Publikation: The Effects of Non-binding Retail-price Recommendations on Consumer and Retailer Behavior
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This paper presents results from an experiment on the effects of retail-price recommendations (RPRs) on consumer and retailer behavior. Despite their non-binding nature, RPRs may influence consumers’ willingness to pay by setting a reference point. Loss averse consumers will then be reluctant to pay a price higher than the recommended one. Furthermore, at a given price level consumers will demand a larger quantity the higher the RPR is. We find evidence for both effects. They are stronger when the price recommendation contains information about the value of the product to the consumer instead of providing an uncorrelated anchor only. Retailers in this study react to RPRs in a similar way as consumers do, but they do not anticipate consumers’ behavior well.
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BRUTTEL, Lisa, 2014. The Effects of Non-binding Retail-price Recommendations on Consumer and Retailer BehaviorBibTex
@techreport{Bruttel2014Effec-28245, year={2014}, series={Research paper series / Thurgauer Wirtschaftsinstitut}, title={The Effects of Non-binding Retail-price Recommendations on Consumer and Retailer Behavior}, number={93}, author={Bruttel, Lisa} }
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