Intertemporal Content Variation with Customer Learning
Fernando Bernstein (),
Soudipta Chakraborty and
Robert Swinney ()
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Fernando Bernstein: Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708
Robert Swinney: Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708
Manufacturing & Service Operations Management, 2022, vol. 24, issue 3, 1664-1680
Abstract:
Problem definition : We analyze a firm that sells repeatedly to a customer population over multiple periods. Although this setting has been studied extensively in the context of dynamic pricing —selling the same product in each period at a varying price—we consider intertemporal content variation , wherein the price is the same in every period, but the firm varies the content available over time. Customers learn their utility on purchasing and decide whether to purchase again in subsequent periods. The firm faces a budget for the total amount of content available during a finite planning horizon, and allocates content to maximize revenue. Academic/practical relevance : A number of new business models, including video streaming services and curated subscription boxes, face the situation we model. Our results show how such firms can use content variation to increase their revenues. Methodology : We employ an analytical model in which customers decide to purchase in multiple successive periods and a firm determines a content allocation policy to maximize revenue. Results : Using a lower bound approximation to the problem for a horizon of general length T , we show that, although the optimal allocation policy is not, in general, constant over time, it is monotone: content value increases over time if customer heterogeneity is low and decreases otherwise. We demonstrate that the optimal policy for this lower bound problem is either optimal or very close to optimal for the general T period problem. Furthermore, for the case of T = 2 periods, we show how two critical factors—the fraction of “new” versus “repeat” customers in the population and the size of the content budget—affect the optimal allocation policy and the importance of varying content value over time. Managerial implications : We show how firms that sell at a fixed price over multiple periods can vary content value over time to increase revenues.
Keywords: intertemporal content variation; revenue management; customer learning (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:inm:ormsom:v:24:y:2022:i:3:p:1664-1680
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