Are points like money? An empirical investigation of reward promotion effectiveness for multicategory retailers
Are points like money? An empirical investigation of reward promotion effectiveness for multicategory retailers
Point-based frequency reward programs are widely used by retailers as a sales promotion strategy. To promote a specific product category, retailers offer more favorable reward ratios so that members can earn extra points. This paper examines the impact of reward ratio variations on sales in a multicategory setting and compares the effectiveness of the reward and price promotion strategies. We estimate a multivariate probit model using scanner data of member purchases in four categories, grouped into two category pairs. We found that increasing the reward ratio in a category positively affected its choice probability and that the presence of rewards promotions also had positive impact on the choice probability of nonpromoted but closely related category within the same category pair. As forms of sales promotion, price discounts and reward promotions were shown to substitute for each other. We constructed and computed a measure, the rate of substitution, to quantify the effects of substitution. The financial im
99–114
Wei, Liyuan
a5ebeff3-eeac-454f-b349-3ac5e50e71f1
Xiao, Junji
977892a0-5a25-4f6b-9244-f59ab993d85c
4 December 2013
Wei, Liyuan
a5ebeff3-eeac-454f-b349-3ac5e50e71f1
Xiao, Junji
977892a0-5a25-4f6b-9244-f59ab993d85c
Wei, Liyuan and Xiao, Junji
(2013)
Are points like money? An empirical investigation of reward promotion effectiveness for multicategory retailers.
Marketing Letters, 26, .
(doi:10.1007/s11002-013-9270-1).
Abstract
Point-based frequency reward programs are widely used by retailers as a sales promotion strategy. To promote a specific product category, retailers offer more favorable reward ratios so that members can earn extra points. This paper examines the impact of reward ratio variations on sales in a multicategory setting and compares the effectiveness of the reward and price promotion strategies. We estimate a multivariate probit model using scanner data of member purchases in four categories, grouped into two category pairs. We found that increasing the reward ratio in a category positively affected its choice probability and that the presence of rewards promotions also had positive impact on the choice probability of nonpromoted but closely related category within the same category pair. As forms of sales promotion, price discounts and reward promotions were shown to substitute for each other. We constructed and computed a measure, the rate of substitution, to quantify the effects of substitution. The financial im
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e-pub ahead of print date: 4 December 2013
Published date: 4 December 2013
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 494143
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494143
ISSN: 0923-0645
PURE UUID: 1ea9fd8d-cdf9-48b5-baf9-7608cd5ab195
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Date deposited: 25 Sep 2024 16:30
Last modified: 14 Nov 2024 03:09
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Author:
Liyuan Wei
Author:
Junji Xiao
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