4.7 Article

Pricing and advertising in a supply chain in the presence of strategic consumers * , ** , ***

Journal

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.omega.2020.102239

Keywords

Pricing policy; Advertising; Supply chain; Strategic consumers

Funding

  1. NSERC, Canada [RGPIN-2016-04975]

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This study investigated pricing and advertising decisions in a supply chain with myopic and strategic consumers. The manufacturer sets wholesale prices and shares in the retailer's advertising costs, while the retailer determines retail prices and advertising budgets. The research found that endogenously determining pricing policies and discount depths during the selling season can optimize profits.
It is well known that strategic consumers can harm firms' profits by delaying their purchases, to buy at a discounted price. A retailer can induce consumers to purchase at the right price and time by acting on the two components of the consumer's surplus in each period, that is, the willingness to pay (WTP) and the selling price. We develop a multi-period model to investigate pricing and advertising decisions in a sup-ply chain, in the presence of two types of consumers, namely, myopic and strategic. We assume that the retailer's advertising positively affects the consumer's WTP at a decreasing rate over time. The manufac-turer sets the wholesale price and its share in the retailer's advertising cost, while the retailer determines the retail prices during the different periods of the selling season, along with the advertising budget. Our approach makes it possible to determine endogenously the number of price drops during the selling sea -son and the depth of each discount. Assuming decentralized decision-making in the supply chain, we determine the conditions under which the retailer prefers a single-pricing policy to a markdown-pricing policy. We show that the manufacturer has a say in the retailer's choice through its participation rate in the retailer's advertising cost. Interestingly, we obtain that an integrated supply chain would, roughly speaking, adopt the same pricing policy as in the decentralized case. To start with, we assume that the WTP is distributed uniformly, and later on, we assess the impact of changing the distribution on the results.

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