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Compromise pricing in luxury

Béatrice Parguel (Université PSL, CNRS, DRM, Paris, France)
Annalisa Fraccaro (TBS Business School, Toulouse, France)
Sandrine Macé (ESCP Business School, Paris, France)

Journal of Product & Brand Management

ISSN: 1061-0421

Article publication date: 27 September 2021

Issue publication date: 25 March 2022

791

Abstract

Purpose

Going beyond odd and even prices, this paper aims to explore the rationale behind the widespread practice of setting prices ending in “50” or “80” in the luxury industry. The authors argue that when they set such prices, managers agree to reduce their profit margin to limit the anticipated guilt luxury consumers associate with luxury shopping while also protecting their brand luxury. The authors label these prices compromise prices and formally define compromise pricing as the practice of choosing a price’s ending so that the price falls below (but not just below) a round number to boost sales without damaging brand luxury.

Design/methodology/approach

Following the observation of the overrepresentation of prices ending in “50” and “80” in the luxury clothing category, an experiment explores the impact of compromise prices on anticipated guilt and brand luxury in the luxury watch category. Then, to identify when luxury pricing managers typically favor compromise prices, multinomial regressions investigate prices collected on two online luxury fashion retailers for the luxury clothing and handbag categories.

Findings

Compromise prices reduce the anticipated guilt luxury consumers associate with luxury shopping compared with even prices while enhancing brand luxury compared with odd prices and interestingly, with even prices also. This finding gives rationale to luxury managers’ preference for compromise prices in the ninth hundred (i.e. €X950, €X980), especially for higher-priced products, i.e. when the potential for price underestimation and/or the risk of damaging brand luxury are more important.

Originality/value

This research contributes to the field of luxury pricing by providing evidence to an original price-ending practice, coined compromise pricing, which consists in agreeing to a slight reduction in prices and unit margin to protect brand luxury.

Keywords

Citation

Parguel, B., Fraccaro, A. and Macé, S. (2022), "Compromise pricing in luxury", Journal of Product & Brand Management, Vol. 31 No. 3, pp. 506-517. https://doi.org/10.1108/JPBM-10-2020-3157

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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