Article ID: | iaor201524030 |
Volume: | 61 |
Issue: | 5 |
Start Page Number: | 403 |
End Page Number: | 417 |
Publication Date: | Aug 2014 |
Journal: | Naval Research Logistics (NRL) |
Authors: | Chen Ying-Ju, Hsiao Lu |
Keywords: | quality & reliability, risk |
This article compares the profitability of two pervasively adopted return policies–money‐back guarantee and hassle‐free policies. In our model, a seller sells to consumers with heterogeneous valuations and hassle costs. Products are subject to quality risk, and product misfit can only be observed post‐purchase. While the hassle‐free policy is cost advantageous from the seller's viewpoint, a money‐back guarantee allows the seller to fine‐tune the consumer hassle on returning the product. Thus, when the two return policies lead to the same consumer behaviors, the hassle‐free policy dominates. Conversely, a money‐back guarantee can be more profitable even if on average, high‐valuation consumers experience a lower hassle cost than the low‐valuation ones. The optimal hassle cost can be higher when product quality gets improved; thus, it is not necessarily a perfect proxy or signal of the seller's quality. We further allow the seller to adopt a mixture of these policies, and identify the concrete operating regimes within which these return policies are optimal among more flexible policies.