Article ID: | iaor1990457 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 8 |
Issue: | 4 |
Start Page Number: | 1 |
End Page Number: | 7 |
Publication Date: | Sep 1989 |
Journal: | Marketing Science |
Authors: | Blattberg Robert, Wisniewski Kenneth J. |
This research focuses on how price changes influence the observed pattern of brand competition. The paper begins with a basic utility model formulation and examines the implications of three major classes of preference distributions on the expected patterns of competition. A price-tier model is proposed to operationalize the theory and to allow predictive testing. The price-tier model is estimated on 28 brands across four product categories. The results show a specific asymmetric pattern of price competition. Higher-price, higher quality brands steal share from other brands in the same price-quality tier, as well as from brands in the tier below. However, lower-price, lower-quality brands take sales from their own tier and the tier below brands, but do