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Dynamic pricing of remanufacturable products under demand substitution: a product life cycle model

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Abstract

We consider a manufacturer who sells both the new and remanufactured versions of a product over its life cycle. The manufacturer’s profit depends crucially on her ability to synchronize product returns with the sales of the remanufactured product. This gives rise to a challenging dynamic optimization problem where the size of both the market and the user pool are dynamic and their current values depend on the entire history. We provide an analytical characterization of the manufacturer’s optimal pricing, production, and inventory policies which lead to a practical threshold policy with a small optimality gap. In addition, our analysis offers a number of interesting insights. First, the timing of remanufacturing activity and its co-occurrence with new product manufacturing critically depends on remanufacturing cost benefits, attractiveness of the remanufactured product and product return rate. Second, there is a small upward jump in the price of the new product when remanufacturing is introduced. Third, the manufacturer keeps the new product longer on the market as the cost of remanufacturing decreases. Fourth, partially satisfying demand for the remanufactured item is never optimal, i.e., it is satisfied either fully or not at all. Finally, user pool and inventory of returned products are substitutes in ensuring the supply for future remanufacturing.

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Notes

  1. To find the manufacturer’s optimal policy, we solve the dynamic decision problem (P) using the solver KNITRO after discretizing it appropriately. The objective function value of the policy is then compared with the upper bound on the optimal objective of the manufacturer’s problem, cf. Sect. 5. The objective value of the optimal policies for Examples 1, 2, and 3 are within 0.33 %, 0.64 % and 0.41 % of the upper bound, respectively, ensuring their global optimality.

  2. We focus on the interaction between user pool and inventory at τ 1 because τ 1 marks a shift in the pricing and production policies, which affect user pool dynamics, as well as the inventory policy.

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Correspondence to Barış Ata.

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The authors thank E.R. Cil and M.H. Tongarlak for their technical assistance.

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Akan, M., Ata, B. & Savaşkan-Ebert, R.C. Dynamic pricing of remanufacturable products under demand substitution: a product life cycle model. Ann Oper Res 211, 1–25 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10479-013-1409-1

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