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Dynamic Effects of Price Promotions: Field Evidence, Consumer Search, and Supply-Side Implications

Author

Listed:
  • Elberg, Andres

    (Universidad Diego Portales)

  • Gardete, Pedro M.

    (Stanford University)

  • Macera, Rosario

    (Universidad de Los Andes, Santiago)

  • Noton, Carlos

    (University of Chile)

Abstract

This paper investigates the dynamic effects of price promotions in a retail setting through the use of a large-scale field experiment which involved varying the promotion depths of 170 products across 17 categories in 10 supermarkets of a major retailer in Chile. In the intervention phase of the experiment, customers were exposed to a promotion schedule that differed only on promotional depths: treated customers were exposed to 30% discounts, whereas control customers were exposed to 10% discounts. In the subsequent measurement phase, the promotion schedule held discount levels constant across groups. We find that treated customers were 22.5% more likely to buy promoted items than their control counterparts, despite facing the same promotional deals. The result is robust to a number of concurrent dynamic forces, including consumer stockpiling behavior and state dependence. We assess the implications to manufacturers by considering a demand-side model in which consumers search for deals, and a supply-side model in which firms compete for those consumers. We find that small manufacturers can benefit from heightened promotion sensitivity by using promotions to induce future consideration. However, when unit margins are high, heightened promotion sensitivity leads to fierce competition, making all firms worse off.

Suggested Citation

  • Elberg, Andres & Gardete, Pedro M. & Macera, Rosario & Noton, Carlos, 2017. "Dynamic Effects of Price Promotions: Field Evidence, Consumer Search, and Supply-Side Implications," Research Papers 3401, Stanford University, Graduate School of Business.
  • Handle: RePEc:ecl:stabus:3401
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