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Online consumers’ reactions to price decreases: Amazon’s Kindle 2 case

Kyung Young Lee (Williams School of Business, Bishop's University, Lenoxville, Canada)
Ying Jin (Marketing Group, PSK Inc., Hwaseong, Korea)
Cheul Rhee (School of Business, Ajou University, Suwon, Korea)
Sung-Byung Yang (School of Business, Ajou University, Suwon, Korea)

Internet Research

ISSN: 1066-2243

Article publication date: 1 August 2016

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to investigate how consumers respond to price changes by analyzing online product reviews (OPRs) posted on a product (Amazon’s Kindle 2), and to suggest several future research topics on online consumers’ reactions embedded in OPRs.

Design/methodology/approach

An exploratory case study is conducted using OPRs added to the Kindle 2. By analyzing 6,714 OPRs, the authors examine how online consumers respond to two continual price decreases embedded in the observable (star rating and review depth) and implicit (positive and negative emotions) features of OPRs as well as how the number of OPRs per day has changed after two price drops.

Findings

The authors found that all four features of OPRs (star rating, review depth, positive emotion, and negative emotion) and the number of OPRs per day had significantly changed after two price decreases for both long-term and short-term periods. In addition, online consumers’ reactions to price decreases in terms of these four features and the change in the number of OPRs per day were different between the first and the second price drops.

Research limitations/implications

This study investigates online consumers’ reactions to price decreases only. Future research should investigate other cases where price changes under the dynamic pricing strategy in order to find the relationship between price increases/decreases and consumers’ reactions.

Practical implications

This study implies that online merchants should consider consumer groups’ innovation adoption stages and make strategic decisions for price decreases to improve the sales of their products.

Originality/value

While prior research involving the effects of price changes on consumers’ reactions has focussed on offline consumers, this is among the first attempts to address the long- and short-term reactions to price changes in terms of both the observable and implicit features of OPRs, and suggests that consumers’ reactions to price changes in OPRs are more complex.

Keywords

Citation

Lee, K.Y., Jin, Y., Rhee, C. and Yang, S.-B. (2016), "Online consumers’ reactions to price decreases: Amazon’s Kindle 2 case", Internet Research, Vol. 26 No. 4, pp. 1001-1026. https://doi.org/10.1108/IntR-04-2014-0097

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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