When a price-demand relationship is needed in inventory/pricing models, very often a convenient (typically linear) function is arbitrarily chosen. The common-wisdom implication is that any downward-sloping demand curve would lead to similar conclusions. This paper applies different demand-curve functions to a simple inventory/pricing model, and shows that while the common-wisdom implication is valid for a single-echelon system, assuming different demand-curve functions can lead to very different results in a multi-echelon system. In some situations, a very small change in the demand-curve appearance leads to very large changes in the model's optimal solutions. Other significant but counter-intuitive effects of the demand-curve form are also...
We study the effects of demand uncertainty on optimal decisions and the expected profit of a price-s...
We estimate the curvature of the demand curve for a wide range of products. We use an extension of D...
In this article we explore the effects of incorporating forecasts explicitly in a two-echelon alloca...
Assumption of a downward sloping demand curve establishes a negative relationship between price and ...
We approach the newsvendor with pricing problem as a practitioner who must model demand as a functio...
The study focuses on the demand-price relationship in the commodity market and the scope of the dema...
The study focuses on the demand-price relationship in the commodity market and the scope of the dema...
Most studies on inventory management under demand uncertainty analyse the detrimental effects of dem...
Pricing and inventory research often focuses on stylized models to illustrate pricing and ordering d...
Traditional economic models of price-setting focus on call-auction markets in which all trading occu...
AbstractIn the two-echelon supply-chain literature, the manufacturer-Stackelberg process, i.e. the m...
The Economic Order Quantity (EOQ) formula is probably the most well-known formula in inventory theor...
Pricing decision making can be helped by estimating the underlying demand curve. While various metho...
Purpose – The purpose of the analysis is to estimate price elasticities of demand for individual FTS...
The retail-market demand for a newsboy-type product is uncertain. The product's manufacturer sets: (...
We study the effects of demand uncertainty on optimal decisions and the expected profit of a price-s...
We estimate the curvature of the demand curve for a wide range of products. We use an extension of D...
In this article we explore the effects of incorporating forecasts explicitly in a two-echelon alloca...
Assumption of a downward sloping demand curve establishes a negative relationship between price and ...
We approach the newsvendor with pricing problem as a practitioner who must model demand as a functio...
The study focuses on the demand-price relationship in the commodity market and the scope of the dema...
The study focuses on the demand-price relationship in the commodity market and the scope of the dema...
Most studies on inventory management under demand uncertainty analyse the detrimental effects of dem...
Pricing and inventory research often focuses on stylized models to illustrate pricing and ordering d...
Traditional economic models of price-setting focus on call-auction markets in which all trading occu...
AbstractIn the two-echelon supply-chain literature, the manufacturer-Stackelberg process, i.e. the m...
The Economic Order Quantity (EOQ) formula is probably the most well-known formula in inventory theor...
Pricing decision making can be helped by estimating the underlying demand curve. While various metho...
Purpose – The purpose of the analysis is to estimate price elasticities of demand for individual FTS...
The retail-market demand for a newsboy-type product is uncertain. The product's manufacturer sets: (...
We study the effects of demand uncertainty on optimal decisions and the expected profit of a price-s...
We estimate the curvature of the demand curve for a wide range of products. We use an extension of D...
In this article we explore the effects of incorporating forecasts explicitly in a two-echelon alloca...