The extent of pharmaceutical advertising and promotion can be characterized by a balancing act between profitable demand expansions and potentially unfavorable subsequent regulatory actions. However, this balance also depends on the nature of competition (e.g. monopoly versus oligopoly). In this paper we model the firm’s behavior under different competitive scenarios and test the model’s predictions using a novel combination of sales, promotion, advertising, and adverse event reports data. We focus on the market for erectile dysfunction drugs as the basis for estimation. This market is ideal for analysis as it is characterized by an abrupt shift in structure, all drugs are branded, the drugs are associated with adverse health events, and ha...
Background: Pharmaceutical firms heavily promote their products and may have changed marketing strat...
Successful innovation of prescription drugs requires a substantial amount of marketing support. Ther...
Abstract: How do competitors react to each other's price-promotion and advertising actions? How do t...
The extent of pharmaceutical advertising and promotion can be characterized by a balancing act betwe...
The research question addressed in this study was, "Do changes in promotional expenditure cause chan...
This paper analyzes the relationship between postmarketing promotional activity and reporting of adv...
Promotional competition in the market for prescription drugs can distort doctors ’ prescription deci...
We present a Hotelling model of price and advertising competition between prescription drugs that di...
Direct-to-consumer advertising (DTCA) of prescription drugs has been a controversial topic ever sinc...
In many industries, market structure determines how firms not only compete in terms of prices but al...
We study effects of direct-to-consumer advertising (DTCA) in the prescription drug market. There are...
We estimate the incentives to get ahead by hurting rivals in the context of comparative advertising....
textabstractNowadays, the U.S. pharmaceutical industry has been under thorough scrutiny. Popular pre...
Between 1994 and 2004, national spending on prescription drugs nearly quadrupled to $188B. Concurren...
This article develops a dynamic model of nonprice competition in an oligopolistic industry and uses ...
Background: Pharmaceutical firms heavily promote their products and may have changed marketing strat...
Successful innovation of prescription drugs requires a substantial amount of marketing support. Ther...
Abstract: How do competitors react to each other's price-promotion and advertising actions? How do t...
The extent of pharmaceutical advertising and promotion can be characterized by a balancing act betwe...
The research question addressed in this study was, "Do changes in promotional expenditure cause chan...
This paper analyzes the relationship between postmarketing promotional activity and reporting of adv...
Promotional competition in the market for prescription drugs can distort doctors ’ prescription deci...
We present a Hotelling model of price and advertising competition between prescription drugs that di...
Direct-to-consumer advertising (DTCA) of prescription drugs has been a controversial topic ever sinc...
In many industries, market structure determines how firms not only compete in terms of prices but al...
We study effects of direct-to-consumer advertising (DTCA) in the prescription drug market. There are...
We estimate the incentives to get ahead by hurting rivals in the context of comparative advertising....
textabstractNowadays, the U.S. pharmaceutical industry has been under thorough scrutiny. Popular pre...
Between 1994 and 2004, national spending on prescription drugs nearly quadrupled to $188B. Concurren...
This article develops a dynamic model of nonprice competition in an oligopolistic industry and uses ...
Background: Pharmaceutical firms heavily promote their products and may have changed marketing strat...
Successful innovation of prescription drugs requires a substantial amount of marketing support. Ther...
Abstract: How do competitors react to each other's price-promotion and advertising actions? How do t...