Phase Transitions in Learning and Earning under Price Protection Guarantee

11/03/2022
by   Qing Feng, et al.
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Motivated by the prevalence of “price protection guarantee", which allows a customer who purchased a product in the past to receive a refund from the seller during the so-called price protection period (typically defined as a certain time window after the purchase date) in case the seller decides to lower the price, we study the impact of such policy on the design of online learning algorithm for data-driven dynamic pricing with initially unknown customer demand. We consider a setting where a firm sells a product over a horizon of T time steps. For this setting, we characterize how the value of M, the length of price protection period, can affect the optimal regret of the learning process. We show that the optimal regret is Θ̃(√(T)+min{M, T^2/3}) by first establishing a fundamental impossible regime with novel regret lower bound instances. Then, we propose LEAP, a phased exploration type algorithm for Learning and EArning under Price Protection to match this lower bound up to logarithmic factors or even doubly logarithmic factors (when there are only two prices available to the seller). Our results reveal the surprising phase transitions of the optimal regret with respect to M. Specifically, when M is not too large, the optimal regret has no major difference when compared to that of the classic setting with no price protection guarantee. We also show that there exists an upper limit on how much the optimal regret can deteriorate when M grows large. Finally, we conduct extensive numerical experiments to show the benefit of LEAP over other heuristic methods for this problem.

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