i figured nintendo would hear the complaints about pricing but damn alright
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i figured nintendo would hear the complaints about pricing but damn alright
Will you pay more for those shoes before 7 p.m.? Would the price tag be different if you lived in the suburbs? Standard prices and simple discounts are giving way to far more exotic strategies, designed to extract every last dollar from the consumer.
It may come as a surprise that, in buying a seasonal pie ingredient, you might be participating in a carefully designed social-science experiment. But this is what online comparison shopping hath wrought. Simply put: Our ability to know the price of anything, anytime, anywhere, has given us, the consumers, so much power that retailersâin a desperate effort to regain the upper hand, or at least avoid extinctionâare now staring back through the screen. They are comparison shopping us.
Oh and:
âI donât think anyone could have predicted how sophisticated these algorithms have become,â says Robert Dolan, a marketing professor at Harvard. âI certainly didnât.â The price of a can of soda in a vending machine can now vary with the temperature outside. The price of the headphones Google recommends may depend on how budget-conscious your web history shows you to be, one study found. For shoppers, that means priceânot the one offered to you right now, but the one offered to you 20 minutes from now, or the one offered to me, or to your neighborâmay become an increasingly unknowable thing. âMany moons ago, there used to be one price for something,â Dolan notes. Now the simplest of questionsâwhatâs the true price of pumpkin-pie spice?âis subject to a Heisenberg level of uncertainty.
Which raises a bigger question: Could the internet, whose transparency was supposed to empower consumers, be doing the opposite?
How Online Shopping Makes Suckers of Us All
By Jerry Useem, The Atlantic, April 18, 2017
As Christmas approached in 2015, the price of pumpkin-pie spice went wild.
It didnât soar, as an economics textbook might suggest. Nor did it crash. It just started vibrating between two quantum states. Amazonâs price for a one-ounce jar was either $4.49 or $8.99, depending on when you looked. Nearly a year later, as Thanksgiving 2016 approached, the price again began whipsawing between two different points, this time $3.36 and $4.69.
We live in the age of the variable airfare, the surge-priced ride, the pay-what-you-want Radiohead album, and other novel price developments. But what was this? Some weird computer glitch? More like a deliberate glitch, it seems. âItâs most likely a strategy to get more data and test the right price,â Guru Hariharan explained, after I had sketched the pattern on a whiteboard.
The right price--the one that will extract the most profit from consumersâ wallets--has become the fixation of a large and growing number of quantitative types, many of them economists who have left academia for Silicon Valley. Itâs also the preoccupation of Boomerang Commerce, a five-year-old start-up founded by Hariharan, an Amazon alum. He says these sorts of price experiments have become a routine part of finding that right price--and refinding it, because the right price can change by the day or even by the hour. (Amazon says its price changes are not attempts to gather data on customersâ spending habits, but rather to give shoppers the lowest price out there.)
It may come as a surprise that, in buying a seasonal pie ingredient, you might be participating in a carefully designed social-science experiment. But this is what online comparison shopping hath wrought. Simply put: Our ability to know the price of anything, anytime, anywhere, has given us, the consumers, so much power that retailers--in a desperate effort to regain the upper hand, or at least avoid extinction--are now staring back through the screen. They are comparison shopping us.
They have ample means to do so: the immense data trail you leave behind whenever you place something in your online shopping cart or swipe your rewards card at a store register, top economists and data scientists capable of turning this information into useful price strategies, and what one tech economist calls âthe ability to experiment on a scale thatâs unparalleled in the history of economics.â In mid-March, Amazon alone had 59 listings for economists on its job site, and a website dedicated to recruiting them.
Not coincidentally, quaint pricing practices--an advertised discount off the âlist price,â two for the price of one, or simply âeveryday low pricesâ--are yielding to far more exotic strategies.
âI donât think anyone could have predicted how sophisticated these algorithms have become,â says Robert Dolan, a marketing professor at Harvard. âI certainly didnât.â The price of a can of soda in a vending machine can now vary with the temperature outside. The price of the headphones Google recommends may depend on how budget-conscious your web history shows you to be, one study found. For shoppers, that means price--not the one offered to you right now, but the one offered to you 20 minutes from now, or the one offered to me, or to your neighbor--may become an increasingly unknowable thing. âMany moons ago, there used to be one price for something,â Dolan notes. Now the simplest of questions--whatâs the true price of pumpkin-pie spice?--is subject to a Heisenberg level of uncertainty.
Which raises a bigger question: Could the internet, whose transparency was supposed to empower consumers, be doing the opposite?
If the marketplace was a war between buyers and sellers, the 19th-century French sociologist Gabriel Tarde wrote, then price was a truce. And the practice of setting a fixed price for a good or a service--which took hold in the 1860s--meant, in effect, a cessation of the perpetual state of hostility known as haggling.
As in any truce, each party surrendered something in this bargain. Buyers were forced to accept, or not accept, the one price imposed by the price tag (an invention credited to the retail pioneer John Wanamaker). What retailers ceded--the ability to exploit customersâ varying willingness to pay--was arguably greater, as the extra money some people would have paid could no longer be captured as profit. But they made the bargain anyway, for a combination of moral and practical reasons.
The Quakers--including a New York merchant named Rowland H. Macy--had never believed in setting different prices for different people. Wanamaker, a Presbyterian operating in Quaker Philadelphia, opened his Grand Depot under the principle of âOne price to all; no favoritism.â Other merchants saw the practical benefits of Macyâs and Wanamakerâs prix fixe policies. As they staffed up their new department stores, it was expensive to train hundreds of clerks in the art of haggling. Fixed prices offered a measure of predictability to bookkeeping, sped up the sales process, and made possible the proliferation of printed retail ads highlighting a given price for a given good.
Companies like General Motors found an up-front way of recovering some of the lost profit. In the 1920s, GM aligned its various car brands into a finely graduated price hierarchy: âChevrolet for the hoi polloi,â Fortune magazine put it, âPontiac ⌠for the poor but proud, Oldsmobile for the comfortable but discreet, Buick for the striving, Cadillac for the rich.â The policy--âa car for every purse and purpose,â GM called it--was a means of customer sorting, but the customers did the sorting themselves. It kept the truce.
Customers, meanwhile, could recover some of their lost agency by clipping coupons--their chance to get a deal denied to casual shoppers. The new supermarket chains of the 1940s made coupons a staple of American life. What the big grocers knew--and what behavioral economists would later prove in detail--is that while consumers liked the assurance the truce afforded (that they would not be fleeced), they also retained the instinct to best their neighbors. They loved deals so much that, to make sense of their behavior, economists were forced to distinguish between two types of value: acquisition value (the perceived worth of a new car to the buyer) and transaction value (the feeling that one lost or won the negotiation at the dealership).
The idea that there was a legitimate âlist price,â and that consumers would occasionally be offered a discount on this price--these were the terms of the truce. And the truce remained largely intact up to the turn of the present century. The reigning retail superpower, Walmart, enforced âeveryday low pricesâ that did not shift around.
But in the 1990s, the internet began to erode the terms of the long peace. Savvy consumers could visit a Best Buy to eyeball merchandise they intended to buy elsewhere for a cheaper price, an exercise that became known as âshowrooming.â In 1999, a Seattle-based digital bookseller called Amazon.com started expanding into a Grand Depot of its own.
The era of internet retailing had arrived, and with it, the resumption of hostilities.
In retrospect, retailers were slow to mobilize. Even as other corporate functions--logistics, sales-force management--were being given the âmoneyballâ treatment in the early 2000s with powerful predictive software (and even as airlines had fully weaponized airfares), retail pricing remained more art than science. In part, this was a function of internal company hierarchy. Prices were traditionally the purview of the second-most-powerful figure in a retail organization: the head merchant, whose intuitive knack for knowing what to sell, and for how much, was the source of a deep-seated mythos that she was not keen to dispel.
Two developments, though, loosened the head merchantâs hold.
The first was the arrival of data. Thomas Nagle was teaching economics at the University of Chicago in the early 1980s when, he recalls, the university acquired the data from the grocery chain Jewelâs newly installed checkout scanners. âEveryone was thrilled,â says Nagle, now a senior adviser specializing in pricing at Deloitte. âWeâd been relying on all these contrived surveys: âGiven these options at these prices, what would you do?â But the real world is not a controlled experiment.â
The Jewel data overturned a lot of what heâd been teaching. For instance, heâd professed that ending prices with .99 or .98, instead of just rounding up to the next dollar, did not boost sales. The practice was merely an artifact, the existing literature said, of an age when owners wanted to force cashiers to open the register to make change, in order to prevent them from pocketing the money from a sale. âIt turned out,â Nagle recollects, âthat ending prices in .99 wasnât big for cars and other big-ticket items where you pay a lot of attention. But in the grocery store, the effect was huge!â
The effect, now known as âleft-digit bias,â had not shown up in lab experiments, because participants, presented with a limited number of decisions, were able to approach every hypothetical purchase like a math problem. But of course in real life, Nagle admits, âif you did that, it would take you all day to go to the grocery store.â Disregarding the digits to the right side of the decimal point lets you get home and make dinner.
By the early 2000s, the amount of data collected on retailersâ internet servers had become so massive that it started exerting a gravitational pull. Thatâs what triggered the second development: the arrival, en masse, of the practitioners of the dismal science.
This was, in some ways, a curious stampede. For decades, academic economists had generally been as indifferent to corporations as corporations were to them. (Indeed, most of their models barely acknowledged the existence of corporations at all.)
But that began to change in 2001, when the Berkeley economist Hal Varian--highly regarded for the 1999 book Information Rules--ran into Eric Schmidt. Varian knew him but, he says, was unaware that Schmidt had become the CEO of a little company called Google. Varian agreed to spend a sabbatical year at Google, figuring heâd write a book about the start-up experience.
At the time, the few serious economists who worked in industry focused on macroeconomic issues like, say, how demand for consumer durables might change in the next year. Varian, however, was immediately invited to look at a Google project that (he recalls Schmidt telling him) âmight make us a little moneyâ: the auction system that became Google AdWords. Varian never left.
Others followed. âeBay was Disneyland,â says Steve Tadelis, a Berkeley economist who went to work there for a time in 2011 and is currently on leave at Amazon. âYou know, pricing, people, behavior, reputationâ--the things that have always set economists aglow--plus the chance âto experiment at a scale thatâs unparalleled.â
At first, the newcomers were mostly mining existing data for insights. At eBay, for instance, Tadelis used a log of buyer clicks to estimate how much money one hour of bargain-hunting saved shoppers. (Roughly $15 was the answer.)
Then economists realized that they could go a step further and design experiments that produced data. Carefully controlled experiments not only attempted to divine the shape of a demand curve--which shows just how much of a product people will buy as you keep raising the price, allowing retailers to find the optimal, profit-maximizing figure. They tried to map how the curve changed hour to hour. (Online purchases peak during weekday office hours, so retailers are commonly advised to raise prices in the morning and lower them in the early evening.)
By the mid-2000s, some economists began wondering whether Big Data could discern every individualâs own personal demand curve--thereby turning the classroom hypothetical of âperfect price discriminationâ (a price thatâs calibrated precisely to the maximum that you will pay) into an actual possibility.
As this new world began to take shape, the initial consumer experience of online shopping--so simple! and such deals!--was losing some of its sheen.
Itâs not that consumers hadnât benefited from the lower prices available online. They had. But some of the deals werenât nearly as good as they seemed to be. And for some people, glee began to give way to a vague suspicion that maybe they were getting ripped off. In 2007, a California man named Marc Ecenbarger thought he had scored when he found a patio set--list price $999--selling on Overstock.com for $449.99. He bought two, unpacked them, then discovered--courtesy of a price tag left on the packaging--that Walmartâs normal price for the set was $247. His fury was profound. He complained to Overstock, which offered to refund him the cost of the furniture.
But his experience was later used as evidence in a case brought by consumer-protection attorneys against Overstock for false advertising, along with internal emails in which an Overstock employee claimed it was commonly known that list prices were âegregiously overstated.â
In 2014, a California judge ordered Overstock to pay $6.8 million in civil penalties. (Overstock has appealed the decision.) The past year has seen a wave of similar lawsuits over phony list prices, reports Bonnie Patten, the executive director of TruthinAdvertising.org. In 2016, Amazon began to drop most mentions of âlist price,â and in some cases added a new reference point: its own past price.
This could be seen as the final stage of decay of the old one-price system. Whatâs replacing it is something that most closely resembles high-frequency trading on Wall Street. Prices are never âsetâ to begin with in this new world. They can fluctuate hour to hour and even minute to minute--a phenomenon familiar to anyone who has put something in his Amazon cart and been alerted to price changes while it sat there. A website called camelcamelcamel.com even tracks Amazon prices for specific products and alerts consumers when a price drops below a preset threshold. The price history for any given item--Classic Twister, for example--looks almost exactly like a stock chart. And as with financial markets, flash glitches happen. In 2011, Peter A. Lawrenceâs The Making of a Fly (paperback edition) was briefly available on Amazon for $23,698,655.93, thanks to an algorithmic price war between two third-party sellers that had run amok.
Especially in challenging economic times, creative pricing strategies may help you to increase profit while your competitors suffer from revenue drops.
Especially in challenging economic times, creative pricing strategies may help you to increase profit while your competitors suffer from revenue drops.
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