2017
DOI: 10.1287/mnsc.2016.2513
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Price-Matching Guarantees with Endogenous Consumer Search

Abstract: Abstract. Price-matching guarantees (PMGs) are offered in a wide array of product categories in retail markets. PMGs offer consumers the assurance that, should they find a lower price elsewhere within a specified period after purchase the retailer will match that price and refund the price difference. The goal of this study is to explain the following stylized facts: (1) many retailers that operate both online and offline implement PMG offline but not online; (2) the practices of PMG vary considerably across r… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(16 citation statements)
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References 37 publications
(51 reference statements)
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“…Thus, their model is not compatible with the role of PMGs as a signal of low prices. Jiang, Kumar, and Ratchford (2016) develop a model to explain why PMGs are often implemented offline but not online, and why the practice of PMGs varies considerably across retail categories. In their model, consumers differ in their search cost pre-and postpurchase, which leads to the existence of three types of consumers: "shoppers," who have zero search costs and go directly to the store with the lowest price; "nonshoppers," who have high search costs and go to the store where they expect prices to be lower (the price expectation depends on whether a firm offers PMGs, as consumers know which firms offer them); and "refundees," who have high search cost prepurchase and zero search cost postpurchase.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Thus, their model is not compatible with the role of PMGs as a signal of low prices. Jiang, Kumar, and Ratchford (2016) develop a model to explain why PMGs are often implemented offline but not online, and why the practice of PMGs varies considerably across retail categories. In their model, consumers differ in their search cost pre-and postpurchase, which leads to the existence of three types of consumers: "shoppers," who have zero search costs and go directly to the store with the lowest price; "nonshoppers," who have high search costs and go to the store where they expect prices to be lower (the price expectation depends on whether a firm offers PMGs, as consumers know which firms offer them); and "refundees," who have high search cost prepurchase and zero search cost postpurchase.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whereas Janssen and Parakhonyak (2013) assume that no consumer knows which firms offer PMGs, Jiang, Kumar, and Ratchford (2016) and Yankelevich and Vaughan (2016) assume the opposite: all consumers know which firms provide a PMG. In either case, PMGs cannot act as a signal of low prices.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
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