Publication: Pricing when customers have limited attention
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Boyacı, Tamer
Publication Date
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Type
Embargo Status
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Alternative Title
Abstract
We study the optimal pricing problem of a monopolistic firm facing customers with limited attention and capability to process information about the value (quality) of a single offered product. We model customer choice based on the theory of rational inattention in the economics literature, which enables us to capture not only the impact of true quality and price, but also the intricate effects of customer's prior beliefs and cost of information acquisition and processing. We formulate the firm's price optimization problem assuming that the firm can also use the price to signal the quality of the product to customers. To delineate the economic incentives of the firm, we first characterize the pricing and revenue implications of customer's limited attention without signaling, and then use these results to explore perfect Bayesian equilibria of the strategic pricing signaling game. As an extension, we consider heterogeneous customers with different information costs as well as prior beliefs. We discuss the managerial implications of our key findings and prescribe insights regarding information provision and product positioning.
Source
Publisher
The Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)
Subject
Management, Operations research and management science
Citation
Has Part
Source
Management Science
Book Series Title
Edition
DOI
10.1287/mnsc.2017.2755