Impact of Social Interactions on Duopoly Competition with Quality Considerations

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Geng ◽  
Xiaomeng Guo ◽  
Guang Xiao

We study the impacts of social interactions on competing firms’ quality differentiation, pricing decisions, and profit performance. Two forms of social interactions are identified and analyzed: (1) market-expansion effect (MEE)—the total market expands as a result of both firms’ sales—and (2) value-enhancement effect (VEE)—a consumer gains additional utility of purchasing from one firm based on this firm’s previous and/or current sales volume. We consider a two-stage duopoly competition framework, in which both firms select quality levels in the first stage simultaneously and engage in a two-period price competition in the second stage. In the main model, we assume that each firm sets a single price and commits to it across two selling periods. We find that both forms of social interactions tend to lower prices and intensify price competition for given quality levels. However, MEE weakens the product-quality differentiation and is benign to both high-quality and low-quality firms. It also benefits consumers and improves social welfare. By contrast, VEE enlarges the quality differentiation and only benefits the high-quality firm, but is particularly malignant to the low-quality firm. It further reduces the consumers’ monetary surplus. Such impact is consistent, regardless of whether the VEE interactions involve previous or current consumers. We further discuss several model extensions, including dynamic pricing, combined social effects, and various cost structures, and verify that the aforementioned impacts of MEE and VEE are qualitatively robust to those extensions. Our results provide important managerial insights for firms in competitive markets and suggest that they need to not only be aware of the consumers’ social interactions, but also, more importantly, distinguish the predominant form of the interactions so as to apply proper marketing strategies. This paper was accepted by Matthew Shum, marketing.

Games ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vincent Mak ◽  
Amnon Rapoport ◽  
Eyran Gisches

2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongjuan Song ◽  
Yushi Jiang

The aim of this study is to examine the advertising information learning processes of potential tourists and observe how potential tourists sequentially adjust their perceived reference prices and purchase intentions with different risk preferences and choices with respect to gains (the current price is lower than the consumer’s reference price) or losses (the current price is higher than the reference price). In this study, a Bayesian experiment was conducted to elicit reference prices in the presence of tourism advertising with uncertain information. The findings show that with respect to gains, risk avoiders do not reduce their reference prices as significantly as do risk seekers when exposed to price-informative advertising. Exposure to image advertising changes potential tourists’ risk preferences, and the reference price drops more significantly for risk avoiders than for risk seekers. With respect to losses, informative and image advertising impact the reference price for participants with different risk preferences but not at a statistically significant level.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruxian Wang

The growth of market size is crucially important to firms, although researchers often assume that market size is constant in assortment and pricing management. I develop a model that incorporates the market expansion effects into discrete consumer choice models and investigate various operations problems. Market size, measured by the number of people who are interested in the products from the same category, is largely influenced by firms’ operations strategy, and it also affects assortment planning and pricing decisions. Failure to account for market expansion effects may lead to substantial losses in demand estimation and operations management. Based on real data, this paper uses an alternating-optimization expectation-maximization method that separates the estimation of consumer choice behavior and market expansion effects to calibrate the new model. The end-to-end solution approach on modeling, operations, and estimation is readily applicable in real business.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Doo Ho Lee

In this study, we consider a three-echelon closed-loop supply chain consisting of a manufacturer, a collector, and two duopolistic recyclers. In the supply chain, the collector collects end-of-life products from consumers in the market. Then, both recyclers purchase the recyclable waste from the collector, and each recycler turns them into new materials. The manufacturer has no recycling facilities; therefore, the manufacturer only purchases the recycled and new materials for its production from the two recyclers. Under this scenario, price competition between recyclers is inevitable. With two pricing structures (Nash and Stackelberg) of the leaders group and three competition behaviors (Collusion, Cournot, and Stackelberg) of the followers group, we suggest six different pricing game models. In each of them, we establish a pricing game model among the members, prove the uniqueness of the equilibrium prices of the supply chain members, and discuss the effects of competition on the overall supply chain’s profitability. Our numerical experiment indicates that as the price competition between recyclers intensifies, the supply chain profitability decreases. Moreover, the greater the recyclability degree of the waste is, the higher the profits in the supply chain become.


2019 ◽  
Vol 36 (03) ◽  
pp. 1950011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng Yang ◽  
Junjun Kong ◽  
Minyue Jin

This paper investigates the implications of selling effort upon a monopolistic seller’s optimal pricing decisions and its performance in the presence of strategic customers. In our model, strategic customers can anticipate future price discounts and decide on when to purchase products from the seller over two periods. The direct impact of selling effort is to induce more customers to purchase in the first period. Two pricing policies are under consideration: (i) preannounced pricing under which the seller commits to a price path over two periods in advance; (ii) contingent pricing under which the seller can dynamically set a price in each period. The analytical results demonstrate that preannounced pricing always dominates contingent pricing from the seller’s perspective. Moreover, compared with the results under contingent pricing, selling effort is enhanced but market demand is shrunk under preannounced pricing. Through sensitivity analysis, we further find that when customers become more willing to postpone their purchases to the second period, the seller should reduce its selling effort in the first period if the demand-enhancement effect of selling effort is sufficiently low.


2000 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aviad A. Israeli ◽  
Natan Uriely

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the pricing decisions of hotels in an effort to ascertain whether corporate affiliation and stars influence hotels' pricing decisions. The findings suggest that high-quality (ie four- and five-star) hotels tend to be affiliated with chains and signal this affiliation using a naming strategy. In addition, the industry-based star rating system explains a large part of the price variation. The impact of corporate affiliation, modelled as the size of the corporation, has a relatively smaller, but overall positive, impact on price. An investigation of different locations reveals that the intensity of corporate affiliation, and specific characteristics of the consumers' market in each location are also significant in explaining the hotels' pricing decisions.


Vestnik RFFI ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 35-45
Author(s):  
Victor A. Soifer ◽  
Nikita V. Golovastikov ◽  
Leonid L. Doskolovich ◽  
Evgeni A. Bezus ◽  
Dmitry A. Bykov

We propose two simple planar structures that enable spatial differentiation of the profile of optical beams propagating in a slab waveguide. The differentiator operating in transmission consists of a single subwavelength dielectric ridge on the surface of a slab waveguide. The differentiator operating in reflection consists of two grooves on the surface of a slab waveguide. In both cases the differentiation is performed at oblique incidence of the beam and is associated with the resonant excitation of the considered structures eigenmodes localized at the ridge or at the ridge between two grooves. It is shown that the required balance between the differentiation quality and the amplitude of the differentiated beam can be achieved by manipulating the quality factor of the resonance. The presented numerical simulation results demonstrate high-quality differentiation. The proposed differentiator may find application in ultrafast analog computing and signal processing systems.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Xiaofeng Liu ◽  
Hong Zhang ◽  
Nannan Xi ◽  
Hamari Juho

This study examined the product line design under two different types of reward crowdfunding, namely, the fixed and the flexible reward crowdfunding. To investigate different effects of the two different reward crowdfunding mechanisms, we addressed the problem of product and pricing decisions in reward crowdfunding by incorporating individual rationality and incentive compatibility into different funding modes. Specifically, when the creator designed the menu price, we compared the menu design, which includes price and quality between the product line under two different crowdfunding mechanisms. We found that when the quality was exogenous, the project could have higher success rate and get more expected profit under the fixed reward crowdfunding than that under the flexible reward crowdfunding; however, the creator could set a higher target and a larger price discrepancy under the flexible reward crowdfunding in some specific market condition. Then, we extended to the situation where the quality was endogenous and found the similar results as the quality was exogenous. Interestingly, the quality differentiation of the product line under the flexible reward crowdfunding is much more than that under the fixed reward crowdfunding. These results can provide the guideline and suggestion to help the creators design their product line, set the target, and select the suitable modes between the fixed and the flexible reward crowdfunding.


2020 ◽  
pp. 135481661989695 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuting Chen ◽  
Rong Zhang ◽  
Bin Liu

The rise of the sharing economy has changed the traditional way of providing service to consumers. Airbnb is the most successful peer-to-peer model in the hospitality industry. This article investigates how to conduct strategic dynamic pricing in a competitive market by considering market conditions, quality, and risk sensitivity. Our research yields three main conclusions. First, we observe that the higher the risk level suppliers face, the more profit they will get; the lower the risk level consumers face, the more utilities they obtain. Second, we find that fixed pricing may be optimal or near-optimal for the platform when market size is small, the accommodation quality is better, and consumers’ reliability is low. Otherwise, a flexible pricing strategy is optimal. Finally, we extend the research into dynamic pricing decision in presence of Bayesian social learning and propose that the less-perfect accommodation requires social learning more urgently. In tourism peak period, social learning has less positive impact when the Airbnb accommodation is much perfect. These conclusions provide useful guidance on how the Airbnb and hotel can take advantage of the competitive market.


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