Selling off-grid light to liquidity constrained consumers

Problem definition: A large proportion of the world’s population has no access to electricity and so relies on noxious kerosene for their lighting needs. Solar-based solutions require a large up-front investment and are often unaffordable in this market owing to consumers’ tight liquidity constraint...

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Main Authors: UPPARI, Bhavani Shanker, POPESCU, Ioana, NETESSINE, Serguei
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2019
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/5850
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/6849/viewcontent/Selling_off_grid_light_sv.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-68492020-09-10T14:05:10Z Selling off-grid light to liquidity constrained consumers UPPARI, Bhavani Shanker POPESCU, Ioana NETESSINE, Serguei Problem definition: A large proportion of the world’s population has no access to electricity and so relies on noxious kerosene for their lighting needs. Solar-based solutions require a large up-front investment and are often unaffordable in this market owing to consumers’ tight liquidity constraints. As an alternative, there are business models relying on rechargeable light bulbs that are sold at a subsidized price (which renders them affordable) and require regular micropayments for recharges (which eases liquidity constraints). These bulbs provide a cheaper and healthier light source than kerosene, yet their adoption is lower than expected, and some consumers continue to use kerosene. This paper explores the potential drivers of such preferences and proposes strategies to alter them. Academic/practical relevance: Unlike most of the existing operations management literature, which focuses on the problems in developed economies, our paper studies a problem specific to the poor population. Our novel modeling approach, which incorporates several operational features of the impoverished regions, could also serve as a template for other potential modeling attempts in similar settings. Methodology: We propose a stylized consumer behavior model that accounts for—in addition to the monetary cost incurred while using a particular light source—the inconvenience cost (resulting from repeated travel to the purchase center) and blackout cost (resulting from liquidity constraints) associated with that source to explain the consumer preference for kerosene and to recommend strategies that could mitigate that preference. Results: Although kerosene lighting is more expensive than bulbs, consumers who face either high inconvenience costs or high blackout costs prefer kerosene to bulbs because the former’s flexibility, with regard to quantity, helps reduce whichever cost is dominating. At the firm level, there is an optimal bulb capacity and recharge price pair that maximizes the firm’s revenue; furthermore, a firm can reverse the preferences for kerosene by increasing the flexibility of the bulbs (e.g., by allowing partial recharges). Although strategies—such as price discounts and mobile micropayments—which alleviate liquidity constraints are not in themselves sufficient to ensure higher adoption rates, increased bulb use becomes more likely when they are combined with inconvenience-reducing strategies. Managerial implications: Our paper sheds light on the structure of the market in which firms operate by identifying the characteristics of the market segments that prefer kerosene. It also helps the firms make better decisions by evaluating the efficacy of several strategies in terms of increasing the adoption of bulbs. 2019-03-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/5850 info:doi/10.1287/msom.2017.0673 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/6849/viewcontent/Selling_off_grid_light_sv.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Bottom of the Pyramid Electricity Sustainability Business Models Business Administration, Management, and Operations Operations and Supply Chain Management
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Bottom of the Pyramid
Electricity
Sustainability
Business Models
Business Administration, Management, and Operations
Operations and Supply Chain Management
spellingShingle Bottom of the Pyramid
Electricity
Sustainability
Business Models
Business Administration, Management, and Operations
Operations and Supply Chain Management
UPPARI, Bhavani Shanker
POPESCU, Ioana
NETESSINE, Serguei
Selling off-grid light to liquidity constrained consumers
description Problem definition: A large proportion of the world’s population has no access to electricity and so relies on noxious kerosene for their lighting needs. Solar-based solutions require a large up-front investment and are often unaffordable in this market owing to consumers’ tight liquidity constraints. As an alternative, there are business models relying on rechargeable light bulbs that are sold at a subsidized price (which renders them affordable) and require regular micropayments for recharges (which eases liquidity constraints). These bulbs provide a cheaper and healthier light source than kerosene, yet their adoption is lower than expected, and some consumers continue to use kerosene. This paper explores the potential drivers of such preferences and proposes strategies to alter them. Academic/practical relevance: Unlike most of the existing operations management literature, which focuses on the problems in developed economies, our paper studies a problem specific to the poor population. Our novel modeling approach, which incorporates several operational features of the impoverished regions, could also serve as a template for other potential modeling attempts in similar settings. Methodology: We propose a stylized consumer behavior model that accounts for—in addition to the monetary cost incurred while using a particular light source—the inconvenience cost (resulting from repeated travel to the purchase center) and blackout cost (resulting from liquidity constraints) associated with that source to explain the consumer preference for kerosene and to recommend strategies that could mitigate that preference. Results: Although kerosene lighting is more expensive than bulbs, consumers who face either high inconvenience costs or high blackout costs prefer kerosene to bulbs because the former’s flexibility, with regard to quantity, helps reduce whichever cost is dominating. At the firm level, there is an optimal bulb capacity and recharge price pair that maximizes the firm’s revenue; furthermore, a firm can reverse the preferences for kerosene by increasing the flexibility of the bulbs (e.g., by allowing partial recharges). Although strategies—such as price discounts and mobile micropayments—which alleviate liquidity constraints are not in themselves sufficient to ensure higher adoption rates, increased bulb use becomes more likely when they are combined with inconvenience-reducing strategies. Managerial implications: Our paper sheds light on the structure of the market in which firms operate by identifying the characteristics of the market segments that prefer kerosene. It also helps the firms make better decisions by evaluating the efficacy of several strategies in terms of increasing the adoption of bulbs.
format text
author UPPARI, Bhavani Shanker
POPESCU, Ioana
NETESSINE, Serguei
author_facet UPPARI, Bhavani Shanker
POPESCU, Ioana
NETESSINE, Serguei
author_sort UPPARI, Bhavani Shanker
title Selling off-grid light to liquidity constrained consumers
title_short Selling off-grid light to liquidity constrained consumers
title_full Selling off-grid light to liquidity constrained consumers
title_fullStr Selling off-grid light to liquidity constrained consumers
title_full_unstemmed Selling off-grid light to liquidity constrained consumers
title_sort selling off-grid light to liquidity constrained consumers
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2019
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/5850
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/6849/viewcontent/Selling_off_grid_light_sv.pdf
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