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Misselling through agents
(2009)
This paper analyzes the implications of the inherent conflict between two tasks performed by direct marketing agents: prospecting for customers and advising on the product's "suitability" for the specific needs of customers. When structuring sales-force compensation, firms trade off the expected losses from "misselling" unsuitable products with the agency costs of providing marketing incentives. We characterize how the equilibrium amount of misselling (and thus the scope of policy intervention) depends on features of the agency problem including: the internal organization of a firm's sales process, the transparency of its commission structure, and the steepness of its agents' sales incentives. JEL Classification: D18 (Consumer Protection), D83 (Search; Learning; Information and Knowledge), M31 (Marketing), M52 (Compensation and Compensation Methods and Their Effects).
This paper considers a firm that has to delegate to an agent, such as a mortgage broker or a security dealer, the twin tasks of approaching and advising customers. The main contractual restriction, in particular in light of related research in Inderst and Ottaviani (2007), is that the firm can only compensate the agent through commissions. This standard contracting restriction has the following key implications. First, the firm can only ensure internal compliance to a "standard of sales", in terms of advice for the customer, if this standard is not too high. Second, if this is still feasible, then a higher standard is associated with higher, instead of lower, sales commissions. Third, once the limit for internal compliance is approached, tougher regulation and prosecution of "misselling" have (almost) no effect on the prevailing standard. Besides having practical implications, in particular on how to (re-)regulate the sale of financial products, the novel model, which embeds a problem of advice into a framework with repeated interactions, may also be of separate interest for future work on sales force compensation. JEL Classification: D18 (Consumer Protection), D83 (Search; Learning; Information and Knowledge), M31 (Marketing), M52 (Compensation and Compensation Methods and Their Effects).
Finanzdienstleister unterliegen infolge zunehmender Deregulierung und Globalisierung und des damit verbundenen Auftretens ausländischer Anbieter einem starken Wettbewerbsdruck. Dieser wird sich durch den Wegfall der Wechselkursrisiken nach Einführung des Euro noch verstärken. Für Finanzdienstleister wird es zunehmend überlebensnotwendig, auf einen kostengünstigen Vertrieb ihrer Produkte zu achten. Unternehmen mit Direktvertrieb, namentlich die nur über Telefon, Fax, E-Mail und Internet erreichbaren Direktbanken, Direktversicherungen und Discount-Broker, erfreuen sich gerade wegen ihrer geringen Vertriebskosten wachsender Beliebtheit. Ein neuer EU-Richtlinienvorschlag für den Fernabsatz von Finanzdienstleistungen (Finanz-RLV)könnte den bestehenden Rechtsrahmen entscheidend verändern. Die betroffenen Kreise sollten sich folglich schon vor Erlaß und Umsetzung der Richtlinie in das mitgliedstaatliche Recht mit dem möglichen neuen Rechtsrahmen beschäftigen.