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The promise and peril of dynamic targeted pricing.

Ham, Sung H.; He, Chuan; Zhang, Dan. The promise and peril of dynamic targeted pricing. International Journal of Research in Marketing. Dec2022, Vol. 39 Issue 4, p1150-1165.ÌýÌýÌýÌý

Dynamic pricing is widely adopted in many industries, such as travel and insurance. These industries are also gaining extensive capabilities in identifying and segmenting customers, partly fueled by the increasing availability of data. It is natural to ask whether firms should take advantage of such developments by charging different prices to different customer segments. If so, under what conditions? We seek answers to these highly managerially relevant questions. We consider a market with two customer segments served by a monopolist. The monopolist can choose among a set of pricing strategies to exploit consumers' inter-temporal preferences and/or inter-segment variations. At one end of the spectrum, the firm can charge a constant price to all customers, which is called static pricing. At the other end of the spectrum, the firm can charge different prices to different customer segments and vary these prices over time, which is referred to as dynamic targeted pricing. We systematically compare these alternative pricing strategies. We show that dynamic pricing without targeting can be more effective than static targeted pricing when customers are not very forward looking, which corroborates the findings in the empirical literature. Interestingly, we find that the monopolist can be worse off when she adopts targeting in addition to dynamic pricing. We conduct laboratory experiments to test several key model predictions. The studies show that individuals behave in a manner consistent with the predictions of our model.ÌýÌýÌýÌý

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