Abstract

We developed a two-period duopoly model to show how consumers’ variety-seeking behavior affects the pricing and service level decisions of a traditional product and a sharing product. Our analysis revealed that, without considering the consumers’ variety-seeking behavior, the traditional product attracted consumers with a high level of service and high price, while the sharing product attracted consumers with a low level of service and low price. When we only considered variety-seeking behavior and did not adjust the service level, the product with the low level of service benefited from the consumers’ variety-seeking behavior, while the product with the high level of service lost profits. When we considered the variety-seeking behavior and adjusted the service level as well as the price, the sharing product was attractive to variety-seeking consumers and it gained a greater competitive advantage over the traditional product. For two periods, the number of variety-seeking consumers who switched from buying traditional products to buying sharing products was greater than those who switched from buying sharing products to buying traditional products. Furthermore, we found that when the consumers’ variety-seeking behavior was not obvious, the number of consumers shifting from the traditional product increased monotonically. In contrast, when the variety-seeking behavior was obvious, the number of consumers shifting from the traditional product decreased monotonically.

Highlights

  • The Sharing Economy (SE) has seen phenomenal growth in recent years with the development of online technological advances and the spread of mobile communication devices [1,2]

  • We posed the following research question: How will consumers’ variety-seeking behavior affect the service level and pricing decisions of both the traditional and sharing products? This study focuses on analyzing the experience of sharing products, so we concentrated on the services sharing rather than the goods sharing; this is because the SE provides for the diversified needs of consumers

  • We developed a simple model to explain why some customers choose traditional products while other customers choose sharing products, and we examined the case of room sharing

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Summary

Introduction

The Sharing Economy (SE) has seen phenomenal growth in recent years with the development of online technological advances and the spread of mobile communication devices [1,2]. Tussyadiah and Pesonen (2015) [4], Guttentag et al (2018) [5], and Lin et al (2019) [6] have studied the switching phenomenon in which consumers choose Airbnb instead of traditional hotels This behavior, induces competition between traditional products and sharing products. We posed the following research question: How will consumers’ variety-seeking behavior affect the service level and pricing decisions of both the traditional and sharing products? When we considered the variety-seeking behavior and adjusted the service level as well as the price, the sharing product was attractive to variety-seeking consumers and it gained a greater competitive advantage over the traditional product.

Service Sharing
Variety-Seeking Behavior
SE Pricing Strategy
Analysis
Benchmark Case
Adjusting Service Level
Findings
Limitations and Future
Full Text
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