A Study of Bidding Behavior in Voluntary-Pay Philanthropic Auctions

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Haruvy, Ernan, Popkowski Leszczyc, Peter T.L.
In: Journal of Marketing, 82, 2018, 3, p. 124-141
published:
SAGE Publications
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
Physical Description: 124-141
ISSN: 1547-7185
0022-2429
DOI: 10.1509/jm.16.0476
published in: Journal of Marketing
Language: English
Subjects:
Collection: SAGE Publications (CrossRef)
Table of Contents

<jats:p>The authors investigate compliance behavior and revenue implications in winner-pay and voluntary-pay auctions in charity and noncharity settings. In the voluntary-pay format, the seller asks all bidders to pay their own high bid. The authors explore motives and boundary conditions for compliance behavior based on internal and external triggers of social norms. The voluntary-pay format generates higher revenue than the winner-pay format for charity auctions, despite imperfect compliance, but it generates lower revenues in noncharity settings. To characterize bidding strategy, the authors study time to bid, auction choice, and jump bidding and find evidence that bidders in voluntary-pay auctions more commonly use jump bidding and late entry. The findings have important implications for marketing managers, augmenting the growing stream of empirical auction studies and work on corporate social responsibility. Specifically, combining an auction with a charitable cause may result in increased revenues, but managers should ensure that they are accounting for differential compliance rates between auction formats. Even if low-compliance bidders can be identified and screened out, doing so is not advantageous, because noncompliant bidders bid up prices.</jats:p>