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The role of store brand positioning for appropriating supply chain profit under shelf space allocation

The role of store brand positioning for appropriating supply chain profit under shelf space allocation
The role of store brand positioning for appropriating supply chain profit under shelf space allocation
We consider a retailer’s decision of developing a store brand (SB) version of a national brand (NB) and the role that its positioning strategy plays in appropriating the supply chain profit. Since the business of the retailer can be regarded as selling to NB manufacturers the shelf space at its disposal, we formulate a game-theoretical model of a single-retailer, single-manufacturer supply chain, where the retailer can decide whether to launch its own SB product and sells scarce shelf-space to a competing NB in a consumer good category. As a result, the most likely equilibrium outcome is that the available selling amount of each brand is constrained by the shelf-space available for its products and both brands coexist in the category. In this paper, we conceptualize the SB positioning that involves both product quality and product features. Our analysis shows that when the NB cross-price effect is not too large, the retailer should position its SB’s quality closer to the NB, more emphasize its SB’s differences in features facing a weaker NB, and less emphasize its SB’s differences in features facing a stronger NB. Our results stress the importance of SB positioning under the shelf-space allocation, in order to maximize the retailer’s value appropriation across the supply chain.
0377-2217
88-97
Kuo, Chia-Wei
0c19f4c0-e4df-47a0-ab41-4b8dfd27a2e5
Yang, Shu-Jung
c7b91fda-ee4f-4ef6-aa45-0bb9c378e5fc
Kuo, Chia-Wei
0c19f4c0-e4df-47a0-ab41-4b8dfd27a2e5
Yang, Shu-Jung
c7b91fda-ee4f-4ef6-aa45-0bb9c378e5fc

Kuo, Chia-Wei and Yang, Shu-Jung (2013) The role of store brand positioning for appropriating supply chain profit under shelf space allocation. European Journal of Operational Research, 231 (1), 88-97. (doi:10.1016/j.ejor.2013.05.018).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We consider a retailer’s decision of developing a store brand (SB) version of a national brand (NB) and the role that its positioning strategy plays in appropriating the supply chain profit. Since the business of the retailer can be regarded as selling to NB manufacturers the shelf space at its disposal, we formulate a game-theoretical model of a single-retailer, single-manufacturer supply chain, where the retailer can decide whether to launch its own SB product and sells scarce shelf-space to a competing NB in a consumer good category. As a result, the most likely equilibrium outcome is that the available selling amount of each brand is constrained by the shelf-space available for its products and both brands coexist in the category. In this paper, we conceptualize the SB positioning that involves both product quality and product features. Our analysis shows that when the NB cross-price effect is not too large, the retailer should position its SB’s quality closer to the NB, more emphasize its SB’s differences in features facing a weaker NB, and less emphasize its SB’s differences in features facing a stronger NB. Our results stress the importance of SB positioning under the shelf-space allocation, in order to maximize the retailer’s value appropriation across the supply chain.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 13 May 2013
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 May 2013
Published date: 16 November 2013
Organisations: Southampton Business School

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 396301
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/396301
ISSN: 0377-2217
PURE UUID: 4ccdef3c-aed6-4160-9b99-a5d7430600fc

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Date deposited: 18 Jul 2016 14:04
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 00:50

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Contributors

Author: Chia-Wei Kuo
Author: Shu-Jung Yang

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