The aim of this study is to investigate whether an online retailer should cooperate with a competing brick-and-mortar retailer for a cooperative showroom which displays more products than an independent showroom (operated by the online retailer) does.
We develop two showroom strategies: an independent showroom owned by the online retailer and a cooperative showroom in which the online retailer showcases products in a brick-and-mortar retailer’s store. The different effects of the independent showroom and the cooperative showroom on consumer preference learning behaviour are characterized. Several analytical game models have been developed to study whether the online retailer cooperates with a local brick-and-mortar retailer and the brick-and-mortar retailer’s response to cooperation.
First, the online retailer prefers the cooperative showroom strategy even if it cannot reduce display costs. Second, encouraging consumers’ one-stop comparison shopping behaviour can alleviate price competition. Third, for a low cooperation commission or product differentiation, the brick-and-mortar retailer may not be willing to cooperate when physical product display plays a more significant role in increasing consumers’ purchase intention of online products. To improve the brick-and-mortar retailer’s cooperation incentives, the online retailer can reveal information about opening an independent showroom that can be used as a deterrent and push the brick-and-mortar retailer to cooperate.
The results provide some managerial insights for online retailers that are making decisions on opening physical showrooms in the competitive market.
This study provides new insight into why and when an online retailer and its offline competitor can cooperate for product display.
