Restaurants’ platform partnership for social promotion and resilient revenue: is reward-based traffic really rewardful?
Restaurants’ platform partnership for social promotion and resilient revenue: is reward-based traffic really rewardful?
Restaurants have traditionally operated offline only, but the growth of food delivery platforms has prompted a shift toward online sales. In practice, consumers who share digital coupons offered by the platforms (e.g. Uber Eats and Meituan) in social networks (e.g. Facebook, Twitter, and WeChat) will be rewarded for the social traffic, which effectively attracts many restaurants to open online store. However, this also leads to intensified competition with the restaurant's physical (offline) store. In this article, we formulate the restaurant's tradeoffs among platform traffic benefits, consumers’ heterogeneous utility, and the platform's commission in the online selling decision. Interestingly, we find that the increased platform traffic may be harmful to the restaurant, and even the entire channel system. The platform offering high subsidies may trap restaurants in a pricing dilemma. We also find that restaurants’ online selling will induce a negative externality due to online/offline order congestion, but it will not qualitatively change the main findings.
Niu, Baozhuang
4d90cf44-0814-4031-9869-daf8cf82b0c1
Chen, Lei
a71c2357-aa0c-4814-8768-7846fe1463ff
Li, Qiyang
81a60c86-a5ff-47a6-8787-ddaa4530dfe9
Zeng, Fanzhuo
f1f8b7f6-b618-46fd-88fc-a08584249438
Niu, Baozhuang
4d90cf44-0814-4031-9869-daf8cf82b0c1
Chen, Lei
a71c2357-aa0c-4814-8768-7846fe1463ff
Li, Qiyang
81a60c86-a5ff-47a6-8787-ddaa4530dfe9
Zeng, Fanzhuo
f1f8b7f6-b618-46fd-88fc-a08584249438
Niu, Baozhuang, Chen, Lei, Li, Qiyang and Zeng, Fanzhuo
(2024)
Restaurants’ platform partnership for social promotion and resilient revenue: is reward-based traffic really rewardful?
Production and Operations Management.
(doi:10.1177/10591478231224919).
Abstract
Restaurants have traditionally operated offline only, but the growth of food delivery platforms has prompted a shift toward online sales. In practice, consumers who share digital coupons offered by the platforms (e.g. Uber Eats and Meituan) in social networks (e.g. Facebook, Twitter, and WeChat) will be rewarded for the social traffic, which effectively attracts many restaurants to open online store. However, this also leads to intensified competition with the restaurant's physical (offline) store. In this article, we formulate the restaurant's tradeoffs among platform traffic benefits, consumers’ heterogeneous utility, and the platform's commission in the online selling decision. Interestingly, we find that the increased platform traffic may be harmful to the restaurant, and even the entire channel system. The platform offering high subsidies may trap restaurants in a pricing dilemma. We also find that restaurants’ online selling will induce a negative externality due to online/offline order congestion, but it will not qualitatively change the main findings.
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 August 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 February 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 499518
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499518
ISSN: 1059-1478
PURE UUID: 414c548b-d8bf-4bed-bb57-f52e56a2e775
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Date deposited: 24 Mar 2025 17:32
Last modified: 24 Mar 2025 17:32
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Author:
Baozhuang Niu
Author:
Lei Chen
Author:
Qiyang Li
Author:
Fanzhuo Zeng
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