PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Rice University study finds Groupon is more beneficial for consumers than businesses

Social promotion industry needs to retool to stay viable

2010-09-30
(Press-News.org) Social promotions such as those offered by deal-of-the-day website Groupon are wildly popular with shoppers, but they might not be as big a hit for businesses, according to a recent study by Rice University's Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Business.

Groupon promotions were profitable for 66 percent of the businesses surveyed for the study, but they were unprofitable for 32 percent. More than 40 percent of the respondents indicated they would not run such a promotion again.

Groupon is a social promotion site that features a daily deal for each city in which it operates and offers consumers a significant discount for a local good, service or event. The discount is valid only if a minimum number of consumers purchase the deal.

Utpal Dholakia, author of the study and associate professor of marketing at the Jones School, conducted surveys with 150 businesses spanning 19 U.S. cities and 13 product categories that ran and completed Groupon promotions between June 2009 and August 2010.

The study provides evidence that "satisfied employees" is the most important factor for the Groupon promotion to work successfully for a business. If employees remain satisfied through the promotion, the likelihood of its profitability is significantly higher. The percentage of discount offered and the number of Groupons sold did not predict the deal's profitability, nor did the percentage of Groupon users who purchased beyond the Groupon's value or purchased again at full price.

"Because the Groupon customer base is made up of deal-seekers and bargain shoppers, they might not tip as well as an average customer or be willing to purchase beyond the deal," Dholakia said. "So employees need to be prepared for this type of customer and the sheer volume of customers that might come through."

Other findings include:

Groupon promotions offer the most benefit for businesses in which the promotion does not cannibalize sales to existing customers. Among the service businesses (restaurants, educational services, tourism and salon and spa), restaurants fared the worst and salons and spas were the most successful. Businesses with unprofitable promotions reported low rates of spending by Groupon users beyond the Groupon's face value and low rates of return to the business again at full price. Respondents indicated they had largely negative perceptions of Groupon's competitors. "I think these findings show that social promotion companies need to better balance consumer appeal with positive outcomes for the small businesses offering them," Dholakia said. "Right now, these deals are tilted too far in consumers' favor."

Dholakia outlined some strategies for success:

Use promotions for building relationships instead of creating one-time transactions. Instead of offering $60 worth of food for $30, parcel it out to offer $20 worth of food for $10 over the customer's next three visits. Don't offer discounts on a total bill; rather, offer a specified discount for various products or services. Choose items judiciously to sell unpopular items or use unutilized services through the promotion. INFORMATION: The complete study can be found at http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~dholakia/. To interview Dholakia, contact David Ruth at 713-348-6327 or druth@rice.edu.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Addition of immunotherapy boosts pediatric cancer survival in children with neuroblastoma

2010-09-30
Administering a new form of immunotherapy to children with neuroblastoma, a nervous system cancer, increased the percentage of those who were alive and free of disease progression after two years, according to researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and fellow institutions. The percentage rose from 46 percent for children receiving a standard therapy to 66 percent for children receiving immunotherapy plus standard therapy, according to the study published in the Sept. 30, 2010 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. "This is the ...

Notre Dame and Wyoming scientists genetically engineer silkworms to produce artificial spider silk

2010-09-30
A research and development effort by the University of Notre Dame, the University of Wyoming, and Kraig Biocraft Laboratories, Inc. has succeeded in producing transgenic silkworms capable of spinning artificial spider silks. "This research represents a significant breakthrough in the development of superior silk fibers for both medical and non-medical applications," said Malcolm J. Fraser Jr., a Notre Dame professor of biological sciences. "The generation of silk fibers having the properties of spider silks has been one of the important goals in materials science." Natural ...

CEO's fate in hands of external constituents

2010-09-30
A CEO's fate might be in the hands of external constituents, according to a new study from Rice University's Jones Graduate School of Business. The study found that investment analysts and their negative stock ratings can sway a board to dismiss its CEO. Conventional research has focused on internal factors that contribute to CEO dismissal -- poor firm performance and organization power and politics. But the new study, published by the Strategic Management Journal, turned its attention outward to discover the significant influence investment analysts have on a board ...

NRL's Wide-Field Imager selected for Solar Probe Plus mission

NRLs Wide-Field Imager selected for Solar Probe Plus mission
2010-09-30
NASA has chosen the Naval Research Laboratory's (NRL's) Wide-field Imager to be part of the Solar Probe Plus mission slated for launch no later than 2018. The Solar Probe Plus, a small car-sized spacecraft will plunge directly into the sun's atmosphere approximately four million miles from our star's surface. It will explore a region no other spacecraft ever has encountered in an effort to unlock the sun's biggest mysteries. For decades, scientists have known that the corona, or the outer atmosphere, is several hundreds of times hotter than the visible solar surface ...

New NIST 'standard cigarette' available for fire-resistance testing

2010-09-30
Cigarettes are the most frequent cause of fatalities from residential fires in the United States. So, it might seem surprising to learn that a cigarette that burns stronger than others has been used for decades by manufacturers of home furnishings to test the fire resistance of their products. Making certain that they can continue this life- and property-saving effort is the job of a new standard reference material (SRM) from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). NIST SRM 1196, "Standard Cigarette for Ignition Resistance Testing," consists of 10 packs ...

Studies show improved patient tolerance for unsedated colonoscopy using novel water method

2010-09-30
OAK BROOK, Ill. – September 29, 2010 – The October issue of GIE: Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, the monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal of the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE), features the results of two randomized controlled trials of unsedated colonoscopy comparing water infusion versus air insufflation to distend the colon. Both studies showed that patient tolerance with the water method during unsedated colonoscopy was greater than with air insufflation and enhanced patient willingness to undergo a repeat unsedated exam; however, the cecal intubation ...

Growing nanowires horizontally yields new benefit: 'nano-LEDs'

Growing nanowires horizontally yields new benefit: nano-LEDs
2010-09-30
While refining their novel method for making nanoscale wires, chemists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) discovered an unexpected bonus—a new way to create nanowires that produce light similar to that from light-emitting diodes (LEDs). These "nano-LEDs" may one day have their light-emission abilities put to work serving miniature devices such as nanogenerators or lab-on-a-chip systems. Nanowires typically are "grown" by the controlled deposition of molecules—zinc oxide, for example—from a gas onto a base material, a process called chemical vapor ...

NIST 'Vision Science Facility' aims for lighting revolution

2010-09-30
Light-emitting diodes, or LEDs, have become popular with backpackers and cyclists who mount them on headbands for a reliable, hands-free source of illumination. Now, a new lab at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is helping to bring these tiny but brilliant devices into your home, to help save both energy costs and the environment. "LEDs can be very energy efficient, and they are a lot smaller and last a lot longer than light bulbs," says NIST vision scientist Wendy Davis. "They're what we'll likely use in the future to light our houses and public ...

Children's well-being and varying degrees of family instability

2010-09-30
Bowling Green, OH—September 29, 2010— A forthcoming issue of the Journal of Marriage and Family states that children today are less likely to be born into a "traditional" family structure, defined as two biological married parents. Growing numbers of children in the United States experience multiple family living arrangements during childhood. How these transitions affect the individual child's well-being needs to be fully addressed by researchers and policymakers alike. This article fully reviews the existing research from the past ten years on these topics in an effort ...

NIST residential fire study education kit now available

NIST residential fire study education kit now available
2010-09-30
Researchers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the International Association of Fire Fighters have prepared an educational resource for fire chiefs, firefighters, and public officials to summarize and explain the key results of a landmark study on the effect of the size of firefighting crews on the ability of the fire service to protect lives and property in residential fires. The study, Report on Residential Fireground Field Experiments, was published by NIST last April. The study is the first to quantify the effects of crew sizes and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Norbert Holtkamp appointed director of Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory

New agentic AI platform accelerates advanced optics design

Biologists discover neurons use physical signals — not electricity — to stabilize communication

Researchers discover that a hormone can access the brain by hitchhiking

University of Oklahoma researcher awarded funding to pursue AI-powered material design

Exploring how the visual system recovers following injury

Support for parents with infants at pediatric check-ups leads to better reading and math skills in elementary school

Kids’ behavioral health is a growing share of family health costs

Day & night: Cancer disrupts the brain’s natural rhythm

COVID-19 vaccination significantly reduces risk to pregnant women and baby

The role of vaccination in maternal and perinatal outcomes associated with COVID-19 in pregnancy

Mayo Clinic smartwatch system helps parents shorten and defuse children's severe tantrums early

Behavioral health spending spikes to 40% of all children’s health expenditures, nearly doubling in a decade

Digital cognitive behavioral treatment for generalized anxiety disorder

Expenditures for pediatric behavioral health care over time and estimated family financial burden

Air conditioning in nursing homes and mortality during extreme heat

The Alps to lose a record number of glaciers in the next decade

What makes a good proton conductor?

New science reporting guide published for journalists in Bulgaria

New international study reveals major survival gaps among children with cancer

New science reporting guide published for journalists in Turkey

Scientists develop a smarter mRNA therapy that knows which cells to target

Neuroanatomy-informed brain–machine hybrid intelligence for robust acoustic target detection

Eight SwRI hydrogen projects funded by ENERGYWERX

The Lundquist Institute and its start-up company Vitalex Biosciences Announces Strategic Advancement of Second-Generation fungal Vaccine VXV-01 through Phase 1 Trials under $40 Million Competitive Con

Fine particles in pollution are associated with early signs of autoimmune disease

Review article | Towards a Global Ground-Based Earth Observatory (GGBEO): Leveraging existing systems and networks

Penn and UMich create world’s smallest programmable, autonomous robots

Cleveland researchers launch first major study to address ‘hidden performance killer’ in athletes

To connect across politics, try saying what you oppose

[Press-News.org] Rice University study finds Groupon is more beneficial for consumers than businesses
Social promotion industry needs to retool to stay viable