TY - JOUR
T1 - Optimal inventory and dynamic admission policies for a retailer of seasonal products with affiliate programs and drop-shipping
AU - Xiao, Yongbo
AU - Chen, Frank Y.
AU - Chen, Jian
PY - 2009/6
Y1 - 2009/6
N2 - This article investigates the optimal inventory and admission policies for a "Clicks-and-Bricks" retailer of seasonal products that, in addition to selling through its own physical and online stores, also sells through third-party websites by means of affiliate programs. Through postings on partners' webpages, an affiliate program allows a retailer to attract customers who would otherwise be missed. However, this retailer needs to pay a commission for each sale that originates from the website operators participating in the program. The retailer may also refer online orders to other sources (such as distributors and manufacturers) for fulfillment through a drop-shipping agreement and thus earns commissions. This would be an option when, for example, the inventories at the physical stores were running low. Therefore, during the selling horizon, the retailer needs to dynamically control the opening/closing of affiliate programs and decide on the fulfillment option for online orders. On the basis of a discrete-time dynamic programming model, the optimal admission policy of the retailer is investigated in this paper, and the structural properties of the revenue function are characterized. Numerical examples are given to show the revenue impact of optimal admission control. The optimal initial stocking decisions at the physical stores are also studied. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
AB - This article investigates the optimal inventory and admission policies for a "Clicks-and-Bricks" retailer of seasonal products that, in addition to selling through its own physical and online stores, also sells through third-party websites by means of affiliate programs. Through postings on partners' webpages, an affiliate program allows a retailer to attract customers who would otherwise be missed. However, this retailer needs to pay a commission for each sale that originates from the website operators participating in the program. The retailer may also refer online orders to other sources (such as distributors and manufacturers) for fulfillment through a drop-shipping agreement and thus earns commissions. This would be an option when, for example, the inventories at the physical stores were running low. Therefore, during the selling horizon, the retailer needs to dynamically control the opening/closing of affiliate programs and decide on the fulfillment option for online orders. On the basis of a discrete-time dynamic programming model, the optimal admission policy of the retailer is investigated in this paper, and the structural properties of the revenue function are characterized. Numerical examples are given to show the revenue impact of optimal admission control. The optimal initial stocking decisions at the physical stores are also studied. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
KW - Admission control
KW - Affiliate program
KW - Drop-shipping
KW - Electronic retailing
KW - Revenue management
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UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/pubmetrics.uri?eid=2-s2.0-67649810602&origin=recordpage
U2 - 10.1002/nav.20346
DO - 10.1002/nav.20346
M3 - RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal
SN - 0894-069X
VL - 56
SP - 300
EP - 317
JO - Naval Research Logistics
JF - Naval Research Logistics
IS - 4
ER -