Integrating the Promotional and Service Roles of Retail Inventories

35 Pages Posted: 19 Jul 2005

See all articles by Anant Balakrishnan

Anant Balakrishnan

McCombs School of Business, University of Texas at Austin

Michael S. Pangburn

University of Oregon

Euthemia Stavrulaki

Bentley University - McCallum Graduate School of Business

Date Written: January 2005

Abstract

In some retail contexts, higher inventories not only improve service levels, but also stimulate demand by serving as a promotional tool (e.g., by increasing product visibility). Motivated by a building-products retailer's practice of stocking large quantities of products to stimulate demand, we study inventory management policies when demand is uncertain but increases with stocking quantity. For general inventory-dependent demand distributions, we characterize the profit-maximizing policy for a stochastic inventory model that extends the classical newsvendor setting. We contrast this integrated policy with two functionally-oriented approaches - a demand-driven policy that might represent marketing managers' view of inventories as a means for promoting products, and a critical fractile policy that reflects the traditional inventory management tradeoff between the costs of overage and lost sales. Our analysis provides insights regarding the structure of the optimal policy, and its relationship to the functional viewpoints. We prove that the optimal stocking quantity always exceeds the critical fractile solution, and can even exceed the demand-driven stocking quantity. Our analysis further shows that the functional orientations are complementary, with one policy performing well when the other fares poorly. By synthesizing the two functional approaches, the optimal stocking policy can achieve considerably higher profits than either functional policy. We also address the problem of jointly optimizing price and stocking quantity for demand-stimulating inventories by considering two alternative models for incorporating the dependence of demand on price - a distribution-lifting model and a multiplicative model. We show that the models permit sequential optimization of the price and stocking quantity decisions, and that ignoring demand stimulation results in a less-than-optimal stocking quantity.

Keywords: Inventory Management, Retailing, Operations-Marketing interface, Operations Management

Suggested Citation

Balakrishnan, Anantaram and Pangburn, Michael S. and Stavrulaki, Euthemia, Integrating the Promotional and Service Roles of Retail Inventories (January 2005). McCombs Research Paper Series No. IROM-02-05, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=759948 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.759948

Anantaram Balakrishnan (Contact Author)

McCombs School of Business, University of Texas at Austin ( email )

Austin, TX 78712
United States

Michael S. Pangburn

University of Oregon ( email )

Eugene, OR 97403
United States

Euthemia Stavrulaki

Bentley University - McCallum Graduate School of Business ( email )

Waltham, MA 02452-4705
United States

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