- The document discusses two research studies on pricing strategies in retail.
- The first study examines how displaying prices in red versus black fonts affects consumers' perceptions of savings. It finds that red prices increase men's perceptions of savings but not women's.
- The second study analyzes the effects of opening and closing stores on chain retailers' financial performance. It finds that factors like market share, advertising, age and size influence whether openings or closings increase firm value. Specifically, openings tend to decrease value for larger, older retailers while closings can increase value.
- The document discusses two research studies on pricing strategies in retail.
- The first study examines how displaying prices in red versus black fonts affects consumers' perceptions of savings. It finds that red prices increase men's perceptions of savings but not women's.
- The second study analyzes the effects of opening and closing stores on chain retailers' financial performance. It finds that factors like market share, advertising, age and size influence whether openings or closings increase firm value. Specifically, openings tend to decrease value for larger, older retailers while closings can increase value.
Original Description:
Journal of Retailing
Executive Summary
Number 89 (2, 2013)
- The document discusses two research studies on pricing strategies in retail.
- The first study examines how displaying prices in red versus black fonts affects consumers' perceptions of savings. It finds that red prices increase men's perceptions of savings but not women's.
- The second study analyzes the effects of opening and closing stores on chain retailers' financial performance. It finds that factors like market share, advertising, age and size influence whether openings or closings increase firm value. Specifically, openings tend to decrease value for larger, older retailers while closings can increase value.
- The document discusses two research studies on pricing strategies in retail.
- The first study examines how displaying prices in red versus black fonts affects consumers' perceptions of savings. It finds that red prices increase men's perceptions of savings but not women's.
- The second study analyzes the effects of opening and closing stores on chain retailers' financial performance. It finds that factors like market share, advertising, age and size influence whether openings or closings increase firm value. Specifically, openings tend to decrease value for larger, older retailers while closings can increase value.
Versus Black Prices on Price Perceptions Nancy M. Puccinelli, Rajesh Chandrashekaran, Dhruv Grewal, Rajneesh Suri Retailers devote a lot of time and money churning out weekly circulars and store advertisements to attract customers to their stores. These yers and ads are lled with pictures of products, salient product attributes, and price information. A common way to highlight prices in these yers is to use either red or black font, though little is known about the impact of these specic colors on consumers price perceptions. The current research therefore examines consumer judg- ments of savings at a retailer when product prices in the store advertisement appear in red versus in a tradi- tional black color. Because the color red often serves as a heuristic cue in judgments, red prices in ads seemingly should affect consumers overall judgments of savings at the retailer. Furthermore, men may be more suscep- tible to such heuristic effects and likely to rely on red prices to judge savings offered by a retailer. Women, as more thorough processors in general, instead may be less likely to base their judgments on the use of color in prices in store advertisements. In a series of studies, this research shows that when prices appear in red, men evaluate savings at the store more favorably than when they appear in black. However, when men are required to process the adver- tisement in more depth, the incremental effects of red prices disappear. Furthermore, compared with women, men have more positive feelings when evaluating red prices in a store ad, which inuences their judgments of savings at the store. In contrast, women, with their tendencies to process advertisements in greater depth, appear immune to such effects. In conclusion, retailers should carefully test and examine the effectiveness of their yers by understanding and incorporating the psy- chological effects of price cues. It is possible that they could achieve signicant cost savings and market share benets by using color strategically in their promotional materials. Effects of opening and closing stores on chain retailer performance Raji Srinivasan, Shrihari Sridhar, Sriram Narayanan, Debika Sihi A key element of a chain retailers marketing strategy is the number of stores it operates to reach its consumers. These decisions not only affect the retailers perfor- mance, but also rm value, as investors pay attention to such strategic decisions. Opening stores has a different strategic emphasis (e.g., revenue expansion and enter- ing markets) from closing stores (e.g., cost reduction and exiting markets), with different implications for the retailers performance. The authors examine factors which inuence the effects of a chain retailers opening and closing store decisions on rm value. Specically, the authors hypothesize effects of the chain retailers market share, advertising intensity (advertising stock to sales ratio), age, and size on the relationships between the number of store open- ings and closings on its rm value. They use data from 132 large, publicly listed US chain retailers from 1998 to 2009 to test their hypotheses. The ndings indicate that As a chain retailers market share and advertis- ing intensity increase, opening stores decreases the retailers market value, while closing stores increases it. A retailers age does not impact the effect of open- ing stores on rm value, but as a retailers age increases (get older), closing stores increases its rm value. Finally, when a chain retailers size increases, open- ing and closing stores both decrease rm value; however, the negative effect of opening stores on rm value is larger than the negative effect of closing stores. Executive Summaries This section provides a concise, nontechnical summary of each article in the current issue of JR focusing on its strategic implications for management. Journal of Retailing 89 (2, 2013) P1P6 P2 Executive Summaries/ Journal of Retailing 89 (2, 2013) P1P6 The authors also develop an approach to analyze the impact of a retailers opening and closing decisions on its rm value, relative to industry competitors. A key insight is that most chain retailers appear to be uni-dimensional with respect to achieving superior performance through their decisions to open and close stores. For example, some rms (55% of the sample) are unable to obtain above-industry (average) rm value from opening stores, while others (27%) are unable to do so through store closures. Yet others (16%) are unable obtain above average-industry rm value from either opening or closing stores. Overall, there appear to be opportunities for chain retailers to improve the impact of their store opening and closing decisions on rm value. Chain retailers (and investors) can use this approach (which is relatively simple to implement in Microsoft Excel) to estimate whether a chain retailers will obtain less than, the same, or more rm value benet from opening and closing stores compared to the other chain retailers. Loss leaders and cross-category retailer pass-through: A Bayesian multilevel analysis Joseph Pancras, Dinesh K. Gauri, Debabrata Talukdar Retailers maximize prots across the portfolio of prod- ucts stocked in their stores. They commonly use deep discounts on some frequently purchased categories such as carbonated soft drinks to attract consumers to their store, the rationale being that these consumers will also end up buying some other categories which are more protable for the retailer once they visit the store. This loss leader strategy has been studied in both academic and practitioner literature. An important related channel issue in the area of pricing is the extent to which price promotions by the manufacturer is passed through to consumers by the retailer. While earlier literature has studied this phenomenon of retailer pass-through as a within-category pricing phenomenon across brands, in this paper we utilize the concept of pass-through to study whether retailers strategically co-ordinate promo- tional pass-throughs across product categories. Own pass-through is a well-established empirical phenom- enon, whereby wholesale price cuts for a brand result in retail price cuts for the same brand, and we show that a similar result holds at the category level. Since loss leader strategies are often initiated by manufacturer pro- motional price cuts, we also analyze whether such cuts in loss-leader categories could be accompanied by price increases in more protable categories such as sandwich bread. Previous research has not examined this phenomenon due to limitations of data and methods, since there could be a large number of cross category effects to be estimated. Using a unique dataset across ten product categories and with a estimation method using advanced Hierarchical Bayesian statistical techniques, we study this phenomenon that we label cross-category pass- throughs. We nd that cross category pass-throughs tend to be negative (about 18% as compared to 9% posi- tive), that is, price cuts in a focal category being accom- panied by price increases in other categories. We nd that wholesale price cuts in loss leader categories such as carbonated soft drinks and potato chips are accompanied by increases in retail prices of more protable categories such as sandwich bread. This indicates that the retailer is cushioning the impact of price cuts in loss leader catego- ries with price increases in the other categories. We also nd evidence of the existence of positive cross-category pass-throughs for protable categories and vice versa for unprotable categories. We also nd the evidence of the existence of a systematic relationship between the occur- rence of negative cross category pass-throughs and the characteristics of the focal category for which the retailer is introducing retail price cuts. Category characteristics such as price elasticity and proportion of loss leaders increase the probability of negative cross-category pass- throughs. Our results challenge the practice of CM which has been widely accepted in the retail industry, but the ef- ciency of which has been questioned in recent theoretical work, based on reasoning similar to our inspiration for undertaking this research, that is, that retailers maximize prots across a basket or portfolio of categories rather than for a category at a time, and pay attention to how their pricing decisions affect overall store trafc (a key motivator behind the use of loss leader categories). We nd that the cross-category phenomenon appears to play an important role in retailer strategies well beyond the previous category manager effects that have been stud- ied so far. Our results also point to how the retailer atten- tion to overall store trafc and overall store prots create strategic linkages across categories that go beyond the more obvious complement/substitute demand linkages that have thus far dominated cross-category research in the eld. Our paper also uses some well-established statistical model checking criteria that could be used in future studies of a similar scope and nature. Our results could also pose a quandary for grocery manufacturers who may have limited control over multiple categories that have cross-category pass-through linkages. Further research could yield theoretical insights on our empirical results, and study whether there are signicant cross- category pass-through timing issues. Executive Summaries/ Journal of Retailing 89 (2, 2013) P1P6 P3 Orchestrating rituals through retailers: An examination of gift registry Tonya Williams Bradford, John F. Sherry Jr. Consumers engage marketers, and particularly retail- ers, to facilitate various life projects, including wedding celebrations. The exchange of wedding vows is quite a straightforward task which, on its own, can be completed within fteen minutes. Yet wedding celebrations have become highly social occasions lasting several hours with events spanning weeks or even months. An area of most relevance to retailers is that of gift giving, a prominent component of wedding celebrations. These celebrations provide the bride and groom with oppor- tunities to negotiate a new family identity. And they do so with explicit invitations for participation to family members and friends through gift registry, a process whereby retailers guide families in navigating complex social exchange relationships to outt the newlyweds home. Where retailers once created gift registry as a mechanism to increase sales, gift registry is now an inte- gral ritual within wedding celebrations. We focus on the roles for retailers, service providers and their brands as consumers create new families through rituals. We nd gift giving to be a ritual that reects market- created and -sanctioned practices beyond the scope of traditional gift giving, inclusive of various consumer and retailer roles. Further, we nd that brands serve as signals between participants as couples and gift-givers co-create anew family identity with the couple. The registry provides ample opportunities for retailers to interface with consumers at multiple levels (e.g., brand, brand portfolio, acquisition channel) in physical and vir- tual spaces to enact the registry ritual. More specically, as the registry builds patronage for the retailer, which benets both from immediate sales and referrals from satised customers, it also provides a signicant face- saving benet for consumers. gift-givers experience relief as the burden of extensive thought or search effort is eliminated. And gift recipients experience less disap- pointment as they receive what they desire. We nd transitional life events, such as marriage, may trigger an opportunity to learn about brands as individu- als face a clean slate upon which to craft a new identity. Furthermore, brand adoption within new families may reect early or late brand learning and provides oppor- tunities for retailers to retain existing consumers and encourage others through switching behaviors in support of family identity presentation. This nding suggests an opportunity for retailers to educate consumers about brands within the portfolio which may support distinct life transitions. As consumers transition through life stages, retailers should demonstrate how different brands within the portfolio may facilitate the performance of various family roles, such as spouse, parent, or host. We nd how consumers learn about brands is inuenced by the choice of channel, and specically the retail outlet. For retailers participating as orchestrators of the registry ritual, we nd it is necessary to have a distinct service point of view, and to provide essential employee training to capture revenues from a (somewhat) captive audi- ence of gift-givers. Finally, the registry ritual facilitates interpersonal relationships in support of life transitions through the marketplace. As transition becomes a modal consumer experience, marketers have an opportunity to extend the registry franchise to a variety of signicant life passages. The market is prevalent in wedding celebrations, and especially gift giving which facilitates the forging of social bonds between the betrothed, kin and kith. In the present study, we nd roles for marketers generally, and retailers specically, in the registry ritual which promote efcacy in gift giving, and provide glue for interpersonal relationships. There are many ceremonies of transition that lend themselves to ritual. e expect that market- ers will identify additional opportunities to exploit the power of gift giving to enrich social relations, and sacral- ize commercial institutions at an accelerated pace in the experience economy. Trademark Strategy in the Internet Age: Customer Hijacking and the Doctrine of Initial Interest Confusion Clifford D. Scott Initial Interest Confusion (IIC) is a legal doctrine affect- ing any rm doing business on the Internet. Traditional trademark law concerned itself with confusion at the instant of product purchase, only. The doctrine of Initial Interest Confusion greatly expands the scope of trade- mark protection by considering confusion at any point within the customers purchase process. The law now recognizes what Marketers have discussed and dissected for decades: purchase is a process, not an instant. Making use of anothers trademark to sidetrack a consumer at any point in that process may now be considered legally actionable. This doctrinal shift brings legal reasoning far more in line with established Marketing thought and extends the rms ability to protect its trademarks and its customer franchise. IIC may come into play any time a customer uses a search engine to locate a product or rm. Internet search engines allow rapid access to customers -and the P4 Executive Summaries/ Journal of Retailing 89 (2, 2013) P1P6 potential for rapid loss of customers. Certain search engine optimization techniques can allow a new rm to co-opt an established rms customer equity. These techniques harness the established rms trademarks, directly using this intellectual property to divert custom- ers of the established rm prior to the moment of sale. For example, one popular technique involves sprinkling a sites hidden HTML code, or text within the site itself, with the market leaders trademarks. Search engines will often respond to these keywords by displaying the new rms site when a consumer searches for the established rms trademark, effectively leveraging the established rms customer equity to a competitors gain. In this article, IIC is explained and illustrated using sev- eral recent business cases. Defenses to an IIC claim are also explained. In light of the potential claims and poten- tial defenses, specic tactical suggestions are offered, both for the rm attempting to protect its trademarks, and for the rm attempting to break into a new market. Building-Up versus Paring-Down: Consumer Responses to Recommendations When Customizing Brent Coker, Anish Nagpal The emergence of the internet as a retail channel has given rise for rms to offer customization of their products. By offering customization of their products, rms are able to more closely match their offerings to customer needs. Dell for example identied a unique opportunity to offer customers customized computers, and Nike began offering customized shoes. Nowadays it is possible to customize a wide variety of products online from cars to apparel. When offering a set of options from which to choose from, rms will often make recommendations to ease decision making. For example, Dell might recommend certain levels of memory and processor speed for a customized computer. In this research we examined how decisions to customize products are inuenced by these recommendations. In four experiments we found that people will customize products differently depend- ing on the customization strategy used, and where the recommendation is made in comparison to the base conguration. One customization strategy for a vendor to offer is a base model, where a customer is able to add options as they desire. If the vendor offers a recommendation mid-way between the base conguration and the highest most expensive option available, we nd that the person customizing will tend to choose a more expensive option than if no recommendation was given. However, if the vendor offers a recommendation past the mid-way point, and closer to the maximum price option, then mistrust sets in and the customizer does not accept the recom- mendation. The result is a customized product about the same price as if no recommendation is offered. Another customization strategy is to offer a fully fea- tured model, and invite the customer to remove features until they reach their desired conguration. If the vendor offers a recommendation mid-way between the most expensive option and least expensive option, we nd that the customizer does not respond to the recommendation. The result is a congured option that is no different to when no recommendation is offered at all. However, if the vendor offers a recommendation that is past the mid-point, and closer to the cheapest option, we nd the customizer does respond to the recommendation, result- ing in a much cheaper congured product than when no recommendation is offered. Collectively our results suggest caution to vendors who offer customized products and recommendations, to avoid mistrust. If the aim of the vendor is to maximize prots, then the preferred strategy is to offer a recom- mendation no higher than mid-point when offering the cheapest model to add features to. If the vendor is offering a fully featured model with options to remove features, then the preferred strategy is to not offer a rec- ommendation below the point. Engaging Dissatised Retail Employees to Voice Promotive Ideas: The Role of Continuance Commitment Jeffrey P. Boichuk, Bulent Menguc A recent industry survey, conducted by Mercer LLC at the end of 2010, suggests that employee satisfaction remains a major concern in business today an estimated 32 percent of U.S. employees are ready to quit. Another survey, conducted globally by BlessingWhite Inc. in 2011, similarly found that only 31 percent of employees feel engaged in their jobs. We propose that institutional factors such as low pay and limited upward mobility are contributing to an epidemic of dissatised retail employees and that studies need to begin uncovering mechanisms through which retailers can engage these employees. Engaging Dissatised Retail Employees to Voice Promotive Ideas: The Role of Continuance Commitment is the rst study of this kind. The form of engagement that we place under the microscope is retail employees voice behaviors, or voluntary communication efforts directed at challenging the status quo of a work unit through the suggestion of creative and promotive solu- tions. Retail employees who raise their voices in this manner are critical to the longevity of retail organiza- tions, because such feedback constitutes an active and constructive response to job dissatisfaction. Alternative responses that are undesirable include quitting and disengagement. The problem we tackle is that dissatised retail employ- ees are generally less likely to engage in voice behaviors than their satised counterparts. How, then, can retailers engage dissatised retail employees to speak up and share their ideas for improvement? A reasonable outlet would seem to be through supervisors support. That is, a retailer could ask its supervisors to actively seek out retail employees problems and expect these employees to voice their ideas in return. However, our results, from a eld study and a controlled experiment, suggest that support should only be provided if dissatised retail employees are also committed to their organization out of necessity. Otherwise, support ends up inducing levels of retail employee voice that are not signicantly different than would be the case had the support been withheld, yielding the support a misallocation of effort. This form of commitment that we nd to be crucial, continuance commitment, differs from affective com- mitment (i.e., caring about the fate of an organization) and normative commitment (i.e., feeling a sense of obligation to an organization). It is a retail employees calculative attachment to his or her organization. It is the feeling of being stuck in ones current organiza- tion, either because alternative employment options are unavailable or because organization-specic skills or investments are high. According to our results, this form of commitment is necessary to ensure that retail employees are receptive to supervisor support. As such, we advise retail managers to continuously conduct mental checklists to determine whether their supportive efforts should be provided to retail employees who are dissatised. Such a checklist should take into consider- ation the economic conditions of their industry and the retail employees level of organization-specic skills and investments. Since our results suggest that retail employees with one foot out the door will be unrecep- tive to supervisor support, supervisors should allocate their efforts elsewhere if the continuance commitment of a given retail employee is deemed to be low. Further recommendations and details about the eld study and controlled experiment employed in this paper can be found within the article. Examining the Role of Franchisee Normative Expectations in Relationship Evaluation Debra Grace, Scott Weaven, Lorelle Frazer, Jeff Giddings Franchising is the preferred business model for many prospective small business owners as buying into an established brand, with established business systems/ processes and customer base, signicantly reduces the perceived risk associated with small business start-up. In fact, many individuals are often sold on the idea of franchising (as a business model) long before they are sold on an individual franchisor (brand). On this basis, there is signicant onus on the franchising business format to perform as expected, regardless of the chosen franchising system (i.e., brand). Maximizing franchisee satisfaction and minimizing per- ceptions of conict is of critical importance to franchi- sors who strive to build sustainable franchising rela- tionships. However, to date, the literature has not fully considered these key relational outcomes within the context of a franchisees expectations regarding the key advantages afforded by the franchising business model (referred to as normative expectations). To this end, the present investigation was designed to examine how a franchisees perception of relational outcomes (i.e., sat- isfaction and conict) and their antecedents (perceived support and communication openness) is evaluated in light of their (dis)conrmation of normative expectations (i.e., expectations of the franchising business model). In order to orchestrate this investigation, a national on-line survey was conducted and this resulted in 339 complete responses from Australian franchisees. The ndings indicate that the expectations that franchi- sees have of the franchising business model do, indeed, effect their subsequent evaluations of the franchise system (i.e., brand) they have bought into. This makes sense, given that the only frame of reference franchisees have, in evaluating their chosen business model, resides within the performance of their individual franchi- sor. This creates a challenge for franchisors, who are (unknowingly) faced with the problem of not only deliv- ering on the promises that they have explicitly made to their franchisee, but also to the promise implicitly perceived by the franchisee in relation to franchising (i.e., the business model). The ndings demonstrate that factors (i.e., franchisee expectations of franchising), which are not fully controlled by the franchisor, may well erode potential satisfaction of their franchisees and enhance the frequency and intensity of conict within the relationship. Executive Summaries/ Journal of Retailing 89 (2, 2013) P1P6 P5 The nding prompts the following question. Are the very characteristics of the franchising business model, that make it so attractive to potential entrepreneurs, partially responsible for relational break-downs, often reported in the franchising literature? We argue, here, that the promises (i.e., advantages) of the franchising busi- ness model may, in fact, breed complacency on the part of the franchisee. For example, due to the franchisees perception of operating within a comfort zone of a tried and tested business arrangement, it may be that, unknowingly, their own lack of contribution or personal effort within the business is, partially responsible for any conict escalation, relational dissatisfaction, or both states, they may experience. Future research needs to investigate this notion. P6 Executive Summaries/ Journal of Retailing 89 (2, 2013) P1P6