Learning Consumer Tastes Through Dynamic Assortments
نویسندگان
چکیده
How should a firm modify its product assortment over time when learning about consumer tastes? In this paper, we study dynamic assortment decisions in a horizontally differentiated product category for which consumers’ diverse tastes can be represented as locations on a Hotelling line. We presume that the firm knows all possible consumer locations, comprising a finite set, but does not know their probability distribution. We model this problem as a discrete-time dynamic program; each period, the firm chooses an assortment and sets prices to maximize the total expected profit over a finite horizon, given its subjective beliefs over consumer tastes. The consumers then choose a product from the assortment that maximizes their own utility. The firm observes sales, which provide censored information on consumer tastes, and it updates beliefs in a Bayesian fashion. There is a recurring trade-off between the immediate profits from sales in the current period (exploitation) and the informational gains to be exploited in all future periods (exploration). We show that one can (partially) order assortments based on their information content and that in any given period the optimal assortment cannot be less informative than the myopically optimal assortment. This result is akin to the well-known “stock more” result in censored newsvendor problems with the newsvendor learning about demand through sales when lost sales are not observable. We demonstrate that it can be optimal for the firm to alternate between exploration and exploitation, and even offer assortments that lead to losses in the current period in order to gain information on consumer tastes. We also develop a Bayesian conjugate model that reduces the state space of the dynamic program and study value of learning using this conjugate model.
منابع مشابه
Attribute Search in Online Retail Grocery Markets
Online shopping is common in many categories of retail goods. The recent trend towards online retailing has created an unprecedented empirical opportunity to examine consumer search behavior using click stream data. In this paper we examine consumer search intensity across a wide range of grocery products that differ in the depth of product assortment. We develop a model of attribute search in ...
متن کاملDynamic Price Competition with Persistent Consumer Tastes
The dynamic price competition in a horizontally differentiated duopoly when consumers value previous market shares is analyzed. The conditions for the existence of stable Markov-Perfect Equilibrium(MPE) in linear strategies are established. When they exist, the optimal pricing policies suggest that a firm with a higher previous market share charges a higher price, all else equal. It is possible...
متن کاملOptimal Dynamic Assortment Planning with Demand Learning
We study a family of stylized assortment planning problems, where arriving customers make purchase decisions among offered products based on maximizing their utility. Given limited display capacity and no a priori information on consumers’ utility, the retailer must select which subset of products to offer. By offering different assortments and observing the resulting purchase behavior, the ret...
متن کاملHierarchical Choice Models and Properties of Optimal and Competitive Assortments
This paper studies centralized and decentralized assortment planning problems for a product category with heterogenous product types from two brands. We model consumer choices in such a product category by two hierarchical choice models: a brand-primary choice model in which consumers choose a brand rst, then a product type in the chosen brand, and a type-primary choice model in which consumer...
متن کاملOn the Effects of Consumer Search and Firm Entry in a Multiproduct Competitive Market
If searching for a better price becomes easier for consumers, conventional wisdom suggests that pricing pressure will increase on firms, thereby lowering prices, reducing firm profits and narrowing assortments. There is indeed evidence that recent search facilitating technologies, such as the Internet, have in some markets reduced prices. But there is also evidence that firms have been able to ...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Operations Research
دوره 60 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2012