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2018
DOI: 10.1287/isre.2017.0772
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When Discounts Hurt Sales: The Case of Daily-Deal Markets

Abstract: We investigate whether the discounts offered by online daily deals help attract consumer purchases. By tracking the sales of 19,978 deals on Groupon.com and conducting a battery of identification and falsification tests, we find that deep discounts reduce sales. A one-percent increase in a deal's discount decreases sales by 0.035-0.256 percent. If a merchant offers 10 percent more discount from the sample mean of 55.6 percent, the sales could decrease by 0.63-4.60 percent, or 0.80-5.24 units and $42-$275 in re… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…However, in an early shopping stage with empty carts, consumers are still browsing or comparing products in a deliberative mindset. In this situation, the same price discounts may signal lower quality products (Blattberg and Neslin 1990, Rossi et al 1996, Jedidi et al 1999, Cao et al 2018. Unlike off-line shopping when consumers can touch, experience, and try the product in physical stores, online shopping prevents customers from evaluating the quality of the product prior to purchase (Dimoka et al 2012).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, in an early shopping stage with empty carts, consumers are still browsing or comparing products in a deliberative mindset. In this situation, the same price discounts may signal lower quality products (Blattberg and Neslin 1990, Rossi et al 1996, Jedidi et al 1999, Cao et al 2018. Unlike off-line shopping when consumers can touch, experience, and try the product in physical stores, online shopping prevents customers from evaluating the quality of the product prior to purchase (Dimoka et al 2012).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The mixed results found in earlier studies (Cao et al, 2018;Dhar et al, 2007;Erdem et al, 2008;Rao & Monroe, 1989;Xu and Huang, 2014) could be potentially explained by informational cascades theory, which gives an indication that the complexity of relationship between price discounts and product sales is underestimated than previously thought. Instead of suggesting price discounts offers a uniform influence on products, informational cascades theory indicates that the influence is moderated by the level of informational cascades when customers make purchase decisions.…”
Section: Information Cascades and Price Discountsmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Prior literature has studied the holiday effect in various fields, especially the stock market [17,18], marketing (e.g. consumer behavior) [19,20], tourism [21], etc. Most of these studies find a positive holiday effect, indicating that individuals are more likely to be in a good mood on holidays [22].…”
Section: How Holidays Affect Online Ratings?mentioning
confidence: 99%