Integrating the customers' perceived risks and benefits into the triple-channel retailing
Authored by Yue Zhang, Wei-Guo Zhang, Qun Zhang, Kamil J Mizgier
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1080/00207543.2017.1336679
Sponsors:
Chinese National Natural Science Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Multiple channel retailing and channel selection strategy have become
key issues for many corporations to place themselves at the heart of a
new era of retailing. This paper studies a triple-channel system in
which a manufacturer operates a conventional channel, a direct online
channel, as well as increases its online presence with an online
shopping platform. It also takes the heterogeneity of consumers' price
sensitivity and channel preferences into account. It highlights that the
perceived risks and perceived benefits are aggregated into an inhibitor
or activator entering the customers' acceptance of triple channels and
further affecting their purchasing decisions. Three cases are discussed
to investigate the demand distributions, the profit behaviours, the
optimal pricing strategies and the channel selection strategies.
Theoretical analysis is further validated by a case study with the aid
of agent-based modelling. Sensitivity analysis demonstrates that two
acceptance indices - respectively, regarded as the consumers'
willingness to tolerate the perceived risks of the online channel and
approve the perceived benefits from the third-party online platform -
significantly govern the total profit in two stylised scenarios. This
study schematically characterises the structure of demand distributions,
helps the corporation to discern consumers' channel choices and then
focus its marketing efforts towards more profitable customers and
strategic channel structures. Furthermore, some implications are
outlined for the optimal supply chain designation decision.
Tags
agent-based simulation
Design
Supply chain networks
Multi-channel retailing
Supply chain design
Perceived risk
Heterogeneous valuation