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Main Authors: Cisternas, Francisco, Chaimanowong, Wee, Montgomery, Alan, Derdenger, Timothy
Format: Preprint
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2010.09227
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author Cisternas, Francisco
Chaimanowong, Wee
Montgomery, Alan
Derdenger, Timothy
author_facet Cisternas, Francisco
Chaimanowong, Wee
Montgomery, Alan
Derdenger, Timothy
contents Shelf design decisions strongly influence product demand. In particular, placing products in desirable locations increases demand. This primary effect on shelf position is clear, but there is a secondary effect based on the relative positioning of nearby products. Intuitively, products located next to each other are more likely to be compared having positive and negative effects. On the one hand, locations closer to relatively strong products will be undesirable, as these strong products will draw demand from others -- an effect that is stronger for those in close proximity. On the other hand, because strong products tend to attract more traffic, locations closer to them elicit high consumer attention by increased visibility. Modifying the GEV class of models to allow demand to be moderated by competitors' proximity, these two effects emerge naturally. We found that although the competition effect is usually stronger, it is not always the dominating effect. Shelf displays can achieve higher profits by exploiting the relative influence on competition from shelf design to shift demand to higher profitability products. In the paper towel category, we found profitability differences of up to 7\% and displays with 3\% higher gross profits over the best shelf design present in our data.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2010_09227
institution arXiv
publishDate 2020
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Influencing Competition Through Shelf Design
Cisternas, Francisco
Chaimanowong, Wee
Montgomery, Alan
Derdenger, Timothy
General Economics
Economics
Shelf design decisions strongly influence product demand. In particular, placing products in desirable locations increases demand. This primary effect on shelf position is clear, but there is a secondary effect based on the relative positioning of nearby products. Intuitively, products located next to each other are more likely to be compared having positive and negative effects. On the one hand, locations closer to relatively strong products will be undesirable, as these strong products will draw demand from others -- an effect that is stronger for those in close proximity. On the other hand, because strong products tend to attract more traffic, locations closer to them elicit high consumer attention by increased visibility. Modifying the GEV class of models to allow demand to be moderated by competitors' proximity, these two effects emerge naturally. We found that although the competition effect is usually stronger, it is not always the dominating effect. Shelf displays can achieve higher profits by exploiting the relative influence on competition from shelf design to shift demand to higher profitability products. In the paper towel category, we found profitability differences of up to 7\% and displays with 3\% higher gross profits over the best shelf design present in our data.
title Influencing Competition Through Shelf Design
topic General Economics
Economics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2010.09227