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Original Articles

Online-offline competitive pricing with reference price effect

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Pages 642-653 | Received 31 Jul 2018, Accepted 17 Nov 2019, Published online: 05 Feb 2020
 

Abstract

Nowadays, consumers can easily compare the prices of the online and offline channels before making purchase decisions, which might arouse the reference price effect among consumers. Considering the reference price effect, how should online and offline retailers set prices? To answer it, we incorporate the reference price effect into a Hotelling model to formulate the online-offline price competition. We find that, when the reference price effect is low (high), the offline (online) retailer monopolizes the market; when the reference price effect is moderate, the retailers co-exist. Interestingly, a first mover disadvantage and a second mover advantage exist in terms of market share, but they do not necessarily exist in terms of profit. However, both the online and offline retailers can be better off by negotiating on the game sequence. Furthermore, we find that each retailer prefers its own price to be regarded as the reference price. A lower reference price, although benefiting the e-retailing in the short run, might compromise the product image and hurt both retailers in the long run.

Acknowledgment

This research is supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (71901137, 71801001).

Notes

1 Renfrow, J. (2017). 80% of shoppers compare prices online before shopping in stores. Retrieved from https://www.fierceretail.com/digital/80-shoppers-do-online-price-comparison-before-store-shopping

2 Deahl, D. (2017). Amazon granted a patent that prevents in-store shoppers from online price checking. Retrieved from https://www.theverge.com/2017/6/15/15812986/amazon-patent-online-price-checking

3 The formulation of the reference price is a complex problem. Ahmetoglu et al. (Citation2014) conclude three ways of forming the reference price: (i) comparing the advertised price with one price which the retailer formerly charged for the product; (ii) comparing the advertised price with one price which is presumably charged by other retailers in the same trade area; and (iii) comparing the advertised price with one manufacturer’s suggested retail price. The two reference prices considered in our paper is formed through the second way.

4 We thank the anonymous reviewers for the insightful comment.

5 Heterogeneous e-purchase costs have been addressed by some previous research works, e.g., Frambach, Roest, & Krishnan, (Citation2007) and Balakrishnan et al. (Citation2014).

6 We thank the anonymous reviewer for the insightful comment.

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