Title: Tuesday, September 21, 1999
1Tuesday, September 21, 1999
- Marketing information systems
- Announcements
- email
- Tapes
- Cases
- Teams
- Ill be out Thursday through Friday AM
- Proquest
- Case MSA
2The Market Driven Organization
- Gathers information
- Disseminates information
- Uses information
3Example Celestial Seasonings
- Taste tests on site
- Weekly panels (3 sites/weekend)
- Focus groups in 11 cities
- Mall intercepts
- National samples
- Customer service
- Tracy Jones
4Market Research Process
- 1. Determine final uses of information
- 2. Determine final report format
- 3. Specify necessary analysis
- 4. Determine data requirements
- 5. Scan available secondary data sources
- 6. Design study
- 7. Implement field work
- 8. Analyze and report
5Potential Problems in Research Use
- Confusing managerial and statistical significance
- Confusion relationships and causality
- The use of inappropriate data
- Overreliance on quantitative data
- Pressure to generate desired solutions
6Ethical Issues The User
- Issuing bid requests for free advice
- Poor use of information
- Making false promises
- Access to information
7Market Assessment
8Uses of Conjoint Analysis
- Product design
- Market segmentation
- Forecasting shares of product concepts
- Pricing
9Conjoint is Suitable When . . .
- We must make tradeoffs between attributes and
benefits in the product - We can decompose the product in ways that are
meaningful for customers and product design - It is possible to describe the product bundles
realistically
10Product Design Conjoint Analysis
- Derive utility values for attributes and
attribute options based on customers stated
overall preferences for different bundles of
attributes. Example Memory and Price bundles.
PriceMemory 1,000 1,500 2,000 32
Mb 4 2 1 64 Mb 7 5 3 128 Mb 9 8 6 9 Most
preferred 1 Least preferred
11Simplified Utility Calculation
Price Part- Memory 1,000 1,500 2,000 Wor
th 32 Mb 4 2 1 7/3 2.3 64 Mb 7 5 3 15/3 5.0
128 Mb 9 8 6 23/3 7.7 20/3 15/3 10/3 Part-Worth
6.7 5.0 3.3 9 Most preferred 1
Least preferred
12Utility for this Customer
- Example
-
- 128 Mb vs. 64 Mb 7.7 5.0 2.7 units
- 1,000 vs. 1,500 6.7 5.0 1.7 units
- So D 64 Mb is worth more than 500 to this
customer. -
13Alternative Pairwise Comparisons of Full Profiles
For example
- PII 233
- 64MB
- 4.3 G HD
- 24X CD
- 1979
- PII 233
- 64MB
- 4.3 HD
- DVD
- 2299
14Designing the Conjoint Study
- Determine relevant attributes
- Determine attribute levels
- Determine attribute combinations
- Choose stimulus representations
- Choose response type
- Choose data analysis technique
15Market Share Forecast
- We can estimate market shares by estimating
utility for different product offerings and
calculating the percentages of preference for
each product in the study
16The Bass Diffusion Model
- When will a customer adopt a new product or
technology? - Useful when
- The product has been recently introduced
- The product has not yet been introduced but there
are reasonable parallels
17Assumptions of the Basic Bass Model
- Diffusion process is binary
- Constant number of maximum potential buyers
- All potential buyers will eventually purchase the
product - No repeat purchases or replacement purchases
- The impact or word of mouth is independent of
adoption time - Innovation is considered independent of
substitutes - The marketing strategies supporting the
innovation are not explicitly included
18The Bass Diffusion Model
- St p Remaining q Adopters
Potential Remaining Potential - Innovation Imitation
Effect Effect
where St sales at time t p coefficient
of innovation q coefficient of imitation
Adopters S0 S1
St1 Remaining Total Potential
Adopters Potential
19Examples of Bass Model Parameters
Innovation Imitation Product/ parameter
parameter Technology (p) (q) BW
TV 0.028 0.25 Color TV 0.005 0.84 Air
conditioners 0.010 0.42 Clothes
dryers 0.017 0.36 Water softeners 0.018 0.30 Recor
d players 0.025 0.65 Cellular telephones 0.004 1.7
6 Steam irons 0.029 0.33 Motels 0.007 0.36 McDona
lds fast food 0.018 0.54 Hybrid
corn 0.039 1.01 Electric blankets 0.006 0.24 A
study by Sultan, Farley, and Lehmann in 1990
suggests an average value of 0.03 for p and an
average value of 0.38 for q.
Source Lilien and Rangaswamy
20Specification of the Model
21Product Factors Affecting the Rate of Diffusion
- High relative advantage over existing products
- High degree of compatibility with existing
approaches - Low complexity
- Can be tried on a limited basis
- Benefits are observable
22Market Factors Affecting the Rate of Diffusion
- Type of innovation adoption decision
- Communication channels used
- Nature of links among market participants
- Nature and effect of promotional efforts
23Caveat
- Do customers have the ability to articulate
preferences? - Market research is probably not helpful when a
new technology is not tied to familiar
applications - e.g., the personal computer, internet access
24Observation Can Overcome . . .
- Customers who dont know possible applications
- Unreliability of self reporting
- Interruption/removal from natural use
- Giving expected answers
25Empathic Design (Leonard and Rayport)
- Gathering, analyzing, and applying information
gleaned from field observations - Requires creative interdisciplinary analysis
26Learning from Observation
- Triggers of use
- Interactions with the users environment
- User customization
- Intangible product attributes
- Unarticulated user needs
27The Empathic Design Process
- Observation
- Capturing data
- Reflection and analysis
- Brainstorming for solutions
- Developing prototypes of possible solutions
28The Challenge
- Linking technology with needs to develop solutions