特色咖啡的直接贸易采购战略

Scott Webster, Burak Kazaz, Shahryar Gheibi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

问题定义:领先的专业咖啡烘焙商依靠直接贸易采购优质咖啡豆。我们对一家烘焙商进行了研究,该烘焙商销售两种基本类型的烘焙产品:(1) 来自特定地区的单一原产地烘焙产品;(2) 混合烘焙产品,即混合使用一年中不同来源的咖啡豆。混合烘焙的价格低于单一原产地烘焙,吸引了更大的市场。我们研究了经营和市场环境的特点如何影响单一原产地咖啡豆的最佳采购策略。方法/结果:我们开发了一个反映这些特征的两阶段随机程序。烘焙商可以选择将部分单一原产地咖啡豆以混合标签出售,即所谓的向下替代。我们确定了三种不同的最优采购策略--专业化(无向下替代)、多样化(一致的向下替代)和混合(介于这两个极端之间)--并证明它们在不同的产量和需求定义下都是稳健的。管理意义:我们发现了四个主要启示:(1)两个因素决定了哪种策略是最优的:劣质产品(混合标签)的平均价格和优质产品(单一原产地标签)的边际成本。(2)与新闻销售商模型相比,我们发现不同策略之间存在明显的结构差异。例如,在混合策略下,不确定性增加对最优数量的影响与新闻销售商模型一致,而在专业化和多样化策略下,其影响则明显不同(例如,专业化策略下的单调递减行为,多样化策略下的数量不变)。(3) 农产品的加权平均价格在收益-价格负相关的情况下是递减的。我们将此称为 "农民的诅咒",它为直接贸易采购提供了借鉴(例如,主张不要以收获后的市场价格向种植者支付报酬)。(4)我们发现了良性反馈循环的证据,即种植者与焙烧炉之间的关系会随着时间的推移而变得更加牢固。我们的研究结果还指出了一个简单的信号,政策制定者可以利用这个信号来确定咖啡种植地区,在这些地区采取有针对性的干预措施可以提高种植者的福利。资助:B. Kazaz 感谢锡拉丘兹大学惠特曼管理学院提供的暑期资助。补充材料:在线附录见 https://doi.org/10.1287/msom.2021.0586 。
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Direct Trade Sourcing Strategies for Specialty Coffee
Problem definition: Leading specialty coffee roasters rely on direct trade to source premium coffee beans. We examine a roaster who sells two basic types of roasts: (1) a single-origin roast sourced from a specific locale and (2) a blend roast that uses a mix of beans from sources that vary over the course of a year. The prices of blend roasts are lower than those of single-origin roasts and appeal to a larger market. We study how characteristics of the operating and market environment affect the optimal sourcing strategy for single-origin beans. Methodology/results: We develop a two-stage stochastic program with recourse that reflects these characteristics. A roaster has the option to allocate some of the single-origin beans for sale under a blend label, known as downward substitution. We identify three distinct optimal sourcing strategies—specialized (no downward substitution), diversified (consistent downward substitution), and mixed (between these extremes)—and show that they are robust under different definitions of yield and demand. Managerial implications: We identify four main insights: (1) Two factors determine which strategy is optimal: the mean price of the inferior product (blend label) and the marginal cost of the superior product (single-origin label). (2) When compared with the newsvendor model, we find distinct structural differences across strategies. For example, whereas the effects of increasing uncertainty on optimal quantity align with the newsvendor model under a mixed strategy, the effects are distinctly different under specialized and diversified strategies (e.g., monotonic decreasing behavior for specialized, no change in quantity under diversified). (3) The weighted average price of an agricultural product is decreasing in negative yield–price correlation. We coin this as the “farmer’s curse,” which carries lessons for direct trade sourcing (e.g., advocating against paying the grower at postharvest market prices). (4) We find evidence of a virtuous feedback loop wherein the grower–roaster relationship becomes stronger over time. Our findings also point to a simple signal that policymakers may use to identify coffee growing locales where targeted interventions can improve grower welfare. Funding: B. Kazaz is thankful for summer support provided by the Whitman School of Management, Syracuse University. Supplemental Material: The online appendix is available at https://doi.org/10.1287/msom.2021.0586 .
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