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Article

A pitfall of using offer quantity limits

Pages 358-374 | Received 17 Dec 2019, Accepted 02 Dec 2020, Published online: 22 Dec 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Retailers may wish to foster high, but not excessively high, consumer purchase quantities of a product. Purchase quantity limits can be used to try to walk that fine line. Two commonly used approaches that retailers use to express purchase quantity limits – offer quantity limits and unit quantity limits – are studied in a setting where a product is offered for a discounted price. An example of a unit quantity limit (UQL) is ‘Limit 2,’ which simply restricts the consumer to a maximum purchase of two units of the discounted product. An offer quantity limit (OQL) of ‘Limit 2 Offers,’ for example, allows the consumer to take advantage of the presented price deal a maximum of two times. Since the price information may specify two or more units, the maximum number of units consumers are allowed to purchase when an OQL is present cannot be determined solely from the number included in the OQL verbiage – the price information must also be considered. A pilot experimental study and main experiment provide evidence strongly suggesting that consumers misunderstand OQLs. The fallacy would harm retailers desiring to stimulate high consumer purchase quantities from a promotion that includes a restriction. Specifically, consumers intend to purchase fewer units when confronted with an OQL rather than an equivalent UQL when one of the two restrictions is imposed on a multiple unit price promotion. This effect is attenuated when the numeric value of the OQL is not a multiple of the units in the price information. The present research is the first to examine how consumers react to OQLs relative to UQLs.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Union Graduate College [N/A].

Notes on contributors

Jay P. Carlson

Jay P. Carlson is an Associate Professor of Marketing at Clarkson University Capital Region Campus. His primary research area is consumer behavior, more specifically he studies consumer reactions to price, sales promotion, and packaging information. Professor Carlson’s research has appeared in Journal of Advertising, Journal of Business Research, Journal of Consumer Marketing, Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Marketing Theory & Practice, Journal of Product & Brand Management, Journal of Retailing, Marketing Letters, Psychology & Marketing, and other peer-reviewed marketing journals.

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