This paper studies a “market creating” firm (platform) that
offers a matching environment by charging an access fee to a population
of high and low type users who wish to form a match. We focus on an
environment where users only observe a signal of their randomly assigned
partner’s type and where the informativeness of the signal is
controlled by the firm. We study how both tools, access fee and signal
informativeness, can be used to screen particular segments of the
population. We finish by characterizing the set of optimal menus. The
paper proposes three results. We show that information provision has a
screening role when network effects are heterogeneous because a platform
cannot induce every level of participation using only the access fee.
Secondly, any platform will optimally offer a menu such that only high
types participate, or where every user participates. In the former the
signal is perfectly informative; in the latter it is partially
informative. Lastly, the profit maximizing firm will over-provide
information in relation to the surplus maximizing firm, and the higher
the heterogeneity in the population, the higher the chance of the
optimal menu excluding low type users