Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
880311 International Journal of Research in Marketing 2011 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

We show that the optimal advertising strategy under the Generalized Bass Model (GBM) involves beginning at an extremely low level (the lower the better) and then increasing spending throughout the planning period. This strategy remains optimal in the presence of decreasing prices that affect both margins and diffusion speed. We provide a simple explanation for why this happens. We further show that the intuitively appealing patterns of continuous decrease or increase-then-decrease (both with an uptick towards the end) identified in earlier research are also possible as optimal dynamic advertising paths under the GBM structure, but only if the advertising at launch is constrained to be higher than a particular threshold, which we identify. The constraint necessary to generate intuitively appealing strategies lowers overall profits. Therefore, the GBM generates advertising policy recommendations that most marketers would deem odd. This casts doubt on the value of the GBM for normative purposes. Other existing diffusion models are preferred when seeking normative guidance on optimal dynamic advertising policies for new products subject to word of mouth.

► We study optimal advertising for new products under the Generalized Bass Model. ► Advertising spending should start close to zero and then increase monotonically. ► This strategy is optimal even in the presence of decreasing prices and margins. ► Knowledgeable marketers would deem such a strategy to be extremely dubious. ► The model is of questionable value for identifying optimal advertising strategies.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Marketing
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