retailers-in-Indonesia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32053
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