Selling Discretionary Services to Strategic Customers with Peripheral Consumption

Xiaofang Wang, Qi Wu, Guoming Lai, Alan Scheller-Wolf
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Abstract

Discretionary service industries are those in which customers prefer not to wait in line, but also derive more value from a longer service time; this is common in healthcare interactions or repair settings. In such settings, the service provider often can obtain not only a fixed fee for the service but also a proportion of the price the customer pays for tests and materials consumed in the service process. As the prices customers pay for such peripherals (e.g. medical imaging and drugs in healthcare, spare parts in repairs) are often externally determined (by insurance, government, or third-party providers), their contribution to the service provider's income complicates the typical speed-quality trade-off decision. We investigate this setting, revealing new insights based on a strategic queueing framework in which the service provider decides the service fee and service rate, an exogenous entity determines the price the customers pay for peripherals, and the customers choose whether to patronize the service by comparing the service value and total costs. We find that if the price of the peripherals increases, the service provider reduces the service fee and increases the service time to improve the service quality, but the equilibrium demand rate still deceases. This effect is more profound if the service provider's share of the peripheral revenues is smaller. We also find that in the presence of peripheral consumption, when the customers become more sensitive to service quality, counter-intuitively, the service provider might speed up the service, which lowers the service quality. In addition, we find that social welfare loss can arise due to the peripheral price or the revenue sharing ratio being strategically determined by an external party (e.g., a peripheral supplier). This loss increases in the peripheral price or the external party's share of the revenue, and it is often most severe when the customers' quality sensitivity is either low or high. Finally, we explore the situation in which a longer service time can reduce peripheral consumption (as can occur in healthcare and repair settings), examining highly debated regulation policies that set price ceilings on the service fee. We find that although such policies can lead to more customers being served, they can also result in both poorer service quality and more peripheral consumption per customer, which reduces social welfare, especially when customers are sensitive to the service quality.
向具有周边消费的战略客户销售可自由支配的服务
自由裁量服务行业是指顾客不喜欢排队,但也能从较长的服务时间中获得更多价值的行业;这在医疗保健交互或修复设置中很常见。在这种情况下,服务提供者通常不仅可以获得固定的服务费用,而且还可以从客户为服务过程中消耗的测试和材料支付的价格中获得一定比例的费用。由于客户为这些外围设备(例如医疗保健中的医疗成像和药物,维修中的备件)支付的价格通常是由外部(由保险、政府或第三方提供商)决定的,因此它们对服务提供商收入的贡献使典型的速度-质量权衡决策变得复杂。我们研究了这种设置,揭示了基于战略排队框架的新见解,其中服务提供商决定服务费用和服务费率,外部实体决定客户为外围设备支付的价格,客户通过比较服务价值和总成本来选择是否订阅服务。我们发现,当外围设备的价格增加时,服务提供商通过降低服务费用和增加服务时间来提高服务质量,但均衡需求率仍然下降。如果服务提供商的外围收入份额较小,这种影响就会更为深远。我们还发现,在存在外围消费的情况下,当客户对服务质量变得更加敏感时,服务提供商可能会反直觉地加快服务速度,从而降低服务质量。此外,我们发现,由于外围价格或收入分享比例由外部方(例如外围供应商)战略性地决定,社会福利损失可能会出现。这种损失在外设价格或外方的收入分成中增加,当客户的质量敏感性低或高时往往最为严重。最后,我们探讨了延长服务时间可以减少外围设备消耗的情况(如在医疗保健和维修环境中可能出现的情况),并研究了备受争议的设置服务费价格上限的监管政策。我们发现,虽然这些政策可以使更多的客户得到服务,但它们也会导致服务质量下降和每个客户的周边消费增加,从而降低社会福利,特别是当客户对服务质量敏感时。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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