2011
DOI: 10.1287/mnsc.1110.1327
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Managing Product Variety and Collocation in a Competitive Environment: An Empirical Investigation of Consumer Electronics Retailing

Abstract: Product variety is an important strategic tool that firms can use to attract customers and respond to competition. This study focuses on the retail industry and investigates how stores manage their product variety, contingent on the presence of competition and their actual distance from rivals.Using a unique data set that contains all Best Buy and Circuit City stores in the United States, the authors find that a store's product variety (i.e., number of stock-keeping units) increases if a rival store exists in … Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 50 publications
(61 reference statements)
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“…Recent literature in this area attempts to discern conditions under which an incumbent will maintain its distance from or stay close to the entrant (e.g., de Figueiredo and Silverman 2007;Wang 2011). A closely related subset of this literature studies how firms use product variety as a strategic response to entry (e.g., Olivares and Cachon 2009;Ren et al 2011). We contribute to this stream of literature by studying incumbent product repositioning in a multi-sided market setting, and by documenting that the repositioning occurs in tandem with other responses including price increases.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent literature in this area attempts to discern conditions under which an incumbent will maintain its distance from or stay close to the entrant (e.g., de Figueiredo and Silverman 2007;Wang 2011). A closely related subset of this literature studies how firms use product variety as a strategic response to entry (e.g., Olivares and Cachon 2009;Ren et al 2011). We contribute to this stream of literature by studying incumbent product repositioning in a multi-sided market setting, and by documenting that the repositioning occurs in tandem with other responses including price increases.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several studies in strategic management have used the Heckman selection model to account for the endogenous nature of binary decisions, primarily when studying the performance impact of two different governance modes (see, among others, Castañer et al ., ; Leiblein et al ., ; Mulotte et al ., ; Shaver, ). Two recent papers used an IV approach to address the endogeneity of more general categorical variables (Cassiman and Veugelers, ; Ren et al ., ), albeit neither used it to examine experience effects. Extending the logic used by these two recent studies, we exploited the cumulative nature of our NPI experience variable and developed a valid “technical” instrument (EXPtrue^m,i,t) for our continuous experience variable that is a variant of categorical variables.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…generate the instrument. Ren et al (2011) applied a probit model in the first stage to predict the probability of whether a rival chain opens a store or not in a local geographic market, then used the predicted probability as an instrument for the second-stage binary endogenous variable. 11 Semadeni et al (2013) have recently surveyed all empirical papers appearing in the Strategic Management Journal between 2005 and 2012 that used the IV approach to analyze continuous endogenous variables.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While we use a specific empirical setting for illustrative purposes (clusters in the global semiconductor industry based on patent density), the paper's insights and methodologies are general enough to apply in other contexts. For example, the input data could be firms, individuals, or economic activities, and the output could be used to define geographic units in studies exploring competition and cooperation among hotels in Baum and Mezias (1992), fast-food franchisees in Kalnins and Lafontaine (2004), or electronics stores in Ren, Hu, and Hausman (2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%