Article ID: | iaor20173072 |
Volume: | 19 |
Issue: | 3 |
Start Page Number: | 403 |
End Page Number: | 418 |
Publication Date: | Jul 2017 |
Journal: | Manufacturing & Service Operations Management |
Authors: | Pun Hubert, DeYong Gregory D |
Keywords: | management, decision, game theory, simulation, manufacturing industries, marketing, behaviour |
In this paper, we use a two‐period game theoretical model to examine the decisions of a manufacturer and a copycat firm who are competing for strategic customers. The manufacturer decides on the amount of its market expansion advertising investment in the first period and on its pricing strategy in both periods. Advertising increases the ‘size of the pie,’ but eventually the manufacturer may end up inadvertently sharing the benefits with the copycat. After the first period, the copycat makes a market‐entry decision, and, if it opts to enter, it also decides on a pricing strategy. The customers are strategic, and they decide whether or not to buy, when to buy, and which product to buy. We find that, interestingly,