Behavioral Consequences of Dynamic Pricing - E-book - PDF

Edition en anglais

David Prakash

,

Martin Spann

Note moyenne 
David Prakash et Martin Spann - Behavioral Consequences of Dynamic Pricing.
Digital technologies are driving the application of dynamic pricing. Today, this pricing strategy is used not only for perishable products such as flights... Lire la suite
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Résumé

Digital technologies are driving the application of dynamic pricing. Today, this pricing strategy is used not only for perishable products such as flights or hotel rooms, but for almost any product or service category. With dynamic pricing, retailers frequently adjust their prices over time to respond to factors such as demand, their supply and that of competitors, or the time of sale. Additionally, dynamic pricing allows retailers to take advantage of a large share of consumers' willingness to pay while avoiding losses from unsold products.
Ultimately, this can lead to an increase in revenue and profit. However, the application of dynamic pricing comes with great challenges. In addition to the technological implementation, companies have to take into account that dynamic pricing can cause complex and unintended behavioral consequences on the consumer side. The key objective of this dissertation is to provide a deeper understanding of the impact of dynamic pricing on consumer behavior.
To this end, this dissertation presents insights from four perspectives. First, how reference prices as a critical component in purchase decisions are operationalized. Second, how customers search for products priced dynamically, differentiated by business and private customers, as well as by different devices used for the search. Third, whether and how dynamic pricing influences the impact of internal reference prices on purchase decisions.
Finally, this dissertation demonstrates that consumers perceive price changes as personalized in different purchase contexts, leading to reduced perceptions of fairness and undesirable behavioral consequences.

Caractéristiques

  • Caractéristiques du format PDF
    • Pages
      154
    • Taille
      3 256 Ko
    • Protection num.
      Digital Watermarking

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À propos des auteurs

David Z. Prakash was a research assistant at the Institute of Electronic Commerce and Digital Markets at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany and received his PhD from this institution in 2022. He holds a B. Sc. in International Economics and European Studies from the Karl-Theodor University Tübingen (2014) as well as a M. Sc. in Economics (2016) and a Master of Business Research (2019) from the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. Martin Spann is a Professor of Electronic Commerce and Digital Markets at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) München - Munich School of Management.
Further, he serves as Dean of the LMU Munich School of Management, as board member of the Center for Digital Technology and Management (CDTM) and the Internet Business Cluster (IBC). He is a member of the National Research Council of the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF). He studied Economics at the University of Kiel and earned his PhD (2002) as well as his Habilitation (2005) from Goethe University Frankfurt.
From 2005 to 2010, he was a Professor of Marketing and Innovation at the University of Passau.

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