TY - JOUR
T1 - Decision support system development for store flyer space allocation
T2 - Leveraging own- and cross-category sales effects
AU - Vafainia, Saeid
AU - Rooderkerk, Robert P.
AU - Breugelmans, Els
AU - Bijmolt, Tammo H.A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - Print store flyers that feature retailer assortments remain a key retail marketing communication tool, making their space allocation among various product categories a vital decision. Academic research on store flyers has mostly taken a descriptive approach, focused on grocery settings where a large number of (often competing) categories are promoted, neglecting cross-category flyer space effects. We advance the literature by addressing how a non-grocery retailer can best allocate space in a showcase flyer intended to highlight the assortment of a few categories, with the aim of maximizing total store revenue. For this purpose, we have developed a dynamic Decision Support System (DSS) handling own- and cross-category flyer space effects on sales. Our DSS features two components: (1) a sales response model and (2) a store flyer space allocation tool that enlists a custom-built Large Neighborhood Search heuristic to solve the store flyer space allocation problem in less than a minute. Dynamics are captured using time-varying baseline estimates that yield optimal flyers to serve different seasons by limiting the level of overlap in subsequent flyers within the same season. In an empirical application for a furniture and home goods retailer, our optimization generates an overall average expected sales improvement of 13.0% versus this retailer's actual flyers. By exploiting cross-category effects, store flyers become more thematic as they concentrate on one or two departments.
AB - Print store flyers that feature retailer assortments remain a key retail marketing communication tool, making their space allocation among various product categories a vital decision. Academic research on store flyers has mostly taken a descriptive approach, focused on grocery settings where a large number of (often competing) categories are promoted, neglecting cross-category flyer space effects. We advance the literature by addressing how a non-grocery retailer can best allocate space in a showcase flyer intended to highlight the assortment of a few categories, with the aim of maximizing total store revenue. For this purpose, we have developed a dynamic Decision Support System (DSS) handling own- and cross-category flyer space effects on sales. Our DSS features two components: (1) a sales response model and (2) a store flyer space allocation tool that enlists a custom-built Large Neighborhood Search heuristic to solve the store flyer space allocation problem in less than a minute. Dynamics are captured using time-varying baseline estimates that yield optimal flyers to serve different seasons by limiting the level of overlap in subsequent flyers within the same season. In an empirical application for a furniture and home goods retailer, our optimization generates an overall average expected sales improvement of 13.0% versus this retailer's actual flyers. By exploiting cross-category effects, store flyers become more thematic as they concentrate on one or two departments.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85199475954&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijresmar.2024.07.002
DO - 10.1016/j.ijresmar.2024.07.002
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85199475954
SN - 0167-8116
VL - 42
SP - 113
EP - 132
JO - International Journal of Research in Marketing
JF - International Journal of Research in Marketing
IS - 1
ER -