Article ID: | iaor20131098 |
Volume: | 15 |
Issue: | 1 |
Start Page Number: | 86 |
End Page Number: | 101 |
Publication Date: | Dec 2013 |
Journal: | Manufacturing & Service Operations Management |
Authors: | Duenyas Izak, Ceryan Oben, Sahin Ozge |
Keywords: | economics |
Firms that offer multiple products are often susceptible to periods of inventory mismatches where one product may face shortages while the other has excess inventories. In this paper, we study a joint implementation of price‐ and capacity‐based substitution mechanisms to alleviate the level of such inventory disparities. We consider a firm producing substitutable products via a capacity portfolio consisting of both product‐dedicated and flexible resources and characterize the structure of the optimal production and pricing decisions. We then explore how changes in various problem parameters affect the optimal policy structure. We show that the availability of a flexible resource helps maintain stable price differences across products over time even though the price of each product may fluctuate over time. This result has favorable ramifications from a marketing standpoint because it suggests that even when a firm applies a dynamic pricing strategy, it may still establish consistent price positioning among multiple products if it can employ a flexible replenishment resource. We provide numerical examples for the price stabilization effect and discuss extensions of our results to a more general multiple product setting.