Price Elasticity from Scanner Data
Estimating price elasticity from scanner data means fitting a store-level sales-response model to the weekly unit-sales, price, and promotion records that retail checkout scanners generate, in order to recover how sensitive demand is to price. The canonical specification is the SCAN*PRO model developed by Dick Wittink, Peter Leeflang, and colleagues: a multiplicative model in which a brand's unit sales in a store-week are a product of relative-price terms raised to elasticity powers and promotion multipliers for feature and display. Taking logarithms turns this into a linear regression whose price coefficients are directly interpretable as own- and cross-price elasticities, while the promotion coefficients become multiplicative lift factors. Pooled across many stores with store-specific intercepts, the model delivers stable, managerially usable elasticities and quantifies the sales lift from promotions. Later work, such as Van Heerde, Gupta, and Wittink, decomposed the promotional sales bump into brand switching, purchase acceleration, and category expansion, refining the interpretation of what an elasticity captures. It is the standard aggregate demand model in retail analytics.
Read the full method
Sign in with a free account to read this section.
Method map
The neighbourhood of related methods — select a node to explore.
Sources
- Leeflang, P. S. H., Wittink, D. R., Wedel, M., & Naert, P. A. (2000). Building Models for Marketing Decisions. Kluwer Academic Publishers. ISBN: 9780792377726
- Van Heerde, H. J., Gupta, S., & Wittink, D. R. (2003). Is 75% of the Sales Promotion Bump Due to Brand Switching? No, Only 33% Is. Journal of Marketing Research, 40(4), 481-491. DOI: 10.1509/jmkr.40.4.481.19386 ↗
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Price Elasticity from Scanner Data (SCAN*PRO Store-Level Model). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/marketing/price-elasticity-scanner-data
Which method?
Set this method beside its closest kin and read them side by side — the library lays the books on the table; the choice is yours.
- Attraction Market-Share ModelMarketing↔ compare
- Reference Price ModelingMarketing↔ compare
- Scanner Panel AnalysisMarketing↔ compare