Retail Category Management with Slotting Fees

Yasin Alan, Mümin Kurtuluş, Alper Nakkas
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Abstract

Problem definition: Slotting fees are lump-sum payments retailers demand from manufacturers to include manufacturers’ products in their assortments. Although retailers regard slotting fees as part of doing business, some manufacturers claim that slotting fees limit their ability to compete on a level playing field with other manufacturers. Considering these conflicting views, we study the role of manufacturer competition in the emergence of slotting fees and how slotting fees affect retailers’ category management (i.e., assortment and pricing) decisions. Methodology/results: We consider a game-theoretic model with a single retailer and two competing manufacturers, each offering a single product. The retailer makes slotting fee, assortment, and pricing decisions in the presence of an operational cost term that increases in the assortment size. The manufacturers that can afford the slotting fee set the wholesale prices for their products. This study leads to three key findings. First, slotting fees can be suboptimal when their absence would trigger intense wholesale price competition. Second, depending on the retailer’s operational cost and the intensity of manufacturer competition, slotting fees create three distinct effects -category expansion, rent extraction, and competitive exclusion under which product variety (i.e., the retailer’s assortment size) increases, remains unchanged, and decreases, respectively. Third, slotting fees are most (least) beneficial for the retailer when they lead to a decrease (increase) in product variety. Managerial implications: This study not only illustrates that retailers can use slotting fees as a strategic tool to control the intensity of manufacturer competition but also reveals how slotting fees impact retailers’ assortment and pricing decisions, with implications for manufacturers and policy makers.Supplemental Material: The online appendix is available at https://doi.org/10.1287/msom.2022.0143 .
零售品类管理与插槽费
问题的定义:档期费是零售商为将制造商的产品纳入其商品目录而要求制造商支付的一次性费用。尽管零售商将档期费视为经营活动的一部分,但一些制造商声称,档期费限制了他们与其他制造商公平竞争的能力。考虑到这些相互冲突的观点,我们研究了制造商竞争在档期费出现中的作用,以及档期费如何影响零售商的品类管理(即分类和定价)决策。方法/结果:我们考虑了一个博弈理论模型,模型中只有一个零售商和两个相互竞争的制造商,每个制造商提供一种产品。零售商在有运营成本项的情况下做出档期费、分类和定价决策,而运营成本项会随着分类规模的增加而增加。有能力支付档期费的制造商则为其产品设定批发价格。这项研究得出了三个重要发现。首先,当不收取档期费会引发激烈的批发价格竞争时,档期费可能是次优的。其次,根据零售商的运营成本和制造商竞争的激烈程度,档期费会产生三种不同的效应--品类扩张、租金提取和竞争排斥,在这三种效应下,产品种类(即零售商的品种规模)分别会增加、保持不变和减少。第三,当档期费导致产品种类减少(增加)时,对零售商最有利(最不利)。管理意义:本研究不仅说明零售商可以将档期费作为控制制造商竞争强度的战略工具,而且揭示了档期费如何影响零售商的分类和定价决策,对制造商和政策制定者具有启示意义:在线附录见 https://doi.org/10.1287/msom.2022.0143 。
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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