Name Your Own Price

The "Name-Your-Own-Price" (NYOP) is a system under which buyers make a suggestion for a product’s price (unlike the traditional way where sellers quote a certain price) and the transaction occurs only if a seller accepts this quoted price.[1] What happens is that the seller waits for a potential buyer's offer and can then either accept or reject that 'named price' that the user had offered.[2] As the Internet is continuously being developed and the online marketplaces are becoming increasingly more popular, consumers have more choices in terms of product pricing. Popularised by the reverse auction pioneer, Priceline.com, such pricing strategy asks consumers to 'name their own price' for various products and services like air tickets, hotels, rental cars, ... etc.[3] The first bid a consumer places and the subsequent bid increments express the consumer's willingness or unwillingness to haggle. "The economic argument is that the number of bids a consumer submits to win a product in a NYOP auction is determined by the bidder’s intention to trade off higher expected savings from haggling against the associated frictional costs" .[4][5][6] NYOP retailers do not post a price for their products, and the final price of the transaction is only determined via a "reverse auction process", and these are key features that distinguish hotels and travel intermediaries from NYOP retailers.[3]

Originally, Name-your-own-price sales are considered "opaque" by marketers because buyers "don't know the name of the supplier (airline, hotel or car rental company) or the schedule (with air tickets) until after" they make a nonrefundable purchase.[7] Suppliers benefit because they can sell to the most price-conscious buyers/travelers without publicly disclosing those low rates.[7]

Priceline.com

Priceline.com logo

Founded in 1998,[8] Priceline is an "online travel company that offers its customers hotel room reservations at over 295,000 hotels worldwide through the Booking.com, priceline.com and Agoda brands." [9] Tom White, an analyst at Macquire Capital USA Inc., who rates Priceline an equivalent of a buy said that “Priceline is the best executor in the online travel space,” on International Bookings[10] By 2005, Priceline began to de-emphasize this system,[11] and added published price options on their websites.[7]

Priceline's price discrimination methods

Jay Walker, founder of Priceline.com, shows one of the many artifacts from his library… an Apollo in-flight instruction manual

Priceline.com has two different methods of price discrimination according to the product categories offered. For example, for multi-attributable products that are fairly close substitutes, such as hotel accommodation or air travel, Priceline uses a certain price discrimination method where potential buyers place offers on such products, uncertain about some of the attributes of the product. For instance, customers placing offers for air travel are uncertain about the travel schedule in details and do not know which carriers will place their orders, thus allowing Priceline to screen consumers according to their type, and this in turn allows airlines to serve customers that they were not able to distinguish from less price-sensitive customers before. Priceline uses a different price discrimination method for selling undifferentiated goods. Using this method, Priceline uses haggling effort—representing consumer effort and time loss from the online haggling process— as a way of discriminating between different customers. For example, a consumer placing an offer for calling capacity can start with a low offer and then— after waiting for a 60-second time period and then getting rejected— the offer is incremented. Before barring customers from submitting additional offers for 24 hours, Priceline allows customers to submit three offers consecutively for the same phone number and the same capacity.[2] Priceline claims that with their breakthrough Name Your Own Price feature, they quickly became the "traveler's cool best friend."[8]

Tips and Warnings for Priceline potential customers

Priceline.com forecasts the best days to fly for the lowest fares, mentioning that the "holiday travel booked before the end of October offers the most attractive rates" [12]

One of the tips that Priceline.com shares about finding cheaper airfares includes:

Consumer Interaction with NYOP Retailer

Consumer and Wholesaler's Perspective

Firstly, the consumer is asked to provide certain identification if he/she is an existing user, or to register as a new user. This is followed by the consumer setting an offer for the desired product. Afterwards, the retailer compares the consumer's offered price with an internal threshold price. If the consumer's offer exceeds the threshold, the transaction then occurs at the consumer's named price. If the named price is below the threshold, the NYOP retailer informs the user that his/her offer was too low and then the user is given the opportunity to submit an incremented offer after a certain pre-set delay period (For Priceline, it is usually a 24-hour period), and comparison with the internal threshold price is done again.[2]

NYOP Retailer's Perspective

The NYOP retailer "acts as an intermediary between the consumer and the wholesaler." [2] The intermediary needs to determine a threshold price above which they are willing to accept the offer from the consumer. As the consumer's offer succeeds, this leads to two sources of profit. The first source is the information rent the intermediary receives, which is the difference between the consumer's submitted offer price and the threshold price. The second source is the difference between the threshold price and the wholesale price, if the NYOP retailer chooses a threshold price that is above the wholesale price. The NYOP retailer also has control over the user interface design. Therefore, the retailer may influence the consumer's haggling effort "via the amount of information the consumer has to key in for every offer". In addition, the NYOP retailer is in charge of choosing the time delay between receiving an offer from the consumer and informing him/her about the offer's outcome (whether it is accepted or rejected) and this impacts the consumer's haggling effort directly.

Chiching

Founded in 2010 by Carlos Hernandez and Andrey Yruski, Chiching.com, the San Francisco company,[13] recently (June 2013) created a transparent NYOP model that allows buyers to select the businesses that they want to buy from as well as the pricing and value that they want to ask for. This new model is dynamic. A customer creates an offer and sends it to the businesses they select. The first business to accept the offer will accept the discounted voucher as payment toward the total bill. This is a highly dynamic model that gives businesses the ability to only accept offers that are profitable and timely. After the bidding, if no dealer has accepted the user's price, the user receives nothing. If a businesses has accepted the offer's discount terms, the customer must use their voucher during the business hours that were specified on the voucher. This transparent use of NYOP system helps establish goodwill in the marketplace and educated consumers what types of deals are reasonable.[14] There are also a number of relatively new services that are offering "Name your price" to their customers. The patrons of these service companies say they appreciate having the privilege of being allowed to name their price, especially in a "down" economy. Internet by taskrabbit.com.

Other websites additions

In Denmark there has been an addition in websites (in July 2006) that incorporate and develop this business model. The site (www.prisminister.dk ) differs from the Priceline strategy, by only collecting a deposit before the deal, rather than making the user commit 100% to the purchase. Furthermore, the dealer is allowed to make a return offer, if the price the user requests is too low. After the bidding, if no dealer has accepted the user's price, the user receives the lowest bid amongst the dealers.[15]

TorchEnergy.com

Uses in the music industry

Radiohead (left to right): Thom Yorke, Jonny Greenwood, Colin Greenwood, Ed O'Brien and Philip Selway

Radiohead band announced that they would charge fans for the band's seventh album, "In Rainbows", using the "Name Your Own Price" method on the band's website. A disclaimer on the checkout screen said, "It's up to you." [16]

Bandcamp, a web service where musicians (typically bands) sell their music to fans or can just upload them for streaming,[17] also allows fans to name their own prices when purchasing music and bands are given the option to set minimum prices for their music and buyers can pay as much over the minimum as they choose to.[18]

References

  1. Fay, Scott (2004). "Partial-Repeat-Bidding in the Name-Your-Own-Price Channel" (PDF). informs. Retrieved 11 November 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Terwiesch, Christian; Hann, Il-Horn; Savin, Sergei (March 2005). "Online Haggling at a Name-Your-Own-Price Retailer: Theory and Application". 51 (3).
  3. 1 2 Chernev, Alexander (2003). "Reverse Pricing and Online Price Elicitation Strategies in Consumer Choice" (PDF). Journal of Consumer Psychology. Retrieved 14 October 2014.
  4. Hann, Il-Horn; Terwiesch, Christian (2003). "Measuring the Frictional Costs of Online Transactions: The Case of a Name-Your-Own-Price Channel". 49 (11).
  5. Hinz, Oliver; Hann, Il-Horn; Spann, Martin (2011). "Price Discrimination in E-Commerce? An Examination of Dynamic Pricing in Name-Your-Own-Price Markets" (PDF). 35 (1). Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  6. Span, Martin; Schäfers, Björn; Skiera, Bernd (17 September 2004). "Measuring individual frictional costs and willingness-to-pay via name-your-own-price mechanisms". Journal of Interactive Marketing. 18 (4).
  7. 1 2 3 Perkins, Ed (5 March 2006). "Dwindling name-your-own-price sites still yield some great deals". San Francisco Chronicle. p. F-9. Retrieved 2006-07-24.
  8. 1 2 "Priceline Company History". Priceline.com. Retrieved 14 October 2014.
  9. "Priceline.Com Inc.". NY Times. Retrieved 21 October 2014.
  10. Cao, Jing (11 August 2014). "Priceline Earnings Exceed Estimates on International Bookings". Bloomberg. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  11. "Priceline.com de-emphasizes "Name Your Own Price"". USA Today. 11 April 2005. Retrieved 2006-07-24.
  12. 1 2 "Priceline.com Forecasts Best Days to Fly for the Lowest Airfares This Holiday Season". Bezinga. September 26, 2014. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  13. "Chiching". Crunchbase. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  14. "Accepts bids on new white goods (Hvidevarer)".
  15. An American Name Your Own Price company, (UrbanOffer ), also follows this concept as well. "Accepts bids on new white goods (Hvidevarer)".
  16. Cohen, Jonathan (October 10, 2007). "Radiohead Asks Fans To Name Price For New Album". Billboard. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  17. "Bandcamp Design and Usability". December 5, 2012. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  18. "Bandcamp Pricing Policy". December 5, 2012. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
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