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Tag: Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)

  • Shoppers prioritize price over health for food choices

    Shoppers prioritize price over health for food choices

    Key Takeaways:

    • When food consumers are properly incentivized, they will choose healthier options.
    • When financial incentives are removed, consumers are more likely to choose less healthy options by comparison.

    Newswise — BALTIMORE, MD, June 9, 2023 – A new study of food consumer shopping behaviors has found that when faced with a choice – lower prices or healthier foods – they will likely choose lower prices.

    The study found that when you give food consumers temporary incentives to buy healthier foods, they will likely to choose those healthier foods. But when you take away the discounts, consumers are more likely to return to old behaviors of buying the less healthy/less expensive options.

    The study, “The Persistence of Healthy Behaviors in Food Purchasing,” was conducted by Marit Hinnosaar of the University of Nottingham and Centre for Economic Policy Research in London.

    Hinnosaar conducted in-depth research into the U.S. Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). WIC gives vouchers for specific foods to mothers and their children age 5 and younger. In 2009, WIC policy reform changed the composition of food vouchers, introducing vouchers to encourage purchase of healthier products. To conduct her research, Hinnosaar used NielsenIQ household-level scanner data of grocery purchases.

    “I conducted what you might call ‘difference-in-differences’ analysis to assess the immediate and long-term impacts of the healthier choice incentive program,” says Hinnosaar. “The product categories most targeted by the program were bread and milk.”

    Hinnosaar says that the evidence points to a decrease in purchases of healthier options after participants left the program.

    “During the incentive program, vouchers were restricted to whole wheat bread and low-fat milk,” she says. “Since some of these options tend to be more expensive, once the vouchers were no longer available for these products, consumers tended to choose items based on price.”

    Still, there was no measurable difference in the total quantities of products in the WIC vouchers during or after the program. These products included bread, milk, fruits and vegetables, juice, eggs and cereal.

    “Based on these findings, it is possible to conclude that a modest post-program subsidy once program participants leave the program – to incentivize healthier food choices – may be a more sustainable way to lengthen the program’s impact and lead to long-term healthier food purchases.”

    Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)

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  • New research finds variable pricing for NFL games increases ticket sales

    New research finds variable pricing for NFL games increases ticket sales

    Key Takeaways from New Study in the INFORMS Journal Management Science:

    • The adoption of variable pricing increases primary market ticket sales by nearly 2% per game.
    • Lower prices for less popular games are well received by customers, and customers don’t object to higher prices for more popular games.
    • Variable pricing has the most success in team hometowns with lower income levels and higher income diversity.
    • Creating more game tiers in variable pricing leads to more sales.

    Newswise — BALTIMORE, MD, January 24, 2023 – How can a sports team win off the field with variable ticket pricing strategies? A new study in the INFORMS journal Management Science sheds light on the adoption of variable pricing increases in primary market ticket sales by looking at National Football League (NFL) ticket markets.

    The study, “Scoring a Touchdown with Variable Pricing: Evidence from a Quasi-Experiment in the NFL Ticket Markets,” looks at primary and resale ticket market data from each NFL regular season game from 2012 to 2015. The authors find that the adoption of variable pricing increases primary market ticket sales by 1.59% per game.

    “We explore the reasoning behind this positive impact and find that customers embrace lower prices for less popular games and accept higher prices for the more attractive games,” says Hayri Alper Arslan of the University of Texas at San Antonio.

    Arslan, alongside Necati Tereyagoglu of the University of South Carolina and Ovunc Yilmaz of the University of Colorado Boulder, say this work provides evidence for the increase in option value created by the resale market and explains the positive response to higher prices for more attractive games.

    “Through our novel data set, this study sheds light on the interplay between primary and resale ticket market dynamics and provides important insights for sports teams that are interested in boosting ticket sales and revenues,” says Tereyagoglu.

    The study concludes by pointing to the situations in which variable pricing is most effective. “For example, we find that variable pricing has greater success in teams’ hometowns with lower income levels and higher income diversity, and creating more game tiers in variable pricing leads to higher sales,” adds Yilmaz.

    The researchers are clear to point out that although variable pricing enables sports teams to respond to changing demand across games, reports point to somewhat limited implementation.

    Link to full study.

     

    About INFORMS and Management Science

    Management Science is a premier peer-reviewed scholarly journal focused on research using quantitative approaches to study all aspects of management in companies and organizations. It is published by INFORMS, the largest association for the decision and data sciences. More information is available at www.informs.org or @informs.

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    Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)

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