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        Business Analytics and Information Systems, Faculty, Management, Research

        Research: Extended return policies work for online retailers

        September 25, 2018 By Joe McAdory

        All News

         

        online return retail

        Online retailers stand to profit if they’re willing to extend their merchandise return policies, according to research conducted by three Harbert College of Business faculty members.

        In their co-authored paper, “Return Time Leniency in Online Retail: A Signaling Theory Perspective on Buying Outcomes,” supply chain management associate professor Shashank Rao, management professor Brian Connelly, and business analytics associate professor Kang Bok Lee, reveal that extended product return time policies attract more customers and cultivates customer trust.

        “Can it be demonstrated that there are ancillary benefits to the retailer liberalizing the return policy?” Rao asked. “The answer is ‘yes’ because we not only know that people are more likely to buy – but also that people are willing to pay more. You can sell the same item for a higher amount by liberalizing a return policy than if you tried to sell it with a very stringent return policy. The argument that comes out of this is – if you are a retailer – you could make money off of a liberal return policy.”

        Why is this important? Prior research has revealed that more than 66 percent of shoppers pay attention to an online retailer’s return policy before making a purchase, as compared to just 22 percent of online purchases that are returned. Return policies have the opportunity to impact many more customers than actual returns experiences. And yet, most research in this area has focused on returns experiences rather than on returns policies.

        Purchase situations between buyers and sellers are asymmetric. In other words, a seller has a product and knows far more about that product than the buyer. When purchasing online, this gap is even more exacerbated, particularly since the buyer cannot try on the item in a fitting room or hold it.

        “Historically, what a return policy has done is try to eliminate or reduce the information,” Rao said. “But if there is something that retailers can do to reduce that information asymmetrically -- they will probably do that.

        “This liberal (extended) return policy sends a signal to the buyer that says, ‘You know what … maybe this is a product where I don’t need to be worried because the seller doesn’t have anything to hide.” 

        The paper, also co-authored by Deepak Iyengar of Central Washington University, was published by Decision Sciences, an elite journal.