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Should the pricing or advertising decision come first in a supply chain with a network externality?

Jiami Liang (School of Health Management, Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou, China)
Jiejian Feng (Lazaridis School of Business and Economics, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Canada)
Yalan Liu (School of Humanities and Management, Hunan University of Chinese Medicine, Changsha, China)

Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing

ISSN: 0885-8624

Article publication date: 5 September 2024

Issue publication date: 31 October 2024

85

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to study how the timing of these decisions affects the total profit and the individual profits of the two agents.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper study a supply chain for a network good where there is a manufacturer and a retailer. The manufacturer determines its wholesale price and its share in the retailer’s advertising cost while the retailer decides the retail price and the advertising cost.

Findings

This paper finds that a stronger network externality leads to higher prices and higher advertising efforts. This increases the profits of both manufacturer and retailer, but the manufacturer’s share of advertising costs depends on the order in which the supply chain enterprise make their decisions, the strength of network externality and the effect of advertising determines which decision timeline results in a higher price and greater advertising effort. The manufacturer prefers the price decision to be made before the advertising decision, while the retailer prefers these decisions to be made simultaneously.

Research limitations/implications

Although this paper studies the price and advertising decision-making order preferences of channel members based on network externalities, this research can also be expanded from the following aspects based on network effects. First, network externality affects advertising cooperation between both parties in the situation such that the pricing power of retail prices is transferred from the retailer to the manufacturer and the retailer relies on revenue sharing (revenue sharing contract, nonwholesale price contract. Second, the manufacturer dominates the issues in the supply chain, but in reality, a retailer can also be the dominator or there are no dominators (Nash equilibrium). Finally, it is possible to consider pricing and advertising decisions in situations where two manufacturers or retailers compete.

Practical implications

When the price is reasonable, advertising investment is the main determinant of product sales. The greater the intensity of network externalities the more retailers will be willing to invest in advertising. An increase in the intensity of network externalities may not necessarily enhance manufacturers’ motivation or cooperative advertising, but it depends on the decision-making sequence. The strength of network externalities determines the decision-making sequence preferences of supply chain channel members whose preferences vary leading to conflicts of interest.

Originality/value

The impact of cooperative advertising or decision sequence on corporate decision-making has not been considered. To fill this gap, the paper integrates network externality and supply chain cooperative advertising models, focusing on the impact of network externality on pricing and advertising decisions, as well as on the sequence of decisions.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the General Topics of Hunan Social Science Achievement Review Committee (No. XSP24YBC139), the Hunan University of Traditional Chinese Medicine Undergraduate Research and innovation Fund Project, the Foundation for Young Innovative Talents in Colleges and Universities of Guangdong Province (No. 2021WQNCX062), and Social Science Key Laboratory of Guangdong Higher Education Institutes for Health Governance Based on Big Data Utilization (No. 2023WSY007).

Citation

Liang, J., Feng, J. and Liu, Y. (2024), "Should the pricing or advertising decision come first in a supply chain with a network externality?", Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing, Vol. 39 No. 11, pp. 2386-2402. https://doi.org/10.1108/JBIM-09-2023-0543

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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