Differentiated or integrated: capacity and service level choice for differentiated products
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1754179
DOI10.1016/j.ejor.2017.10.053zbMath1403.90452OpenAlexW2766094883MaRDI QIDQ1754179
Publication date: 30 May 2018
Published in: European Journal of Operational Research (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejor.2017.10.053
product differentiationOR in marketingcannibalizationjoint product-service strategyservice complexity
Related Items
Self-design fun: should 3D printing be employed in mass customization operations?, Impact of capacity flexibility on service product line design, A product service supply chain network equilibrium model considering capacity constraints, Quality differentiation in a dual-channel supply chain
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Make-or-buy service capacity decision in a supply chain providing after-sales service
- Monopoly and product quality
- Commonality in product design: Cost saving, valuation change and cannibalization
- Capacity and price setting for dispersed, time-sensitive customer segments
- Investment Strategies for Flexible Resources
- Quality–Speed Conundrum: Trade-offs in Customer-Intensive Services
- Price and Service Discrimination in Queuing Systems: Incentive Compatibility of Gcμ Scheduling
- Competition and Outsourcing with Scale Economies
- Competition in Service Industries with Segmented Markets
- Optimal Investment in Product-Flexible Manufacturing Capacity
- Resource Sharing for Efficiency in Traffic Systems
- Market Segmentation, Cannibalization, and the Timing of Product Introductions
- Product Variety and Manufacturing Performance: Evidence from the International Automotive Assembly Plant Study
- Principles on the Benefits of Manufacturing Process Flexibility
- Optimal Incentive-Compatible Priority Pricing for the M/M/1 Queue
- Optimum Bribing for Queue Position
- Evaluating focused factory benefits with queuing theory