International audienceWe show that a monopolist's profit is higher if he refrains from collecting coarse information on his customers, sticking to constant uniform pricing rather than recognizing customers' segments through their purchase history. In the Markov perfect equilibrium with coarse information collection, after each commitment period, a new introductory price is offered to attract new customers, creating a new market segment for price discrimination. Eventually, the whole market is covered. Shortening the commitment period results in lower profits. These results sharply differ from the ones obtained when the firm can uncover the exact willingness-to-pay of each previous customer
We study competition by firms that simultaneously post (potentially nonlinear) taris to consumers wh...
When demand is noisy and firms’ costs are uncertain, the availability of market share data increases...
In economic analyses of asymmetric information, better-informed agents are assumed capable of reprod...
International audienceWe show that a monopolist's profit is higher if he refrains from collecting co...
International audienceUsing a Markov-perfect equilibrium model, we show that the use of customer dat...
International audienceWe present a model of market hyper-segmentation, where a monopolist acquires w...
We analyze a model of monopolistic price discrimination where only some consumers are originally suf...
Where consumers have imperfect information about specific firms’ prices and lack information about t...
Recent developments in information technology (IT) have resulted in the collection of a vast amount ...
International audienceWe consider a nondurable good monopolist that collects data on its customers i...
This paper studies dynamic pricing by a monopolist selling to buyers who learn from each other’s pur...
We consider a Hotelling model of price competition where firms may acquire costly information regard...
We analyse the informational content of market shares and prices in a dynamic duopoly model in which...
This Consider an oligopolistic industry where two firms have access to the same technology and compe...
We study competition by firms that simultaneously post (potentially nonlinear) taris to consumers wh...
When demand is noisy and firms’ costs are uncertain, the availability of market share data increases...
In economic analyses of asymmetric information, better-informed agents are assumed capable of reprod...
International audienceWe show that a monopolist's profit is higher if he refrains from collecting co...
International audienceUsing a Markov-perfect equilibrium model, we show that the use of customer dat...
International audienceWe present a model of market hyper-segmentation, where a monopolist acquires w...
We analyze a model of monopolistic price discrimination where only some consumers are originally suf...
Where consumers have imperfect information about specific firms’ prices and lack information about t...
Recent developments in information technology (IT) have resulted in the collection of a vast amount ...
International audienceWe consider a nondurable good monopolist that collects data on its customers i...
This paper studies dynamic pricing by a monopolist selling to buyers who learn from each other’s pur...
We consider a Hotelling model of price competition where firms may acquire costly information regard...
We analyse the informational content of market shares and prices in a dynamic duopoly model in which...
This Consider an oligopolistic industry where two firms have access to the same technology and compe...
We study competition by firms that simultaneously post (potentially nonlinear) taris to consumers wh...
When demand is noisy and firms’ costs are uncertain, the availability of market share data increases...
In economic analyses of asymmetric information, better-informed agents are assumed capable of reprod...