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Seasonality effects in retail supply chains
Type
fundamental research project
Start Date
01 December 2010
End Date
31 May 2011
Status
completed
Keywords
on-shelf availability (OSA)
purchasing patterns
seasonality
channel decisions
Description
Seasonality effects play an important role in retail supply chains. Changes in sales velocity need to be accounted for by retail supply chain managers in order to be able to fulfill shopper demand and prevent stockouts. While seasonality effects throughout the year and weeks (e.g. summer holiday sales dip, weekend sales peak) are generally known, little evidence exists on intraday purchasing patterns. This study seeks to explore and connect annual, weekly and intraday demand patterns in retail supply chains in order to improve channel decisions, shelf replenishment and inventory control.
Leader contributor(s)
Stölzle, Wolfgang
Member contributor(s)
Ehrenthal, Joachim C.F.
Funder(s)
Topic(s)
on-shelf availability (OSA)
purchasing patterns
seasonality
channel decisions
Method(s)
time series analysis
Range
Institute/School
Range (De)
Institut/School
Division(s)
Eprints ID
69798
3 results
Now showing
1 - 3 of 3
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PublicationValue-attenuation in distribution networks : Insights from a service dominant-logic perspective on retail out-of-stocks( 2012-02-18)
;Ehrenthal, Joachim C.F. ;Gruen, Thomas W.This conceptual article examines the effects of out-of-stock items through the Service-Dominant (S-D) logic lens. Combining classic S-D logic research with recent applications of S-D logic in supply chains, this article examines the role that out-of-stock items play in value attenuation throughout the supply chain and its networks of actors. It presents a model of value co-creation where the brand manufacturer and customer demand meet in the retailer's realm for the "first moment of truth," and then develops a model of the total costs of a stock-out that are uncovered by the S-D logic perspective. It concludes with managerial implications showing how this perspective can bring previously misaligned incentives of supply chain actors into alignment.Type: presentation -
PublicationValue-attenuation in distribution networks : Insights from a service dominant-logic perspective on retail out-of-stocksThis conceptual article examines the effects of out- of-stock items through the Service-Dominant (S-D) logic lens. Combining classic S-D logic research with recent applications of S-D logic in supply chains, this article examines the role that out-of-stock items play in value attenuation throughout the supply chain and its networks of actors. It presents a model of value co-creation where the brand manufacturer and customer demand meet in the retailer's realm for the "first moment of truth," and then develops a model of the total costs of a stock-out that are uncovered by the S-D logic perspective. It concludes with managerial implications showing how this perspective can bring previously misaligned incentives of supply chain actors into alignment.Type: conference paper
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PublicationThe Relationship Marketing View of the Customer and the Service Dominant Logic PerspectiveBased on the concept of service-dominant logic as the emerging organizing logic of marketing that would replace the traditional goods-dominant view, Vargo and Lusch (2004) originally proposed that among several other approaches to research and marketing practice that had emerged, relationship marketing would be subsumed by this broader view. More recently, however, Vargo (2009) suggested that because relationship marketing focuses on increasing the series of on-going transactions with a customer, coupled with the goal of enhancing their long- term patronage, that relationship marketing extends the goods-dominant perspective, rather than transcending into the service-dominant logic. This article counters that the relationship marketing view of the customer has already transcended the goods-dominant view to the to service-dominant view based on the way that customers are brought into the relationship as active participants in the service creation, and act as "co-producers" of value. To address the apparent goods-dominant approach in two widely used relationship marketing practices and measures, customer relation- ship management and customer lifetime value, this article proposes that these tools can be used from a goods-dominant view, but they can also serve as essential steps towards the practice of relationship marketing from the service-dominant logic.Type: journal articleJournal: Journal of Business Market ManagementVolume: 4Issue: 4