Author List: Granados, Nelson; Gupta, Alok; Kauffman, Robert J.;
Information Systems Research, 2012, Volume 23, Issue 1, Page 164-181.
The Internet has brought consumers increased access to information to make purchase decisions. One of the expected consequences is an increase in the price elasticity of demand, or the percent change in demand caused by a percent change in price, because consumers are better able to compare offerings from multiple suppliers. In this paper, we analyze the impact of the Internet on demand, by comparing the demand functions in the Internet and traditional air travel channels. We use a data set that contains information for millions of records of airline ticket sales in both online and offline channels. The results suggest that consumer demand in the Internet channel is more price elastic for both transparent and opaque online travel agencies (OTAs), in part, because of more leisure travelers self-selecting the online channel, relative to business travelers. Yet, after controlling for this channel self-selection effect, we still find differences in price elasticity across channels. We find that the opaque OTAs are more price elastic than the transparent OTAs, which suggests that product information can mitigate the price pressures that arise from Internet-enabled price comparisons. We discuss the broader implications for multichannel pricing strategy and for the transparency-based design of online selling mechanisms.
Keywords: air travel industry; economics of information systems; electronic markets; market transparency; mechanism design; multichannel strategy; online travel agencies; price elasticity; self-selection
Algorithm:

List of Topics

#23 0.317 channel distribution demand channels sales products long travel tail new multichannel available product implications strategy allows internet revenue technologies times
#62 0.167 price buyers sellers pricing market prices seller offer goods profits buyer two-sided preferences purchase intermediary traditional marketplace decisions intermediaries selling
#118 0.118 online consumers consumer product purchase shopping e-commerce products commerce website electronic results study behavior experience b2c impact internet purchases websites
#225 0.083 information environment provide analysis paper overall better relationships outcomes increasingly useful valuable available increasing greater regarding levels decisions viewed relative
#182 0.062 percent sales average economic growth increasing total using number million percentage evidence analyze approximately does business flow annual book daily
#171 0.054 markets industry market ess middle integrated logistics increased demand components economics suggested emerging preference goods interesting form recent vertically chinese
#262 0.050 impact data effect set propensity potential unique increase matching use selection score results self-selection heterogeneity evidence measure associated estimate leads