线下线上定位的互补与蚕食:全渠道商务的现场实验

MIS Q. Pub Date : 2020-06-01 DOI:10.25300/MISQ/2020/15630
Xueming Luo, Yuchi Zhang, Fue Zeng, Z. Qu
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引用次数: 18

摘要

由于在线渠道至关重要,传统的线下零售商店寻求通过激励来诱导现有消费者在线购买(即线下到线上目标)。然而,这样的目标是否真正有效是有争议的。虽然支持者认为网上购物应该补充公司的实体店渠道,但批评者反驳说,这样做可能会导致自相残杀。利用渠道相互作用文献并考虑到客户的旅行成本,我们研究了诱导在线购物是否以及如何补充或蚕食公司的线下销售。通过对某大型百货公司11200多名顾客的随机现场实验,我们为线上和线下渠道的互补性和同类相食效应提供了因果证据。离线到在线的目标产生更高的在线购买(如预期)比没有目标。本地平均处理效应模型表明,一旦被诱导在线购买,居住在零售商实体店附近的消费者往往会增加47%的线下支出和总销售额(即对附近消费者的互补效应)。然而,对于离实体店较远的消费者来说,诱使他们在网上购物可能会适得其反,因为每增加一公里的距离,就会减少线下和总销售额约5.7%(即对距离较远的消费者产生蚕食效应)。对这些机制的探索表明,被诱导在线购买的远程消费者可能不会再回到线下商店购物,购买的体验类产品数量少于其他顾客,购物篮尺寸也小于其他顾客,从而导致对总销售额的净影响为负。这些发现提醒管理者注意不恰当的定位和信息技术投资的危险,以及消费者异质性对跨线上和线下渠道的全渠道商务的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Complementarity and Cannibalization of Offline-to-Online Targeting: A Field Experiment on Omnichannel Commerce
As the online channel is crucially important, traditional offline retail stores seek to induce their existing consumers to buy online with incentives (i.e., offline-to-online targeting). However, it is debatable whether such targeting is truly effective. While advocates argue that online shopping should complement a firm’s store channel, critics counter that doing so may result in cannibalization. Drawing on the channel interplay literature and considering customers’ travel costs, we examine whether and how inducing online shopping complements or cannibalizes a firm’s offline sales. Using a randomized field experiment on over 11,200 customers of a large department store, we provide causal evidence for both the complementarity and cannibalization effects of online and offline channels. Offline-to-online targeting engenders higher online purchases (as intended) than no targeting. The local average treatment effects models suggest that once induced to buy online, consumers who live near the retailer’s physical store tend to increase their offline spending and total sales by 47% (i.e., complementarity effects for nearby consumers). However, for consumers who live far away from the brick-and-mortar store, inducing them to buy online can backfire by reducing offline and total sales by approximately 5.7% for each additional kilometer of distance (i.e., cannibalization effects for distant consumers). Explorations of these mechanisms suggest that distant consumers who are induced to buy online may fail to return to shop in the offline store and purchase less experiential category products with a smaller basket size than other customers, thus leading to a negative net impact on the total sales. These findings alert managers to the dangers of improper targeting and investment in information technology and the importance of consumer heterogeneity for omnichannel commerce across online and offline channels.
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