Thursday, July 24, 2008

Best in Business

Hot Tuna? Not After Price Cuts

Posted January 9, 2008

Price promotions may not be the best marketing strategy after all. In Decomposing Promotional Effects With a Dynamic Structural Model of Flexible Consumption, marketing professors from the University of Texas-Dallas and Washington University in St. Louis used A. C. Nielsen data to study how 1,000 households in South Dakota purchased canned tuna over a two-year period. The study, which will appear in the Journal of Marketing Research, showed that some consumers switched tuna brands to take advantage of sales, while others simply stocked up on their favorite brand when its price fell. Researchers also found that while consumers bought more tuna at a lower price, the stockpiling effect among brand loyalists hurt future sales of full-price tuna.

advertisement

advertisement

20-Something Guide

Financial planning for twenty somethings

The Guide to Being a Grown-Up: 20-Something Financial Advice

Figuring out your finances doesn't have to be tough for 20-somethings. Learn more about careers, budgeting, investing, and paying off your debt.

advertisement

Best Places to Retire

America's Best Places to Retire (Charlie Archambault for USN&WR)

See America's Best Places to Retire

Retirement may be a ways away. But that doesn't mean you can't think about where you might spend your golden years.

Reader Photos

Check out our readers' favorite retirement spots here. Have a photo of a retirement spot you'd like to share? Send it to retirementphotos@usnews.com

Suggest a Spot

From California to the Carolinas, where do you think you'll retire? What cities should have been on our list?

Get Stock Quotes

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.