Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Advertising Pricing'
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Anderson, Eric T. (Eric Thomas). "Essays on pricing and advertising." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/11879.
Full textBaardman, Lennart. "Analytics in promotional pricing and advertising." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2019. https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/122389.
Full textThesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, Operations Research Center, 2019
Cataloged from student-submitted PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 191-198).
Big data and the internet are shifting the paradigm in promotional pricing and advertising. The amount of readily available data from both point-of-sale systems and web cookies has grown, enabling a shift from qualitative design to quantitative tools. In this work, we address how firms can utilize the power of analytics to maximize profits in both their offline and online channels. First, we consider an online setting, in which an advertiser can target ads to the customer in question. The goal of the advertiser is to determine how to target the right audience with their ads. We study this problem as a Multi-Armed Bandit problem with periodic budgets, and develop an Optimistic-Robust Learning algorithm with bounded expected regret. Practically, simulations on synthetic and real-world ad data show that the algorithm reduces regret by at least 10-20% compared to benchmarks.
Second, we consider an offline setting, in which a retailer can boost profits through the use of promotion vehicles such as flyers and commercials. The goal of the retailer is to decide how to schedule the right promotion vehicles for their products. We model the problem as a non-linear bipartite matching-type problem, and develop provably-good algorithms: a greedy algorithm and an approximate integer program of polynomial size. From a practical perspective, we test our methods on actual data and show potential profit increases of 2-9%. Third, we explore a supply chain setting, in which a supplier offers vendor funds to a retailer who promotionally prices the product to the customer. Vendor funds are trade deals in which a supplier offers a retailer a short-term discount on a specific product, encouraging the retailer to discount the product.
We model the problem as a bilevel optimization model and show that a pass-through constrained vendor fund mitigates forward-buying and coordinates the supply chain on the short term. Finally, we present a pilot study on the impact of promotional pricing on retail profits. We assess the potential impact of our promotion planning tool on historical data from a large retailer. Our results suggest a 9.94% profit improvement for the retailer.
by Lennart Baardman.
Ph. D.
Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, Operations Research Center
Thöne, Miriam [Verfasser]. "Essays on Advertising and Pricing Strategies in Digital Markets / Miriam Thöne." Düsseldorf : Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek der Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, 2017. http://d-nb.info/113811443X/34.
Full textQiao, Liang. "Pricing and advertising responses of national brands to store brand introduction /." May be available electronically:, 2007. http://proquest.umi.com/login?COPT=REJTPTU1MTUmSU5UPTAmVkVSPTI=&clientId=12498.
Full textSchlosser, Rainer. "Six essays on stochastic and deterministic dynamic pricing and advertising models." Doctoral thesis, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Fakultät, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.18452/16973.
Full textThe cumulative dissertation deals with stochastic and deterministic dynamic sales models for durable as well as perishable products. The models analyzed are characterized by simultaneous dynamic pricing and advertising controls in continuous time and are in line with recent developments in dynamic pricing. They include the modeling of multi-dimensional decisions and take (i) time dependencies, (ii) adoption effects (iii), competitive settings and (iv) risk aversion, explicitly into account. For special cases with isoelastic demand functions as well as with exponential ones explicit solution formulas of the optimal pricing and advertising feedback controls are derived. Moreover, optimally controlled sales processes are analytically described. In particular, the distribution of profits, the expected evolution of prices as well as inventory levels are analyzed in detail and sensitivity results are obtained. Furthermore, we consider the question whether or not monopolistic policies are socially efficient; in special cases, we propose taxation/subsidy mechanisms to establish efficiency. The results are presented in six articles and provide economic insights into a variety of dynamic sales applications of the business world, especially in the area of e-commerce.
Prasad, Ashutosh. "Essays on product-introduction timing, pricing, advertising and piracy in contemporary media /." Digital version accessible at:, 1999. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/main.
Full textWeber, Martin. "Optimal inventory control in the presence of dynamic pricing and dynamic advertising." Doctoral thesis, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.18452/17339.
Full textThis dissertation analyzes the optimal coordination of dynamic pricing, dynamic advertising, and inventory management. We consider different optimization problems for a monopolistic retailer who faces a time-dependent deterministic demand. In Chapter 2, we generalize the model of Rajan et al. (1992). The retailer is allowed to choose a dynamic price, a dynamic advertising rate, and the inventory capacity for a sales period of fixed length so that the present value of revenue minus inventory, purchasing and (nonlinear) advertising costs is maximized; in addition, the inventory deteriorates at an exponential rate. We derive the optimal dynamic price-advertising control and the optimal capacity and also consider partially static cases. For the optimally controlled dynamic model we carry out a sensitivity analysis with respect to the model parameters and we compare the results of the dynamic model with those of the partially static models. In Chapter 3, we interpret the sales process as the controlled adoption process of a new product and the inventory capacity as untapped market share. The initial state is assumed to be exogenously given and the demand depends on the current state of the system. We exclude, however, deterioration effects and any other costs but the cost of advertising. We derive the optimal controls using a different technique than Helmes et al. (2013) - we apply Pontryagin’s maximum principle. As an interesting application we consider the controlled von Bertalanffy model. In Chapter 4, we extend the analysis of one-period models to multi-period and longterm average models. Assuming that the optimal controls derived in Chapter 2 and Chapter 3 are applied throughout a cycle, we treat the cycle length and the capacity as decision variables. We derive conditions that ensure the existence of an optimal pair of cycle length and capacity. Various examples and illustrations are given, and structural properties of the optimal pair are verified.
Kurad, Astrid [Verfasser]. "Advertising pricing in German consumer magazine industry : an industrial economic analysis of market concentration, advertising prices, and their interrelations / Astrid Kurad." Flensburg : Zentrale Hochschulbibliothek Flensburg, 2008. http://d-nb.info/101828009X/34.
Full textSimbanegavi, Witness. "Price discrimination, advertising and competition." Doctoral thesis, Stockholm : Economic Research Institute, Stockholm School of Economics, (EFI), 2005. http://www.hhs.se/efi/summary/684.htm.
Full textMolinari, Benedetto. "Sticky information and non-pricing policies in DSGE models." Doctoral thesis, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10803/7379.
Full textEn la segunda parte se presentan nuevas evidencias sobre la publicidad agregada en EE.UU. y se estudian los efectos de la publicidad en la economía usando un modelo dinámico estocástico de equilibrio general. En particular, el capitulo 2 se enfoca en las relaciones de corto plazo entre las mas comunes variables macroeconómicas - consumo agregado, producto interno bruto, totalidad de horas trabajadas en la economía - y la publicidad agregada, con particular atención a la relación de causalidad entre publicidad y consumo. En cambio, el capitulo 3 se enfoca sobre las relaciones de largo plazo, enseñando como la publicidad agregada afecte el nivel de trabajo de la economía. A través del modelo presentado en el capitulo 2, se demuestra que un mayor nivel de publicidad implica un mayor números de oras trabajadas asociadas con un menor nivel de bienestar por los consumidores.
This thesis is organized in two parts. In the first one, I seek to understand the relationship between frictions in information flows among firms and inflation persistence. To this end, I present a novel estimator for the Sticky Information Phillips Curve (Mankiw and Reis, 2002), and I use it to estimate this model with U.S. postwar data. The main result is that the Sticky Information Phillips Curve can match inflation persistence only at the cost of mispredicting inflation variance. I conclude that the Sticky Information Phillips Curve is a valid model to explain inflation persistence but not an overall valid theory of inflation.
The second part presents new evidence about aggregate advertising expenditures in U.S., and analyzes the effect of advertising in the aggregate economy by the mean of a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model. Chapter 2 focuses on the short run impact of advertising on the aggregate dynamics, and shows that an increase in aggregate advertising significantly increases the aggregate consumption. Chapter 3 focuses on the long run effects of advertising on the labor supply, showing that in economies where aggregate advertising is higher, agents supply more hours of works and are generally worse off in terms of welfare.
Weber, Martin [Verfasser], Kurt [Akademischer Betreuer] Helmes, and Sigrid [Akademischer Betreuer] Müller. "Optimal inventory control in the presence of dynamic pricing and dynamic advertising / Martin Weber. Gutachter: Kurt Helmes ; Sigrid Müller." Berlin : Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, 2015. http://d-nb.info/1078309647/34.
Full textSchlosser, Rainer [Verfasser], Kurt [Akademischer Betreuer] Helmes, and Michael C. [Akademischer Betreuer] Burda. "Six essays on stochastic and deterministic dynamic pricing and advertising models / Rainer Schlosser. Gutachter: Kurt Helmes ; Michael C. Burda." Berlin : Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Fakultät, 2014. http://d-nb.info/1052060617/34.
Full textHrabec, Dušan. "Mathematical Programs for Dynamic Pricing - Demand Based Management." Doctoral thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Fakulta strojního inženýrství, 2017. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-263401.
Full textGunnarsson, Tomas, and Alfred Lindén. "The Swedish Gambling Monopoly : Impacts from Internet competition on Svenska Spel’s prices and advertising expenses." Thesis, Jönköping University, JIBS, Economics, 2008. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-1200.
Full textWith the fast progress of the Internet the Swedish gambling monopoly is no longer able to control the market. Gambling companies licensed in foreign countries can compete with Svenska Spel via the Internet offering lower prices. The authors investigated whether the competition has lead Svenska Spel to lower their prices. Focus has been put on the years 2000-2006 and on Svenska Spel’s sports betting section Oddset since competition here is high. To help analysing Svenska Spel’s pricing behaviour the dynamic limit pricing model of optimal pricing when faced with entry was used.
The effect on Svenska Spel´s advertising expenditures following the competition was also investigated. For this part A dynamic model of advertising and market shares was used.
The analysis indicates that when the number of firms on the market increased, prices decreased and Svenska Spel’s advertising expenses increased.
Hyun, Soeun. "The effects of contextual cues on consumers' perceptions of comparative price advertisments." Diss., Virginia Tech, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/40417.
Full textPh. D.
Genchev, Bogdan Georgiev. "Essays in Industrial Organization and Health Economics:." Thesis, Boston College, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108915.
Full textThe unifying theme of this dissertation is the growing importance of pharmaceutical products in health care and in society more broadly. The first two chapters use structural and reduced-form models to study the effects of various policies on the choice and utilization of prescription drugs. The third chapter surveys the empirical literature on the competitive effects of a class of pricing arrangements used in the pharmaceutical and many other industries. Chapter 1. One of the criticisms leveled against direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription drugs is that it overemphasizes the use of pharmaceuticals at the expense of other forms of treatment. In “Choice of Depression Treatment: Advertising Spillovers in a Model with Complementarity,” I study how antidepressant TV ads affect demand for psychotherapy. Antidepressant advertising can increase demand for therapy if the products are complements or if advertising has spillover effects. To disentangle the different channels, I develop a discrete-choice demand model that allows for complementarity between products, advertising spillovers, and flexible unobserved preference heterogeneity. Individual-level panel data on treatment choices and price variation allow me to separately identify complementarity and correlated preferences, whereas the average price of TV advertising, used as an instrument, identifies the causal effect of antidepressant ads on demand for each product. The results indicate that even though antidepressants and psychotherapy are substitutes, drug advertising increases demand for therapy through a spillover effect. Allowing for time-invariant and time-varying unobservables that can be correlated across products critically affects the estimated degree of complementarity and advertising elasticities. Chapter 2. While prescription drugs have enabled the cost-effective treatment of a myriad of diseases, many pharmaceuticals come with potential for abuse. The growing use of opioid medications for chronic pain led to widespread misuse, addiction, and skyrocketing overdose death rates. In “Did Plain-Vanilla Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs Reduce Opioid Use? Evidence from Privately Insured Patients,” I explore whether prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) with no registration or use mandates were effective in reducing the utilization of opioid prescription drugs. Exploiting the staggered introduction of such programs between 2008 and 2010, I use difference-in-differences to estimate their causal effect on the number of prescriptions, days supply, and dosage per capita. Based on data from privately insured adults, the estimation results reveal that PDMPs successfully reduced opioid utilization, especially of high-dosage prescriptions. A battery of robustness checks suggests that the estimated effects are caused by the PDMPs and not by confounding factors such as broader trends in health care, attrition, out-of-state purchases, or other anti-opioid policies. Chapter 3. The assumption that buyers pay the same price for each unit of the good they purchase underlies many economic analyses. However, linear pricing is one of many pricing arrangements used in practice. In “Empirical Evidence on Conditional Pricing Practices: A Review,” Julie Holland Mortimer and I review the existing empirical studies on the competitive impact of conditional pricing practices (CPPs), under which the price of a product may depend on a quantity, share, bundling, or other requirement. Examples of CPPs include all-units and loyalty discounts, full-line forcing contracts, and exclusivity arrangements. A common thread unifying the empirical literature is that CPPs often have both procompetitive and anticompetitive effects and that their net effect may depend on the details of the arrangements and the characteristics of the markets in which they are used
Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2020
Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Discipline: Economics
Rousset, Xavier. "La tarification dynamique, l'utile et le juste Seasonal factors and marketing mix: Literature survey and proposed guidelines An analytical framework for retailer price and advertising decisions for products with temperature-sensitive demand The impact of outdoor temperature on pricing and advertising policies for weather-sensitive products Tarification dynamique en ligne et éthicalité perçue par le consommateur : synthèse et voies de recherche Designing algorithmic dynamic pricing from an ethical perspective Are consumers vulnerable to algorithmic dynamic pricing? An empirical investigation." Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019USPCB039.
Full textThis PhD thesis brings together different research projects on dynamic pricing. The objective of the thesis, located at the interface of economics, management sciences and political sciences, is twofold: first, to study the determinants and conditions of use of dynamic pricing at the level of firm in a perspective of maximizing its profits and, on the other hand, to show how, at a collective level, the consideration of ethical issues in the study of dynamic pricing allows a better understanding of its scope. Our contributions, both theoretical and empirical, are presented in two parts. Part 1 focuses on economic efficiency (point of view of the useful), and asks questions about the maximization of profit considerations related to dynamic pricing. From the study of so-called weather-sensitive products in the physical distribution channels, we present a literature review that introduces the dynamic adaptation of the price to factors influencing the demand and we propose a theoretical model of dynamic adaptation of the price in time following the temperature. We complete this theoretical approach with an empirical study that examines how pricing, exercised dynamically from the firm's point of view in response to external factors, allows it to maximize its interests. Part 2 brings together work on ethical considerations related to dynamic pricing (the point of view of the right). Focusing on online distribution channels, we discuss, on a theoretical level, the potential impact of dynamic pricing on consumers' ethical perception, highlighting potential risks of unfairness or vulnerability that price fixing raises. From an empirical point of view, we thoroughly analyse the determinants of the ethical perception of online dynamic pricing by the consumer, in particular according to the conditions of its setting, as well as the dimensions of vulnerability that concern consumers.The conclusion of the thesis brings together future lines of research on the deepening of the measurement of perceived ethics, on the potentialities of the hybridization of economic science with ethics on a subject such as dynamic pricing and on the considerations we have seen on the link between dynamic pricing and the revelation of exchange value (point of view of the true)
Столяр, Ю. В. "Удосконалення маркетингової політики туристичних підприємств (на прикладі туристичного агентства «Поїхали з нами»)." Thesis, Одеський національний економічний університет, 2021. http://local.lib/diploma/Stolyar.pdf.
Full textУ роботі розглядаються теоретичні аспекти інноваційної діяльності у сфері туристичного маркетингу на підприємстві. Висвітлено сутність та типи інноваційної діяльності в процесі ринкового просування туристичних продуктів. Досліджено існуючі методики планування та бюджетування маркетингової діяльності суб’єктів туристичного бізнесу, аналізує чинники ефективності політики підприємства у цій сфері. Проведено комплексний аналіз фінансово-господарською діяльності та маркетингової діяльності туристичного агентства «Поїхали з нами». Запропоновано шляхи впровадження маркетингових інновацій, як способу стимулювання попиту туристів.
The paper considers the theoretical aspects of innovation in the field of tourism marketing at the enterprise. The essence and types of innovative activity in the process of market promotion of tourist products are highlighted. The existing methods of planning and budgeting of marketing activities of tourism business entities are studied, the factors of efficiency of the enterprise policy in this sphere are analyzed. A comprehensive analysis of financial and economic activities and marketing activities of the travel agency "let's go with us". Ways of introduction of marketing innovations as a way of stimulation of demand of tourists are offered.
Hai, Xiaodong. "Marché et tarification des plateformes de vente d'applications mobiles comme marchés bifaces : analyse comparée France-Chine." Thesis, Paris, ENST, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014ENST0001/document.
Full textMobile app is becoming an important mobile internet access channel. Three groups of end users affiliated with two Two-sided platforms in the mobile app market have attracted considerable attention. App store platform (App-store) is an app distribution platform connected with developers and users. App ad platform (Ad-store) supplies advertising services for advertisers through developers’ apps. Developers, users and advertisers are end users. Mobile app market is a complicated two-sided market. There are widespread and interactive network externalities. The study focuses on the pricing strategies for the app store platform. App-store shares paid app sales and in-app purchase revenues with developers. Ad-store shares in-app advertising revenues with developers. The App-store platform implements asymmetric pricing to developer side and user side. Developer side is the subsidy side as well as the revenue side for App-store platform. Mobile device purchasing cost constitutes a particular App-store platform pricing determinant. Membership fees are negligible in the mobile app market. Usage fee is workable. It is a duopoly in the mobile app market. Apple and Google are the two giants with distinct business models. Both Apple’s mobile device sales model and Google’s in-app advertising model are extremely successful. App-store, Ad-store and mobile devices are the three key profit makers in this market. Vertical integration inside this ecosystem will generate considerable revenues. Chinese users have higher price elasticity of demand and they are particularly sensitive to the app prices when compared with the French
López, Dawn Ricardo José. "Modélisation stochastique et analyse des données pour la diffusion d'information dans les plateformes sociales en ligne." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2023. https://accesdistant.sorbonne-universite.fr/login?url=https://theses-intra.sorbonne-universite.fr/2023SORUS036.pdf.
Full textInfluencer marketing has become a thriving industry with a global market value expected to reach 15 billion dollars by 2022. The advertising problem that such agencies face is the following: given a monetary budget find a set of appropriate influencers that can create and publish posts of various types (e.g. text, image, video) for the promotion of a target product. The campaign's objective is to maximize across one or multiple online social platforms some impact metric of interest, e.g. number of impressions, sales (ROI), or audience reach. In this thesis, we create original continuous formulations of the budgeted influence marketing problem by two frameworks, a static and a dynamic one, based on the advertiser's knowledge of the impact metric, and the nature of the advertiser's decisions over a time horizon. The static model is formulated as a convex program, and we further propose an efficient iterative algorithm based on the Frank-Wolfe method, that converges to the global optimum and has low computational complexity. We also suggest a simpler near-optimal rule of thumb, which can perform well in many practical scenarios. Due to the nature of the dynamic model we cannot solve any more a Network Utility Maximisation problem since that the ROI is unknown, possibly noisy, continuous and costly to evaluate for the advertiser. This approach involves exploration and so, we seek to ensure that there is no destructive exploration, and that each sequential decision by the advertiser improves the outcome of the ROI over time. In this approach, we propose a new algorithm and a new implementation, based on the Bayesian optimization framework to solve our budgeted influence marketing problem under sequential advertiser's decisions over a time horizon. Besides, we propose an empirical observation to avoid the curse of dimensionality. We test our static model, algorithm and the heuristic against several alternatives from the optimization literature as well as standard seed selection methods and validate the superior performance of Frank-Wolfe in execution time and memory, as well as its capability to scale well for problems with very large number (millions) of social users. Finally, we evaluate our dynamic model on a real Twitter data trace and we conclude the feasibility of our model and empirical support of our formulated observation
Hai, Xiaodong. "Marché et tarification des plateformes de vente d'applications mobiles comme marchés bifaces : analyse comparée France-Chine." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris, ENST, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014ENST0001.
Full textMobile app is becoming an important mobile internet access channel. Three groups of end users affiliated with two Two-sided platforms in the mobile app market have attracted considerable attention. App store platform (App-store) is an app distribution platform connected with developers and users. App ad platform (Ad-store) supplies advertising services for advertisers through developers’ apps. Developers, users and advertisers are end users. Mobile app market is a complicated two-sided market. There are widespread and interactive network externalities. The study focuses on the pricing strategies for the app store platform. App-store shares paid app sales and in-app purchase revenues with developers. Ad-store shares in-app advertising revenues with developers. The App-store platform implements asymmetric pricing to developer side and user side. Developer side is the subsidy side as well as the revenue side for App-store platform. Mobile device purchasing cost constitutes a particular App-store platform pricing determinant. Membership fees are negligible in the mobile app market. Usage fee is workable. It is a duopoly in the mobile app market. Apple and Google are the two giants with distinct business models. Both Apple’s mobile device sales model and Google’s in-app advertising model are extremely successful. App-store, Ad-store and mobile devices are the three key profit makers in this market. Vertical integration inside this ecosystem will generate considerable revenues. Chinese users have higher price elasticity of demand and they are particularly sensitive to the app prices when compared with the French
Shu-Ying, Chuang, and 莊樹穎. "The Research on The Pricing Strategies of Internet Advertising." Thesis, 2001. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/20852926164444004402.
Full text銘傳大學
傳播管理研究所
89
The Research on The Pricing Strategies of Internet Advertising Abstract The purposes of this research were to sort out the factors which affect the pricing strategies of Internet advertisement and to compare the pricing concern, the means of charging as well as the pricing strategies among different kinds of websites by survey and depth interviews. Besides, this research observed the difficulties when websites set the prices of Internet ads, and provided some suggestions. According to the result of factor analysis, 29 factors were abstracted into seven dimensions (ordered by their importance)─“the essential condition of the website”, “the commercial mechanism of Internet ads”, “the situation of competition”, “the attribute of users”, “the cost of website”, “the macro-economic environment”, and “the ad-pricing of traditional media”. After comparing all kinds of website, this study found that, websites with different attribution were shown significant differences in three dimensions─“the cost of website”, “the macro-economic environment”, and “the ad-pricing of traditional media”. Apparently, when websites with different attributions set their prices of advertisement, the factors they concern are different. CPM (Cost Per Mille) were now the most popular ways of charging, also assisted by the calculation of running time as well as the size of ads. Websites with different attribution are significantly different in the ways of charging. Totally, CPL (Cost Per Leads) is the potentially popular means of all the result-oriented ways. The pricing strategies can be assorted into three categories─ “cost-oriented”, “ competition -oriented”, and “demand-oriented ”. The pricing of Internet ads tends to be “competition-oriented”. Generally, the prices of Internet ads are at the range from CPM 200 to 350, but many websites would drastically reduce because of competition. As a result, the market price is in a mess. The suggestions of this research are as follow─ first, a website should sort out its own competitive advantage, and to create different content / service from others. Second, to avoid bargaining depending on clients, and the agent mechanism in Internet ads should be built up. The forms of report which agencies or websites provide should be standardized. When sponsors integrate the Internet ads into IMC (Integrated Marketing Communication), and the Internet ads become stabilization as an advertising media, the price of Internet ads will be in normal and steady condition. Keywords: Internet ads, the pricing of product, the pricing of Internet ads, the means of charging in Internet ads
Costea, Dana. "Essays on the economics of drug pricing and advertising." 2008. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:3341180.
Full textChen, Ying-An, and 陳盈安. "Appropriate Pricing, Product Quality, and Advertising Strategies in Dual Distribution Channels." Thesis, 2016. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/03711987531917123218.
Full text國立交通大學
資訊管理研究所
104
The competition in dual distribution channels is always discussed in supply chain systems. In addition, the competition becomes keener because of e-tail distribution channels. Therefore, how the supply chain members make their appropriate strategies becomes more important. I have studied manufacturer's and retailer's competitive behavior when manufacturer provide modularization and return policy in dual distribution channels (Chen, 2007). However, customers would not know the product functions before time to market without advertising strategy. It would delay the effect of word-of-mouth marketing, enhance the risk of imitation, and reduce the demand by competitors. On the other hand, we relax the meaning of product quality enhancement and use one price policy which has not been discussed in previous study. Finally, we compare the different models numerically, conduct parametric analysis, and reveal some managerial insights
Hung-Chieh, Chang, and 張閎杰. "Applications of Game theory for the Cooperative advertising and Pricing policies." Thesis, 2010. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/59075181167343570424.
Full text國立屏東商業技術學院
行銷與流通管理系(所)
98
The purpose of this study is to explore how to make the most total profit of the one-on-one channel system with the manipulation of cooperative advertising and pricing strategies. Within the channel system, composed of a single manufacturer and a single retailer, the job of the manufacturer is to raise consumers’ awareness of the products by means of the nationwide advertising; the retailer is to implement the regional advertising and price promotion with the advertising allowance from the manufacturer. In the research model of this study, the consumer demand will be influenced by advertising and retail prices. The impact of the Co-op advertising and product pricing strategies on the total profit of the supply chain, the respective profits of the seller and the buyer, and the consumer demand will be compared and analyzed among the three different models derived from Game theory: Stackelberg, Nash, and cooperation of collaboration, and to explore the elements of game theory to environmental changes and the impact on decision-making implications derived.
Tang, Ying-feng, and 唐英峰. "Optimal pricing when facing a risk-taking speculator with advertising strategy." Thesis, 2011. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/72726648526928417007.
Full text國立中央大學
工業管理研究所
99
We study a monopolist firm of real estate when facing a speculator''s firm selling a fixed capacity. The firm sets a price before demand uncertainty is resolved. Speculators may enter the market purely with the intention of resale, which can be profitable if demand turns out to be high. We also find out that speculator is not risk-neutral, seller will not shut speculator out of the market. Furthermore, we add an advertising strategy in the paper and increase profits of seller and speculator. Consumers may strategically choose when to purchase, and they may also choose to purchase from the firm or from the speculator. There are three findings. First, the presence of speculators increases the firm’s expected profits even though the resale market competes with the firm. Second, Seller will increase profit when facing speculator with advertising strategy in dynamic pricing. Third, seller will earn less profit when facing risk-aversion speculator. On the other hand, seller will earn more profit when facing risk-prone speculator, the overall profits (seller and speculator''s profit) will also increase gradually.
Tseng, Hui-Wen, and 曾慧玟. "The Optimal Advertising and Pricing Strategies for Duopolistic Firms Facing Heterogeneous Consumers." Thesis, 2013. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/08684649079561965920.
Full text國立臺灣大學
商學研究所
101
This research focuses on the optimal advertising and pricing strategies for duopolistic firms facing heterogeneous consumers. We build a game-theoretic model to analyze Hotelling competition with imperfectly informed buyers. The heterogeneity of buyers becomes two-dimensional in this paper---buyers differ in their ideal points for a horizaontally differentiated product, and they also differ in their knowledge about the products offered by the firms. The duopolistic firms decide whether to execute advertising. The results are as the following.(1)Monopolist can deter the potential competitor by executing the informative advertising unless the consumer valuations are very high and monopolist has a lot of loyal consumers. The price variation of pre-monopolist depends on the relative size of the loyal consumers and switchers after executing the informative advertisingif competitor entry the market. (2)The firm with more loyal consumers has strong incentive to execute the advertising in product differentiation unless the consumer valuations are very high and it has a lot of loyal consumers, or the consumer valuations are very low. Advertising in product differentiation may lead to higher prices or lower price depending on the quantities of its loyal consumers. (3)The firm with more loyal consumers has strong incentive to execute the generic advertising increasing all market segments. The generic advertising has no effect on the price. (4).The firm with less loyal consumers has strong incentive to execute the generic advertising only increasing the switchers The generic advertising may lead to higher prices or lower price.
Lin, Jiun-min, and 林竣民. "Pricing and advertising strategy of a monopolistic firm when facing strategic customers." Thesis, 2011. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/97547577735318116624.
Full text國立中央大學
工業管理研究所
99
In this study, we discuss a monopolistic retailer’s pricing and advertising strategies when facing strategic customers. In general, the customers will make a purchase when their utilities are equal or more than the price of product. However, the strategic customers may have the different decisions in the same situation, because they consider the possibility of markdown in the future. The strategic customers will evaluate whether making a purchase right now or waiting for sales when making the decision. Therefore, strategic customers may wait for sales even their utilities are more than the full price when they discover that the waiting is more benefic. We assume a monopolistic retailer sells one product in two periods, and he will keep or reduce the price of product in the second period. The customer’s utility is a probability distribution, and they will make the decision by considering their own utility, the price of product, and the probability of product availability in the second period. We discuss the customer’s behavior and the retailer’s strategies in four cases. In case 1, the customers have no idea about the price of second period and the quantity of product. In case 2, the customers can expect the quantity of product by knowing the utility function. In case 3, the retailer announces the price of second period and the quantity of product. In case 4, the retailer only announces the quantity of product. Furthermore, we assume the customer’s utility will be affected by advertisement, and further discuss the foregoing cases with the effect of advertisement.
Ayar, Musa 1979. "Essays on vertical mergers, advertising, and competitive entry." Thesis, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3821.
Full texttext
Huang, Chun-Kai, and 黃俊凱. "A Study on Optimal Pricing and Advertising Strategy under Product Type and Duopoly." Thesis, 2007. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/50647282917460956586.
Full text國立屏東科技大學
工業管理系所
95
In modern competition market, most of firms produce the products which have a certain degree of differentiation. The price of those products will influence the manager to how to make the price strategy in this kind of environment. Therefore, in the early researches, they only focus on the optimal quantity and price of the different product and does not discuss the relationship of price and quantity. Hence, this paper provides a model to discuss the optimal pricing and advertising strategy under a duopoly market. This paper adopts a Bertrand price competition model and a general of linear demand function to analyze firm’s pricing and advertising behavior under non-cooperative condition. Considering four kinds of product type includes perfect homogeneous, substitutions product, complement product and perfect differentiation, they make a optimal pricing and advertising strategy under maximum profit. Therefore, we demonstrate a numerical example to carry on the analysis of sensitivity for some specific parameters. Finally, we derive six conclusions based on the results of the model formulation and numerical analysis.
Gabriel, Patrícia Ferreira. "ActualSales : the online advertising pricing models and the success of an Online Agency." Master's thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10400.14/13443.
Full textLiao, Chen-Kai, and 廖振凱. "The pricing Competitive relationship between the tourism marketing share and the advertising strategy." Thesis, 2007. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/14504479260695818746.
Full textLin, Yi Shin, and 林怡芯. "A Study of Protection Policy, Pricing and Advertising Strategies in the Digital Products Industry." Thesis, 2006. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/31275921321130164498.
Full text中華大學
科技管理研究所
94
This dissertation uses a game theory approach to investigate three subjects. The first part investigates the effects of protection policy on the prices of the digital products and the hardware, consumer’s surplus and social welfare. We find that in the presence of digital products piracy, an increase in the basic utility of the legal digital products increases consumer’s surplus and social welfare In the case of no digital products piracy, an increase in the unit R&D cost decreases consumer’s surplus and social software. The firm’s digital products price is higher under no digital products piracy and the hardware firm’s hardware price is higher under digital products piracy. When the firm implements digital products protection, consumer’s surplus falls. In addition, our result shows that in general the social welfare level is higher in the presence of digital products piracy. The second part studies the effects of a digital company adopting the different pricing strategies to virtual digital products on the company’s profit, consumer’s surplus and social welfare. We show that after a digital company charging for virtual digital products, a part of users of virtual digital products is unwilling to pay the products; this does not influence the users who use the entity digital products, as a result the consumer's surplus falls. Because the effect of decreasing the consumer's surplus is greater than that of the increasing profit of the company, social welfare decreases. Therefore, the charging strategy is economic efficiency. Finally, the third part compares two competing digital platforms with/without paid. We show that the paid digital platform doesn’t earn excess profits and the relationship between socially - optimal advertising and basic utility of virtual digital products are parabolic-related.
Wang, Wei-Tsung, and 王威琮. "The Impacts of the Keywords Advertising on Firms’ Pricing Strategies and the Co-opetition Relationship." Thesis, 2013. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/37421370152382745356.
Full text國立臺灣師範大學
國際事務與全球戰略研究所
102
Taiwan’s internet advertising industry had been in the market for over a decade. During the years, the industry experienced continual changes brought about by its expanding scales, advancing technologies, widespread network access, and an increasing number of broadband-network users. In particular, internet advertising formats had evolved from Gif animations to Rich Media formats and further to state-of-the-art broadband, multi-media, online commercials. Pay per click (PPC) models, such as search marketing and keyword advertising, gained popularity very quickly as well.With the coming of the age of information explosion, the massive amount of information from around the world has spread through the world by the Internet every day. It also increased the opportunity of the internet advertising being browsed or clicked, and affected the opportunities and effect of internet advertising. Many new types of advertising different from traditional forms appeared because of the interactive of internet. Since Yahoo! released Keyword Advertising services in 2004, Keyword Advertising has existed eighth year. The importance of Keyword Advertising increased with the expansion of market scale, and it also successfully helped many companies to attract more customers and growth performance. The study is based on game theory model to explore Keyword Advertising strategies and pricing strategies of the firms in the monopoly market and the duopoly market. The study found the price consumers are willing to pay and the structure of the consumer will impact Keyword Advertising strategies and pricing strategies of the firms. By analyzing the model, the study found the following results: 1. When the number of new wandering customers being attracted by Keyword advertising is not great, the pricing strategies of the firms will be impacted by the price consumers are willing to pay and firm’s Keyword Advertising strategies. 2. After Keyword Advertising appeared, the firms will be incentives to perform Keyword Advertising. However, in order to avoid the interference between two Keyword Advertisings, the firm in the monopoly market may perform Keyword Advertising only for one product. And it's possible that only one firm perform Keyword Advertising in a duopoly market. 3. When the number of new wandering customers being attracted by Keyword advertising is not great, Keyword advertising will effectively reduce the price competition among firms.
Wu, Che-Chuan, and 吳哲全. "The Optimal Pricing and Advertising Strategies with “Cost-per-Action” Mechanism for Imperfectly Competitive Firms." Thesis, 2010. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/45054326731289487692.
Full textLin, Yi-Chun, and 林奕君. "The Optimal Pricing and Advertising Strategies with "Cost-Per-Click" Mechanism for Imperfectly Competitive Firms." Thesis, 2010. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/44750587651394177182.
Full text國立中興大學
企業管理學系所
98
Internet advertisement is the mass media which is gradually rising and developing in recent years. Relating to advertisement valuation, cost per click is a measurement still in use until now. This shows that cost per click can be highly accepted by the market. A review of previous studies, it can be found that most of the studies emphasized more on the presentation and the effectiveness of internet advertisement, as well as the impact of information on prices, amount of advertisement and social welfare. On the contrary, few studies researched on strategic issues concerning how to choose an advertiser. Therefore, this study based on game theory further research the equilibrium price and advertising strategy under CPC model and different marketing environments. In modeling, this study uses Hotelling’s standard model, manufacturer pricing patterns by cost per click, due to the advertising message across to consumers, there are three kinds of consumers, one who only received the message with high brand equity firms and other one receive messages with low brand equity firms, the last one who receive both these information. Under two kinds of scenario which the gap between brand equities is large and low, this study discuss how the gap between brand equities、degree of brand differentiation、click rate and advertising cost effect equilibrium price and advertising strategies of firms. The following is the study’s main conclusions: 1.When the gap between brand equities is large High (rank) advertising costs has a low hit rate, while manufacturers tend to choose high click rate advertisers and the advertising click through rate and it’s more able to attract companies When the gap among firms greater than brand equity, firms with high brand equity is tend to select high click rate advertiser, whereas low brand equity of the firms tend to choose low click rate advertisers. 2.When the gap between brand equity among firms is small They still get high hit rate even if the advertisers spend advertising cost lower than low hit rate, however, there are still companies who tend to choose low click rate advertisers When the click rate gap between advertisers is large, if the gap between brand equity among firms is smaller then firms tend to choose low click rate of advertiser in order to reduce the level of competition. Oppositely, if the gap between brand equity among firms is larger then firms tend to choose high click rate of advertiser to attract more consumers. When he degree of firm’s brand differentiation is smaller, if the click rate gap between advertisers is large then firms tend to choose advertiser of low click rate. Oppositely, if the click rate gap between advertisers is low then firms tend to choose advertiser of high click rate. The firm can choose advertisers of high click rate to increase demand. Other manufactures can click on rate of advertising options to mitigate the effect of competition.
Lee, Ching-wei, and 李景威. "The Monopolist’s Optimal Allocation of Advertising and Pricing under the Threat of the Potential Firm." Thesis, 2011. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/33023637565845869220.
Full text國立中山大學
經濟學研究所
99
This article aims at exploring how the monopolist determines the optimal allocation of advertising and pricing when he faces the threat of the potential firm entering the market. When consumers are unable to distinguish the quality of a commodity, they will use the weighted average willingness to pay of the high quality and the low quality goods to be the willingness to pay for the commodity. Because that the average willingness to pay is different among consumers of different types, thus the monopolist’s decisions concerning the allocation of advertising budget and pricing will be influenced. We found that no matter what the average willingness to pay is, as long as the monopolist has the ability to compete against price, the expenditure on advertising will be larger; otherwise, the expenditure on advertising will be smaller.
Moreira, Carolina Pires Soares Do Nascimento. "How can fng grow faster via entering and thriving in the online advertising market?: pricing strategy." Master's thesis, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10362/114623.
Full textDeRamus, David W. "R&D, advertising, and profits: Economic theory, empirical evidence, and consequences for transfer pricing policy." 1999. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI9950149.
Full textTsai, Yue-Chen, and 蔡鈺貞. "The Impacts of Product Information, Advertising Appeal and Pricing on Customers’ Purchase Behavior - The Case of MOD." Thesis, 2003. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/68222730801358435872.
Full text東海大學
管理碩士學程在職進修專班
91
This study discusses the product information, advertising appeal and pricing variables that affect consumers’ perceived quality and adoption willingness of MOD. It also discusses the differences of consumers’ characteristics within different adopter categories. Researcher hopes that this study can help firms in marketing strategies. This study adopts the laboratory experimentation and employs 2( two levels of product information context, strong, and general )× 2 ( two levels of pricing, high monthly fee & low pay per view & has budget limitation and low monthly fee & high pay per view & no budget limitation )× 2 ( two levels of advertising appeal, rational and emotional ) between-subjects factorial design. The result of this study shows that the perceived quality of MOD can be divided into operation quality and content quality. The adoption willingness of MOD can be divided into direct adoption willingness and replace adoption willingness. The customers can be classified into three groups:family- entertainmental group, practical group and innovative adoption group. The major conclusions are as follows: 1. Strong product information context leads high replace adoption willingness. 2. Rational advertisement has obviously motivated direct adoption willingness. 3. Education level is an obvious variance within different consumer groups. 4. Perceived quality has positive effect on adoption willingness.
Nair, Radhika Anantharaman Shepherd Marvin D. "Evaluation of factors related to prescription drug expenditures, prescribing trends and physican visits the role of direct-to-consumer advertising expenditures, demographics, and health insurance coverage /." 2005. http://repositories.lib.utexas.edu/bitstream/handle/2152/1642/nairr94530.pdf.
Full textCHEN, YI-CHEN, and 陳奕蓁. "Research on the Relationship between Revenue of Online Advertising and Browser, Browsing Time of Web-site, Pricing and Selling Performance of Online Ads." Thesis, 2008. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/81137233911565846065.
Full text國立交通大學
管理學院碩士在職專班經營管理組
96
Along with developing of high technology on Internet medium, it becomes powerful communication channel for marketer. The way web-site gathering end-consumer who with silimar attribute and easy to track or interact with is making more and more Advertisers trying to include Internet medium into marketing plan. On the other hand, on-line adverting via banner ads is most easy way for web-site owner to convert web-site visitors into revenue if marketers are interested on. So managing a good web-site, gathering enough web-site visitors and making more Advertisers willing to buy on-line ads become first option to web-site owner. Another metrics marketers care about is Click thru Rate of on-line ads. Click thru Rate, a real-time metrics make on-line ads different from all tranditional medium which allow marketers review and fix future plan with end consumer’s input. It became important issue that web-site owner need to maintain while manageing a web-site. Value of this study is trying to help web-site owner knowing more about web-site visitors’ preference of on-line ads and then able to design a good on-line ad’s format contain with impactful image which able to improve the communication between end-user and marketers. For those web-sites which can not rely on powerful on-line ads, then proper suggestions based on statistic and real-world practice will also be provided for web-site owner’s reference.
Cho, Pei-Yi, and 卓佩怡. "A Study of a Marketing-Mix Decision Model for Allocating Advertising Budget and Pricing Target Product-An Example of Green Tea Product from Taiwan." Thesis, 2006. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/33132721327988508521.
Full text輔仁大學
資訊管理學系
94
Facing fast variety of environment, an enterprise must create more profits and market share for maintaining its competitive advantage and the source of customers. The operations are changed from production-, product-, or sales-oriented type to marketing -oriented type. Using several marketing methods for understanding customers' requirements, target markets are identified and then the information of products or service are correctly delivered to the right customers for attracting main potential customers to purchase all related products automatically. Under the constraints of finite advertisement resources, a media budget allocation and product pricing model is formulated in this study for optimizing various business advantages such as profit, market share, etc. A multi-objective programming is used to represent the media budget allocation and product pricing model. A prototype system based on the model is built in this study, and famous software packages Expert Choice and Lingo 9.0 are integrated and used to analyze the data and obtain the optimal planning solution interactively. Finally, under different parameter and scenario settings, several situational analyses of each enterprise’s conditions from its environment or objective are implemented. Also, some important managerial implications and guidelines are obtained from more empirical examples to help administrators effectively manage and monitor the operational strategy of each company.
Yao, Song. "Online Auction Markets." Diss., 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10161/1073.
Full textCentral to the explosive growth of the Internet has been the desire
of dispersed buyers and sellers to interact readily and in a manner
hitherto impossible. Underpinning these interactions, auction
pricing mechanisms have enabled Internet transactions in novel ways.
Despite this massive growth and new medium, empirical work in
marketing and economics on auction use in Internet contexts remains
relatively nascent. Accordingly, this dissertation investigates the
role of online auctions; it is composed of three essays.
The first essay, ``Online Auction Demand,'' investigates seller and
buyer interactions via online auction websites, such as eBay. Such
auction sites are among the earliest prominent transaction sites on
the Internet (eBay started in 1995, the same year Internet Explorer
was released) and helped pave the way for e-commerce. Hence, online
auction demand is the first topic considered in my dissertation. The
second essay, ``A Dynamic Model of Sponsored Search Advertising,''
investigates sponsored search advertising auctions, a novel approach
that allocates premium advertising space to advertisers at popular
websites, such as search engines. Because sponsored search
advertising targets buyers in active purchase states, such
advertising venues have grown very rapidly in recent years and have
become a highly topical research domain. These two essays form the
foundation of the empirical research in this dissertation. The third
essay, ``Sponsored Search Auctions: Research Opportunities in
Marketing,'' outlines areas of future inquiry that I intend to
pursue in my research.
Of note, the problems underpinning the two empirical essays exhibits
a common form, that of a two-sided network wherein two parties
interact on a common platform (Rochet and Tirole, 2006). Although
theoretical research on two-sided markets is abundant, this
dissertation focuses on their use in e-commerce and adopts an
empirical orientation. I assume an empirical orientation because I
seek to guide firm behavior with concrete policy recommendations and
offer new insights into the actual behavior of the agents who
interact in these contexts. Although the two empirical essays share
this common feature, they also exhibit notable differences,
including the nature of the auction mechanism itself, the
interactions between the agents, and the dynamic frame of the
problem, thus making the problems distinct. The following abstracts
for these two essays as well as the chapter that describes my future
research serve to summarize these contributions, commonalities and
differences.
Online Auction Demand
With $40B in annual gross merchandise volume, electronic auctions
comprise a substantial and growing sector of the retail economy. For
example, eBay alone generated a gross merchandise volume of $14.4B
during the fourth quarter of 2006. Concurrent with this growth has
been an attendant increase in empirical research on Internet
auctions. However, this literature focuses primarily on the bidder;
I extend this research to consider both seller and bidder behavior
in an integrated system within a two-sided network of the two
parties. This extension of the existing literature enables an
exploration of the implications of the auction house's marketing on
its revenues as well as the nature of bidder and seller interactions
on this platform. In the first essay, I use a unique data set of
Celtic coins online auctions. These data were obtained from an
anonymous firm and include complete bidding and listing histories.
In contrast, most existing research relies only on the observed
website bids. The complete bidding and listing histories provided by
the data afford additional information that illuminates the insights
into bidder and seller behavior such as bidder valuations and seller
costs.
Using these data from the ancient coins category, I estimate a
structural model that integrates both bidder and seller behavior.
Bidders choose coins and sellers list them to maximize their
respective profits. I then develop a Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC)
estimation approach that enables me, via data augmentation, to infer
unobserved bidder and seller characteristics and to account for
heterogeneity in these characteristics. My findings indicate that:
i) bidder valuations are affected by item characteristics (e.g., the
attributes of the coin), seller (e.g. reputation), and auction
characteristics (e.g., the characteristics of the listing); ii)
bidder costs are affected by bidding behavior, such as the recency
of the last purchase and the number of concurrent auctions; and iii)
seller costs are affected by item characteristics and the number of
concurrent listings from the seller (because acquisition costs
evidence increasing marginal values).
Of special interest, the model enables me to compute fee
elasticities, even though no variation in historical fees exists in
these data. I compute fee elasticities by inferring the role of
seller costs in their historical listing decision and then imputing
how an increase in these costs (which arises from more fees) would
affect the seller's subsequent listing behavior. I find that these
implied commission elasticities exceed per-item fee elasticities
because commissions target high value sellers, and hence, commission
reductions enhance their listing likelihood. By targeting commission
reductions to high value sellers, auction house revenues can be
increased by 3.9%. Computing customer value, I find that attrition
of the largest seller would decrease fees paid to the auction house
by $97. Given that the seller paid $127 in fees, competition
offsets only 24% of the fees paid by the seller. In contrast,
competition largely in the form of other bidders offsets 81% of the
$26 loss from buyer attrition. In both events, the auction house
would overvalue its customers by neglecting the effects of
competition.
A Dynamic Model of Sponsored Search Advertising
Sponsored search advertising is ascendant. Jupiter Research reports
that expenditures rose 28% in 2007 to $8.9B and will continue to
rise at a 26% Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR), approaching half
the level of television advertising and making sponsored search
advertising one of the major advertising trends affecting the
marketing landscape. Although empirical studies of sponsored search
advertising are ascending, little research exists that explores how
the interactions of various agents (searchers,
advertisers, and the search engine) in keyword
markets affect searcher and advertiser behavior, welfare and search
engine profits. As in the first essay, sponsored search constitutes
a two-sided network. In this case, bidders (advertisers) and
searchers interact on a common platform, the search engine. The
bidder seeks to maximize profits, and the searcher seeks to maximize
utility.
The structural model I propose serves as a foundation to explore
these outcomes and, to my knowledge, is the first structural model
for keyword search. Not only does the model integrate the behavior
of advertisers and searchers, it also accounts for advertisers
competition in a dynamic setting. Prior theoretical research has
assumed a static orientation to the problem whereas prior empirical
research, although dynamic, has focused solely on estimating the
dynamic sales response to a single firm's keyword advertising
expenditures.
To estimate the proposed model, I have developed a two-step Bayesian
estimator for dynamic games. This approach does not rely on
asymptotics and also facilitates a more flexible model
specification.
I fit this model to a proprietary data set provided by an anonymous
search engine. These data include a complete history of consumer
search behavior from the site's web log files and a complete history
of advertiser bidding behavior across all advertisers. In addition,
the data include search engine information, such as keyword pricing
and website design.
With respect to advertisers, I find evidence of dynamic
bidding behavior. Advertiser valuation for clicks on their sponsored
links averages about $0.27. Given the typical $22 retail price of
the software products advertised on the considered search engine,
this figure implies a conversion rate (sales per click) of about
1.2%, well within common estimates of 1-2% (gamedaily.com). With
respect to consumers, I find that frequent clickers place a
greater emphasis on the position of the sponsored advertising link.
I further find that 10% of consumers perform 90% of the clicks.
I then conduct several policy simulations to illustrate the effects
of change in search engine policy. First, I find that the
search engine obtains revenue gains of nearly 1.4% by sharing
individual level information with advertisers and enabling them to
vary their bids by consumer segment. This strategy also improves
advertiser profits by 11% and consumer welfare by 2.9%. Second, I
find that a switch from a first to second price auction results in
truth telling (advertiser bids rise to advertiser valuations), which
is consistent with economic theory. However, the second price
auction has little impact on search engine profits. Third, consumer
search tools lead to a platform revenue increase of 3.7% and an
increase of consumer welfare of 5.6%. However, these tools, by
reducing advertising exposure, lower advertiser profits by 4.1%.
Sponsored Search Auctions: Research Opportunities in Marketing
In the final chapter, I systematically review the literature on
keyword search and propose several promising research directions.
The chapter is organized according to each agent in the search
process, i.e., searchers, advertisers and the search engine, and
reviews the key research issues for each. For each group, I outline
the decision process involved in keyword search. For searchers, this
process involves what to search, where to search, which results to
click, and when to exit the search. For advertisers, this process
involves where to bid, which word or words to bid on, how much to
bid, and how searchers and auction mechanisms moderate these
behaviors. The search engine faces choices on mechanism design,
website design, and how much information to share with its
advertisers and searchers. These choices have implications for
customer lifetime value and the nature of competition among
advertisers. Overall, I provide a number of potential areas of
future research that arise from the decision processes of these
various agents.
Foremost among these potential areas of future research are i) the
role of alternative consumer search strategies for information
acquisition and clicking behavior, ii) the effect of advertiser
placement alternatives on long-term profits, and iii) the measure of
customer lifetime value for search engines. Regarding the first
area, a consumer's search strategy (i.e., sequential search and
non-sequential search) affects which sponsored links are more likely
to be clicked. The search pattern of a consumer is likely to be
affected by the nature of the product (experience product vs. search
product), the design of the website, the dynamic orientation of the
consumer (e.g., myopic or forward-looking), and so on. This search
pattern will, in turn, affect advertisers payments, online traffic,
sales, as well as the search engine's revenue. With respect to the
second area, advertisers must ascertain the economic value of
advertising, conditioned on the slot in which it appears, before
making decisions such as which keywords to bid on and how much to
bid. This area of possible research suggests opportunities to
examine how advertising click-through and the number of impressions
differentially affect the value of appearing in a particular
sponsored slot on a webpage, and how this value is moderated by an
appearance in a non-sponsored slot (i.e., a slot in the organic
search results section). With respect to the third area of future
research, customer value is central to the profitability and
long-term growth of a search engine and affects how the firm should
allocate resources for customer acquisition and retention.
Organization
This dissertation is organized as follows. After this brief
introduction, the essay, ``Online Auction Demand,'' serves as a
basis that introduces some concepts of auctions as two-sided
markets. Next, the second essay, ``A Dynamic Model of Sponsored
Search Advertising,'' extends the first essay by considering a
richer context of bidder competition and consumer choice behavior.
Finally, the concluding chapter, which outlines my future research
interests, considers potential extensions that pertain especially to
sponsored search advertising.
Dissertation
Nair, Radhika Anantharaman. "Evaluation of factors related to prescription drug expenditures, prescribing trends and physican visits: the role of direct-to-consumer advertising expenditures, demographics, and health insurance coverage." Thesis, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/1642.
Full textVotruba, Daniel. "Cenové prostředí mediálního trhu OOH reklamy v České republice." Master's thesis, 2021. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-448334.
Full textHe, R., Y. Xiong, Y. Cheng, and Jiachen Hou. "Online expansion: is it another kind of strategic manufacturer response to a dominant retailer?" 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/14046.
Full textThe issues of channel conflict and channel power have received widespread research attention, including Geylani et al.’s (2007) work on channel relations in an asymmetric retail setting. Specifically, these authors suggest that a manufacturer can respond to a dominant retailer’s pricing pressure by raising the wholesale price for a weak retailer over that for the dominant retailer while transferring demand to the weak retailer channel via cooperative advertising. But, is online expansion another kind of strategic manufacturer’s optimal response to a dominant retailer? In this paper, we extend this work by adding a direct online selling channel to illustrate the impact of the manufacturer’s internet entry on firms’ demands, profits, and pricing strategies and on consumer welfare. Our analysis thus includes a condition in which the manufacturer can add an online channel. If such an online channel is opened, the channel-supported network externality will always benefit the manufacturer but hurt the retailers. Consumers, however, will only benefit from the network externality when a dominant retailer is present and will be hurt when both retailers are symmetric.
National Natural Science Foundation of China, Chongqing’s Natural Science Foundation, British Academy