做一个热门产品:一个信号解释饥饿营销策略【外文翻译】 .doc
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1、外文翻译The Making of a “Hot Product”: A Signaling Explanation of MarketersScarcity StrategyAuthor: Axel Stock, Subramanian BalachanderAbstract: Every marketers dream is to create a “hot product” that customers would absolutely want to have, thus generating considerable profit to the marketer. According
2、 to one school of thought, marketers should make products hard to get in order to create really hot products. In this paper, using a game-theoretic model, we investigate if such scarcity strategies can indeed be optimal. While a scarcity strategy may appear to be a viable approach for making a firms
3、 product successful, further analysis raises some puzzling issues. In particular, it is not clear why a firm would not increase its price to get demand and supply in sync and increase its profit in the process. We therefore offer a signaling explanation for the optimality of such strategies and show
4、 that a high-quality seller may optimally choose to make the product scarce in order to credibly signal the quality of its product to uninformed customers. Our analysis indicates that a high-quality seller optimally employs scarcity as a signaling device in product markets that are characterized, ce
5、teris paribus, by a small difference in marginal cost between high- and low-quality products, a low reservation price for a low-quality product, a greater heterogeneity in reservation prices for a high-quality product, and a moderate number of informed consumers. Our results provide a rationale for
6、the fact that scarcity strategies are usually observed for discretionary or specialty products, but not for commodity products, staple products, or new-to-the-world products.Key words: marketing strategy; signaling; pricing research; product managementIn the fall of 2000 Sonys Playstation 2 was cons
7、idered one of the hottest consumer electronics products available (Retailing Today 2000). This was partly due to its functionality, but even more so because limited product availability was causing a buying frenzy. Officially, component problems were blamed for this shortage, but surprisingly simila
8、r problems had occurred during the introduction of the Playstation 2 to the Japanese market eight months earlier. Many industry observers wondered if supply problems were a tongue-in-cheek explanation of a deliberate strategy of shortage to create more hype for the product (Retailing Today 2000). Th
9、us, a manager at a retail store of the Toys R Us chain commented, “I think its just a marketing thing to get people really excited” (The San Francisco Chronicle 2000, p. A17). The example of Sonys Playstation 2 does not stand alone. Nintendos Game Boy cartridges were similarly hard to get and became
10、 a “hot” product when they were introduced (The Wall Street Journal 1989). Scarcity and accompanying hype is also a common practice in the automotive industry, as was experienced by purchasers of Miatas, Harleys, New Beetles, and PT Cruisers. More recently, consumers signed up on waiting lists for h
11、ard-to-get cars such as the Mercedes CLK320 convertible, but car makers were not exactly rushing to speed up production (The Wall Street Journal 1999). A similar phenomenon can be observed in the world of designer fashion with consumers getting in line “for the privilege of paying $750 for falls mos
12、t-wanted Prada boots” (The Globe and Mail 1999). Informed consumers get on these waiting lists early and are able to purchase the products, while those coming later may be unable to purchase even if they are willing to pay the price. The above examples suggest perhaps a conscious strategy on the par
13、t of marketers to use product scarcity as a marketing tool. Indeed, according to Ramirez (The New YorkT imes 1989, p. D1), Nintendos marketing strategy for its video games was to “both stimulate demand and ration its availability, insuring that Nintendo games are far more desired than readily obtain
14、able.”Further, two recent articles in the Harvard Business Review have given greater prominence to such “scarcity” strategies by suggesting that these be part of the marketers toolkit (Dye 2000, Brown 2001). However, when subject to hard-nosed analysis, the scarcity strategy employed by Sony and the
15、 other firms raises some puzzling issues. Why would the firm not increase its introductory price in order to get demand and supply in sync, and increase its profit in the process? At that time, Sonys Playstation2 was being traded for up to 300% of its price in auctions, which suggests that Sony was
16、leaving some money on the table. Alternatively, firms could delay introduction of the product until they have accumulated enough inventory to meet the demand. Thus, it is not clear that a firm benefits from scarcity strategies, especially if it underproduces a “hot” product. Also, if scarcity is suc
17、h an effective marketing strategy, why is it not used more extensively?In this paper, we offer a signaling explanation for this puzzling phenomenon. Using a model similar to Bagwell and Riordan (1991), we consider a seller with private information about quality facing both informed (expert) and unin
18、formed consumers, with the informed consumers buying earlier than the uninformed consumers. To signal quality to uninformed consumers, the seller could choose to make the product scarce (through the choice of production quantity) or use price or uninformative advertising as signals. We then show tha
19、t product scarcity can be an optimal strategy for a seller to credibly signal to uninformed consumers that the products quality is high. Signaling of quality through price has received considerable attention in the marketing literature (Rao and Monroe 1989, Bagwell and Riordan 1991, Moorthy and Srin
20、ivasan 1995). Our model extends the strategy space by allowing for signaling with scarcity. Interestingly, we show that signaling through scarcity can be more efficient than price under some conditions. The key to the intuition is that scarcity affects only later buyers as the seller runs out of the
21、 product, while a price distortion affects all buyers. Because the later buyers are the uninformed consumers in our model, a scarcity strategy affects only the sales from such consumers, unlike a signal produced by price distortion. Furthermore, because a low-quality seller who pretends to offer a h
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