Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
480709 European Journal of Operational Research 2011 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Promotions are important tools for matching supply and demand in many industries. In the United States automotive industry, promotions are frequently offered, which may be given directly to customers (rebates) or given to dealers (incentives) to stimulate demand. We analyze the performance of customer rebate and retailer incentive promotions under competition. We study a setting with two manufacturers making simultaneous pricing and promotion decisions, and with two price-discriminating retailers as Stackelberg followers making simultaneous order quantity decisions. In the benchmark case with no promotions, we characterize the equilibria in closed form. We find that retailer incentives can be used by manufacturers to simultaneously improve each of their profits but can potentially lead to lower retailer profits. When manufacturers use customer rebates, we show that a manufacturer is able to decrease the profit of her competitor while increasing her own profit, although she is also at risk for her competitor to use rebates in a similar fashion. Unlike the monopoly case where the manufacturers are always better off with retailer incentives, customer rebates can be more profitable under some cases in the presence of competition. Using numerical examples we generate insights on the manufacturers’ preference of promotions in different market settings.

► We analyze customer rebates and retailer incentives of automotive manufacturers. ► Supply chains are competitive and retailers can price discriminate. ► Game theoretical models are developed to compare the promotions. ► Insights are generated from equilibrium outcomes and numerical examples.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
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