The impact of secondary market competition on refurbishing authorization strategies
The impact of secondary market competition on refurbishing authorization strategies
Secondary market where used or refurbished products are traded has attracted many independent refurbishers (IRs) to engage in refurbishing. It poses competitions for new product sales of the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) and presents new market opportunities for OEMs as well. Many OEMs have adopted refurbishing authorization as one form of cooperation. As a result, it is common that authorized refurbished products and non-authorized refurbished products coexist in the secondary market. This paper investigates a supply chain consisting of an OEM and two competing IRs. To this end, we model the decision-making processing of the OEM and two IRs as a Stackelberg game. We provide the conditions for the OEM to implement refurbishing authorization and for IRs to accept authorization. We identify that the critical trade-off is whether the indirect benefit from refurbishing authorization, such as authorization fee, can outweigh the direct cannibalization effect of the sales of refurbished products on new products sales. The comparative analyses show that the OEM can benefit from the secondary market only when the IRs gain enough profit from authorized refurbishment, and a high authorization fee is not always beneficial for the OEM.
Zhou, Qin
22cc3c1b-50f4-41e0-9c3e-8cdf183a022e
Meng, Chao
30df20a9-21f1-42c5-921f-99fd5b5629ec
Yuen, Kum Fai
5acba8bd-2837-4913-8ec8-5b9b98cb04b9
October 2020
Zhou, Qin
22cc3c1b-50f4-41e0-9c3e-8cdf183a022e
Meng, Chao
30df20a9-21f1-42c5-921f-99fd5b5629ec
Yuen, Kum Fai
5acba8bd-2837-4913-8ec8-5b9b98cb04b9
Zhou, Qin, Meng, Chao and Yuen, Kum Fai
(2020)
The impact of secondary market competition on refurbishing authorization strategies.
International Journal of Production Economics, 228.
(doi:10.1016/j.ijpe.2020.107728).
Abstract
Secondary market where used or refurbished products are traded has attracted many independent refurbishers (IRs) to engage in refurbishing. It poses competitions for new product sales of the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) and presents new market opportunities for OEMs as well. Many OEMs have adopted refurbishing authorization as one form of cooperation. As a result, it is common that authorized refurbished products and non-authorized refurbished products coexist in the secondary market. This paper investigates a supply chain consisting of an OEM and two competing IRs. To this end, we model the decision-making processing of the OEM and two IRs as a Stackelberg game. We provide the conditions for the OEM to implement refurbishing authorization and for IRs to accept authorization. We identify that the critical trade-off is whether the indirect benefit from refurbishing authorization, such as authorization fee, can outweigh the direct cannibalization effect of the sales of refurbished products on new products sales. The comparative analyses show that the OEM can benefit from the secondary market only when the IRs gain enough profit from authorized refurbishment, and a high authorization fee is not always beneficial for the OEM.
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Accepted/In Press date: 5 March 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 March 2020
Published date: October 2020
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 473979
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473979
ISSN: 0925-5273
PURE UUID: 86836fb8-11b1-4fbc-902a-7027429ecf69
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Date deposited: 07 Feb 2023 17:34
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:37
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Author:
Qin Zhou
Author:
Chao Meng
Author:
Kum Fai Yuen
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