4.7 Article

Optimal piecewise-constant price under heterogeneous sensitivity to product freshness

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRODUCTION RESEARCH
Volume 54, Issue 2, Pages 365-385

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00207543.2014.997402

Keywords

perishable inventory; EOQ; dynamic price; heterogeneous sensitivity; time-dependent demand; price-dependent demand

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When perishable products are priced uniformly, regardless of the amount of time remaining until expiration, consumers may gravitate towards fresher products, leaving some inventory unsold. This research considers dynamic pricing policies as well as replenishment policies in the context of perishable products with a fixed shelf life. Consumers are assumed to be heterogeneous in their sensitivity to freshness, i.e. their willingness to pay more for fresher products. We develop a model for identifying an optimal (profit-maximising) dynamic pricing policy and for evaluating the extent to which both the retailer and the consumer benefit from the implementation of a dynamic pricing policy as opposed to a static policy. The model assumes that the retailer is able to utilise knowledge regarding the heterogeneous characteristics of incoming customers (e.g. the retailer can gather specific information about customers' historical purchases). Unexpectedly, it is proven that in an optimal pricing policy, the retailer should assign a lower price to fresher products and then raise the price as the products approach expiration. A numerical illustration shows that profits are strongly influenced by the volatility of consumer sensitivity to freshness; specifically, this variable has the potential to reduce optimal profits by up to 8%.

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