Publication: Price discrimination through multi-level loyalty programs (vol 27, pg 687, 2015)
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Advisor
Publication Date
2016
Language
English
Type
Other
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Loyalty programs often feature multiple rewards with different requirements; for instance, an airline offering a free domestic ticket for 10 K miles, and an international ticket for 20 K miles. This research focuses on the role of multi-level rewards as a segmentation and price discrimination mechanism: Multi-level rewards can increase firm profits when buyers differ in purchase frequency and/or time discount factor. We propose that a program with two rewards can be designed in such a way that (i) it is more profitable than a one-reward program, and (ii) buyers self-select. Light users prefer to receive the smaller reward two times over receiving the larger reward one time, even though the smaller reward is less than half of the larger reward. We show that the smaller reward helps the firm enlarge its base in the light user segment. We also compare multi-level programs with quantity discounts.
Description
Source:
Marketing Letters
Publisher:
Springer
Keywords:
Subject
Business