In this paper we consider a two-stage duopoly game where firms first decide
whether to invest in advertising and then compete in prices. Advertising has
two effects: a market enlargement for both firms and a predatory gain for
the investing firm only.
Both symmetric and asymmetric equilibria may arise. The two most interesting
cases are a coordination game where both firms investing
and non-investing are equilibria, and a chicken game where
only one firm invests while the other is possibly driven (endogenously) out
of the market. Our results suggest that product differentiation has an
ambiguous impact on investment in advertising and that strong product
substitutabihty may induce a coordination problem.