Consumer Inter-Product Showrooming and Information Service Provision in an Omni-Channel Supply Chain

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

48 Scopus Citations
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Author(s)

Detail(s)

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)51
Number of pages5
Journal / PublicationDecision Sciences
Volume51
Issue number5
Online published7 Oct 2019
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2020

Abstract

Facilitated by physical showrooms, many online first retailers have embarked on the practice of omni-channel retailing. This offline to online mode (information delivery offline and product fulfillment online) empowers consumers’ showrooming behavior in two ways, namely, intra-product showrooming (intra-SR) and inter-product showrooming (inter-SR). As the physical showroom usually displays a partial assortment of the online products, consumer inter-SR, i.e., the behavior of inspecting one product offline but buying a different or related product online, is critical to firms’ decisions. Moreover, inter-SR facilitated by the retailer's omni-channel operations changes the nature of upstream competition between manufacturers. In this article, we develop a theoretical model to investigate consumer inter-SR behavior and the information service provision in an omni-channel supply chain. Our main findings are as follows. First, consumer inter-SR benefits the manufacturer whose product is displayed online exclusively but hurts the manufacturer whose product is dual-channel displayed; inter-SR is beneficial to the omni-channel retailer only when the inter-SR intensity is not too high. Second, under the service compensation contract, the dual-channel manufacturer and the retailer can be coordinated to provide enhanced information service; the online-exclusive manufacturer, however, may be either better off or worse off depending on the relative strengths of the utility-increasing effect and the service-differentiating effect of the information service enhancement. Third, the consumers located far from the showrooms are more likely to be hurt by the inter-SR behavior and the information service compensation, while the local consumers generally benefit from them. Finally, the in-store inventory that facilitates immediate product fulfillment has a positive impact on the retailer's information service provision.

Research Area(s)

  • Information Service, Inter-Product Showrooming, Omni-channel Retailing, Operations-Marketing Interface, Supply Chain