Benefits for companies Rebates have become popular in retail sales within the United States. Retailers and manufacturers have many reasons to offer them: • Rebates are heavily used for advertising sales in retail stores, and can be especially appealing to price-sensitive consumers by increasing their willingness to pay. For example, an item might be advertised as "$39 after rebate" with the item costing $79 out-the-door with a $40 rebate that the customer would need to redeem. • Rebates can be used by retailers to gain
market share, by persuading more consumers to purchase their products and services over those of a rival company. This increases one firm's profits while decreasing others' profits. • Sometimes discounts are given at the point of sale rather than the manufacturer providing rebates, eliminating the need for coupons or mail-in rebates. However, rebates are sometimes given in the form of "cashback offers" for mobile phone contracts or other high value retail items sold alongside a credit agreement. • The information given in the rebate form, such as name, address, method of payment, can be used for
data mining studies of consumer behavior. • The information can be used as evidence of a pre-existing business relationship for marketing purposes, such as
do not call lists. • Customers tend to notice price increases and react negatively. Rebates offer retailers the benefit of giving customers a temporary discount on an item, to stimulate sales, while allowing it to maintain its current price point. This method avoids the negative backlash that could be perceived with a price being lowered and then raised later. • Rebates also allow companies to "price protect" certain product lines by being selective in which models or brands to be discounted. This allows retailers and manufacturers to move some product at lower cost while maintaining prices of successful models. A straight price reduction on some models would have a domino effect on all products in a line. • During the turnaround time, the company can earn
interest on the money. • If the turnaround time crosses into the next
fiscal year or quarter, a rebate offer can inflate sales in the current period, and not have to be accounted for until the next period and then it could be attributed as a cost reducing sales or expense for the next period, giving companies an accounting advantage with their
Wall Street projections. • Can be profitable for businesses who offer rebates as customers may void their chance of receiving a rebate. Companies often require the original UPC barcode, receipt, and additional information, which a buyer may forget to include when redeeming the rebate. Companies almost always add other
caveats to the rebate as well, such as the redemption having to be
postmarked by a certain date. Rebate mail may also look like junk mail (either deliberately or by coincidence), and so the customer may overlook it. It works in the company's favor if buyers do not act quickly to redeem. However, a
University of Florida study notes that shorter redemption periods actually increase the redemption rate in the consumer's favor because it gives them less time for
procrastination to set in. • New companies that want to make a break into a market can offer substantial rebate savings on their new product as a means of capturing a customer's attention. Zeus Kerravala, vice president at the Yankee Group, has said, "For companies that haven't been in a particular market, the rebate that essentially refunds the customer's money is a great way to get people to pay attention to them. This is especially true in
consumer electronics, where brand name does matter. It's a good way to get customers to take a chance on a new brand." • Consumers that are more price-sensitive will be more enticed to purchase products with rebates. • Increased sales through offering rebate programs can increase brand loyalty between manufacturers and retailers. • Retailers and manufacturers can use rebates as a way of gaining market share over rival companies, by increasing the amount of customers due to lower perceived prices. • Rebates can offer price protection against pricing controls, retaining full list prices at the maximum allowed price ceiling or minimum allowed price floor while using rebates to comply with controls exerted by government or distribution channels. • Some customers are likely to forget about the rebate.
Benefits for consumers Rebates may offer customers lower pricing. Deal hunter sites frequently tout the benefits of rebates in making technology affordable: "Rebates are the meat and potatoes of the ultimate tech deal, no matter what you are buying… They are paying you money to buy their stuff. All you have to do is take it." According to 2011 research, 47% of consumers submitted a rebate in the past 12 months, whereas similar research conducted in 2009 showed that only 37 percent of consumers had submitted a rebate in the prior year. Industry advisers claim that if mail-in rebates go away, they will not be replaced by "instant rebates" of the same value amount because of the loss of the tangible benefits listed above (fiscal accounting, price protection, etc.) Steve Baker, vice president of industry analysis for NPD Group, comments that "It's a case of be careful of what you ask for. You may see some great deals go away." If the consumer is more concerned with the price than his or her time for any reason, or if the consumer's income and budget are extremely limited or non-existent, the rebate may be seen as a good deal. Price-sensitive consumers have a higher willingness to pay when there are perceived discounts. ==Drawbacks for consumers==