Collective Advertising for Homogeneous Goods by Industry Associations
To overcome the problem that no single firm wants to pay for advertising that benefits all its competitors, firms in a competitive industry may band together. An association, such as one representing all dairies, can pay for generic advertising campaigns like 'Drink milk!'. This collective action allows the cost of promoting the homogeneous product to be shared among all producers who stand to benefit from an industry-wide increase in demand.
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Economy
Economics
CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.8 Supply and demand: Markets with many buyers and sellers - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Collective Advertising for Homogeneous Goods by Industry Associations
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A single firm operates in a market with numerous competitors, all selling an identical, unbranded product. Match each component of the firm's advertising decision with its correct description in this market context.
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Learn After
Marketing Strategy for a Fragmented Industry
In a market with thousands of small, independent apple orchards all selling nearly identical apples, why would the orchard owners be most likely to collectively fund a generic 'An Apple a Day!' campaign through an industry group, rather than a single large orchard running its own advertising campaign?
Limits of Collective Advertising
The Rationale for Collective Industry Promotion
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Match each market scenario with the most logical advertising strategy that would result from the incentives within that market structure.
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The Free-Rider Problem in Industry Promotion
An association representing thousands of small, independent cattle ranchers, who all sell a nearly identical product, decides to implement a mandatory fee per head of cattle sold. This fee will fund a national advertising campaign. What is the primary economic challenge this association is attempting to solve with the mandatory fee structure?