Remanufactured Products in Closed-Loop Supply Chains for Consumer Goods Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • 2014 Production and Operations Management Society. This study empirically investigates consumer perceptions of remanufactured consumer products in closed-loop supply chains. A multi-study approach led to increasing levels of measure refinement and facilitated examination of various assumptions researchers have made about the consumer market for remanufactured products. Based in part on the measure building studies, an experimental study examined remanufactured product perceptions from a national panel of consumers. The consumers responded to remanufactured product descriptions that manipulated price discount and brand equity. The results indicate that discounting had a consistently positive, linear effect on remanufactured product attractiveness. Curiously, the brand equity manipulation proved less important to consumers than specific remanufactured product quality perceptions. The results also show that green consumers and consumers who consider remanufactured products green typically found remanufactured products significantly more attractive. Finally, the findings introduce the concept of negative attribute perceptions, such as disgust, that had a significantly detrimental effect on remanufactured product attractiveness.

published proceedings

  • PRODUCTION AND OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT

altmetric score

  • 7

author list (cited authors)

  • Abbey, J. D., Meloy, M. G., Guide, V., & Atalay, S.

citation count

  • 196

complete list of authors

  • Abbey, James D||Meloy, Margaret G||Guide, V Daniel R Jr||Atalay, Selin

publication date

  • March 2015

publisher