Dayton Daily News

Consumers hate ‘price discrimina­tion,’ but they sure love a discount

- Lydia DePillis

It’s been a strange and maddening couple of years for consumers, with prices of essential goods soaring and then sinking, turning household budgets upside down.

Perhaps that’s why, in late February, the internet revolted over Wendy’s plan to test changing its menu prices across the day. If the Breakfast Baconator winds up costing $6.99 at 7 a.m. and $7.99 three hours later, what in life can you really count on anymore?

The company later issued a statement saying it would not raise prices during busy parts of the day, but rather add discounts during slower hours. Neverthele­ss, the episode won’t stop the continued spread of so-called dynamic pricing, which describes an approach of setting prices in response to shifting patterns of demand and supply. It might not even stop the growth of “personaliz­ed pricing,” which targets individual­s based on their personal willingnes­s to pay.

And in many circumstan­ces, customers may come around — if they feel companies are being forthright about how they’re changing prices and what informatio­n they’re using to do it.

“There’s a need for some transparen­cy, and it has to make sense to consumers,” said Craig Zawada, a pricing expert with PROS, a consultanc­y that helped pioneer dynamic pricing by airlines in the 1980s and now works across dozens of other industries. “In general, from a buyer standpoint, there has to be this perception of fairness.”

Dynamic pricing, by one name or another, has been around since the dawn of merchandis­ing.

Sometimes it’s a means of maximizing return on fixed expenses, such as labor: Happy hour is a way to boost bar traffic before the after-work rush, for example. (You might say Wendy’s was attempting a happy hour for Baconators.)

“Load balancing” is a similar concept in energy and transporta­tion. Utilities charge less for power overnight, and transit agencies impose higher fares during rush hour to encourage users to shift toward off-peak times, when energy and trains are in less demand.

It’s easy to understand why companies want to change prices more frequently: to make more money. But does that mean that as dynamic pricing spreads, prices will be higher on average?

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, posed the question to the Federal Reserve chair, Jerome Powell, at an oversight hearing in March, calling the technique “just another way for corporatio­ns to make it harder for consumers to seek out lower prices.”

“Are you concerned that the wide adoption of these pricing schemes, if you will, contribute to inflation?” Brown asked. Powell responded that dynamic pricing lowers prices as well as raises them, and that the overall impact on price levels isn’t yet known.

Part of the concern comes from the idea that dynamic pricing is often enabled by algorithms, which are opaque to consumers and regulators, and can be tools of collusion. The Federal Trade Commission recently filed a legal brief warning that price fixing by algorithms is still illegal, even without explicit human direction. And when one company dominates the market, dynamic pricing is more likely to inflate prices overall.

But in a competitiv­e environmen­t, dynamic pricing can also lead to price wars that benefit consumers. Most companies use the strategy to try to broaden their reach, according to pricing experts, increasing their revenues by bringing in new customers rather than making more money on each one.

Jean-Pierre Dubé is a professor of marketing at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business who has studied personaliz­ed pricing. In one experiment, two movie theaters offered mobile discounts to people who were located closer to their competitor, effectivel­y creating a twotier price structure. (This is common with senior and student discounts.) In the end, both moviegoers and theaters came out ahead.

“When both firms do it, the prices go down a ton,” Dubé said. “The only reason the firms aren’t harmed profit-wise is that you can generate enough new customers who wouldn’t have otherwise gone to a movie to make up for it.”

If companies did this more often, they might end up charging wealthier people more, effectivel­y creating a progressiv­e cost structure for goods and services. For example, a 2017 economics paper found that grocery stores could make more money by offering lower prices in poor neighborho­ods, which they currently tend not to do.

But few companies have embraced the strategy, fearing the kind of fury that Wendy’s faced — or, at least, don’t charge different sticker prices for different people, which draws accusation­s of the uglier term “price discrimina­tion.” Instead, they’ve found more subtle ways to personaliz­e the shopping experience that create essentiall­y the same result.

Zohar Gilad runs Fast Simon, a company that helps retailers optimize their websites. Instead of offering different prices, they might display higher-end items for customers with a free-spending buying history, and clearance items for bargain hunters. Targeted coupons for hesitant browsers also create a personaliz­ed price by another name, creating a sale that might not have happened.

“Say if you search for something and you didn’t buy it, you may get an email saying: ‘Hey, you have great taste. We saw you looking for black boots. Here’s a 20% coupon,’” Gilad said. “I think that personaliz­ation, done correctly, can be good and serve both shoppers and the merchants well.”

The most important factor, said the Consumer Federation of America’s director of consumer protection, Erin Witte, is that shoppers understand the rules that merchants have created. Problems arise when there’s an “informatio­nal imbalance,” especially when it comes to something as existentia­l as food, which may have fueled the Wendy’s backlash.

“When they feel like they can participat­e meaningful­ly in a negotiatio­n about price, everyone understand­s on some level that a business is going to make money on a transactio­n,” Witte said. “But when you feel like you’re the subject of price manipulati­on that you as the consumer don’t have any access to, and certainly can’t predict with any measure of certainty, it just feels very unfair.”

 ?? FILIP FRŠHLICH / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The Wendy’s debacle is a warning shot for brands: If you want to play with prices, make sure to communicat­e why and whom it could help.
FILIP FRŠHLICH / THE NEW YORK TIMES The Wendy’s debacle is a warning shot for brands: If you want to play with prices, make sure to communicat­e why and whom it could help.

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