Authors
Harald J Van Heerde, Peter SH Leeflang, Dick R Wittink
Publication date
2004/8
Journal
Marketing Science
Volume
23
Issue
3
Pages
317-334
Publisher
INFORMS
Description
Sales promotions generate substantial short-term sales increases. To determine whether the sales promotion bump is truly beneficial from a managerial perspective, we propose a system of store-level regression models that decomposes the sales promotion bump into three parts: cross-brand effects (secondary demand), cross-period effects (primary demand borrowed from other time periods), and category-expansion effects (remaining primary demand). Across four store-level scanner datasets, we find that each of these three parts contribute about one third on average. One extension we propose is the separation of the category-expansion effect into cross-store and market-expansion effects. Another one is to split the cross-item effect (total across all other items) into cannibalization and between-brand effects. We also allow for a flexible decomposition by allowing all effects to depend on the feature/display support …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
HJ Van Heerde, PSH Leeflang, DR Wittink - Marketing Science, 2004