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An analysis of B2B ingredient co-branding relationships
Authors:Sunil Erevelles  Thomas H Stevenson  Shuba Srinivasan  Nobuyuki Fukawa[Author vitae]
Institution:aThe Belk College of Business, University of North Carolina, Charlotte, 9201 University City Boulevard, Charlotte, NC 28223-0001, United States;bUniversity of California, Riverside, Riverside, CA 92521, United States;cLouisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, United States
Abstract:The proliferation of co-branding in consumer markets has been given considerable attention in the literature, yet attention to the practice in business-to-business markets has been limited, despite the growing attention to the role of relationships in the B2B arena. In an examination of co-branding in the industrial sector, this paper discusses the use of ingredient co-branding and uses an econometric modeling approach to offer a rationale for why it occurs. The analysis provides insight into why downstream manufacturers participate in a relationship that strengthens the supplier's position in the market. We find that under the threat to the supplier of entry from a competitor whose costs are unobservable, co-branding relationships will be entered into resulting in a reduced probability of entry. This co-branding arrangement benefits both the incumbent supplier and the downstream manufacturer. The incumbent supplier benefits from the reduced probability of competitor entry, and the downstream manufacturer is rewarded with a lower price. Further, we find that the cost of the co-branded product is lower, due to a mitigation of double marginalization in a vertically-integrated solution. We examine co-branding relationships with and without advertising support and find that co-branding relationships with advertising support tend to be superior.
Keywords:Branding  Ingredient co-branding  Relationships  Business-to-business
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