Advertising and Sealed Bid Auctions in a Transshipment Game

Abstract

In an earlier paper 7, we suggested employing the sealed-bid auction as a format for modelling the marketing of a wide range of heterogeneous products, including the marketing of most brand names. The formation of prices in such markets is described as if it resulted from an actual sealed-bid auction, with buyers inspecting the goods offered by sale by the various manufacturers, and making sealed bids which later are opened by a hypothetical auctioneer. While surely putative, this model nevertheless seems superior to the standard assumptions of perfect competition where a homogeneous commodity is transacted and all buyers offer identical prices. Extending the use of the sealed bid auction, we here consider cases where the manufacturers or distributors promote their sales by advertising. While the maximum quantity demanded by each customer is fixed and given, his bids on the various brands are determined by the advertising and other promotional efforts. The bid response function for each consumer is supposed to be given and known. The preceding vertical production and distribution chain, from the supply of raw materials and primary commodities, via the successive processing, manufacturing and distribution of the product is described as a transshipment auction game. We formulate a complementarity model that in one step solves this entire logistics system, including a possible formation of coalitions between suppliers and/or distributors, the market prices of the various brands, the optimal distribution of the product, and the bids of the consumers. A numerical example is provided and the solution routine is discussed.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 01, 1996
Accession Number
ADA352045

Entities

People

  • Gerald L. Thompson
  • Sten Thore

Organizations

  • Carnegie Mellon University

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Commerce
  • Commodities
  • Consumers
  • Economic Analysis
  • Economic Models
  • Economic Systems
  • Linear Programming
  • Market Economy
  • Marketing
  • Markets
  • Mathematical Models
  • Models
  • Packaging
  • Perturbations
  • Shipping
  • Targeting
  • Transportation

Readers

  • Government Contracting/Procurement.
  • Industrial Economics
  • Operations Research