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Integrated Product Architecture and Pricing for Managing Sequential Innovation

Author

Listed:
  • Vish Krishnan

    (Rady School of Management, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093)

  • Karthik Ramachandran

    (Cox School of Business, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas 75275)

Abstract

Science and technology advances drive firms to continually enhance their product's performance and launch sequentially improving offerings. Firms face challenges in marketing such improving products to well-informed, forward-looking consumers who anticipate product improvements and seek to delay their purchase timing. Product design, specifically a modular upgradable architecture in which improving and stable subsystems of a product are separated and selectively upgraded, can be a valuable approach for marketers to alleviate consumer concerns about product obsolescence. However, such an architecture-based approach can present new challenges as well, and dealing with them requires carefully coordinated cross-functional decision making by the firm. In this paper, we identify and formalize the notion of design inconsistency , which refers to the monopolist firm's inability to commit to future product design architectures. We find that firms experience design inconsistency even when they are able to commit to future prices, and design inconsistency lowers firm profits as well as consumer surplus. We then derive a joint product architecture and pricing approach to solve this problem; this enables an innovating firm to optimally and in a time-consistent manner launch modular upgradable products. The modeling and analysis in the paper lends insight into types of markets and products for which modular upgradability is most appropriate and offers guidelines on making pricing and product design decisions jointly for managing sequential innovation. This paper was accepted by Preyas Desai, marketing.

Suggested Citation

  • Vish Krishnan & Karthik Ramachandran, 2011. "Integrated Product Architecture and Pricing for Managing Sequential Innovation," Management Science, INFORMS, vol. 57(11), pages 2040-2053, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:inm:ormnsc:v:57:y:2011:i:11:p:2040-2053
    DOI: 10.1287/mnsc.1110.1391
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    6. Yang, Guangyong & Ji, Guojun & Tan, Kim Hua, 2020. "Impact of regulatory intervention and consumer environmental concern on product introduction," International Journal of Production Economics, Elsevier, vol. 230(C).
    7. Vishal V. Agrawal & Sezer Ülkü, 2013. "The Role of Modular Upgradability as a Green Design Strategy," Manufacturing & Service Operations Management, INFORMS, vol. 15(4), pages 640-648, October.
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    9. Ales Lukman & Tina Vukasovic, 2022. "A Conceptual Model of Consumer Behavior when Purchasing Fixed Telecommunications Connections," Digital Transformation: The Harmonic Convergence of People, Culture, Process, and Technology in the New Normal,, ToKnowPress.
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    12. Yu Chang & Tao Zhang, 2019. "The Effects of Product Consistency and Consumer Resistance to Innovation on Green Product Diffusion in China," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 11(9), pages 1-14, May.
    13. Aydin, Ayhan & Parker, Rodney P., 2018. "Innovation and technology diffusion in competitive supply chains," European Journal of Operational Research, Elsevier, vol. 265(3), pages 1102-1114.
    14. Boeuf, Benjamin, 2019. "The impact of mortality anxiety on attitude toward product innovation," Journal of Business Research, Elsevier, vol. 104(C), pages 44-60.
    15. Liu, Jingchen & Zhai, Xin & Chen, Lihua, 2019. "Optimal pricing strategy under trade-in program in the presence of strategic consumers," Omega, Elsevier, vol. 84(C), pages 1-17.
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