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Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic Analysis of Consumer Response to Marketing Strategies

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TLDR
In this article, the authors developed a methodology for modeling consumer response that integrates previous research in stochastic brand selection, diffusion of innovation, test market analysis, and new product design.
Abstract
This paper develops a methodology for modeling consumer response that integrates previous research in stochastic brand selection, diffusion of innovation, test market analysis, and new product design. The methodology makes it practical to extend brand selection models to include diffusion phenomena such as awareness, trial, and information flow. Purchase timing and brand selection are interdependent and both phenomena depend jointly on managerial controls such as advertising, coupons, price-off promotion, product positioning, and consumer characteristics. Within this general structure, we provide practical estimation procedures a least squares approximation to the maximum likelihood estimates to determine the parameters which link managerial controls to consumer response. Closed form solutions are derived for cumulative awareness, cumulative trial, penetration, expected sales, and purchases due to promotion-all as a function of time. We also provide simplified expressions for equilibrium t → ∞ market share. Tradeoffs among complexity of the diffusion process, number of managerial variables, nonstationarity, complexity of purchase timing, consumer segmentation, and sample size are made explicit so that the marketing scientist can customize his analyses to the managerial problems that he faces. The effects of sample size, data interval frequency, and collinearity in the explanatory variables are investigated with simulations based on a five-state consumer response process which depends on 8-10 marketing variables. The paper closes with a brief description of the application and predictive test of a consumer response model based on the methodology.

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Citations
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A Conjoint‐Hazard Model of the Timing of Buyers' Upgrading to Improved Versions of High‐Technology Products*

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Using Survey Data to Predict Adoption and Switching for Services

TL;DR: In this article, the diffusion of a service when customers can switch among competing offerings of the service is considered and explicit formulas for brand switching and adoption probabilities are obtained in the context of product switching.
Journal ArticleDOI

Application, Predictive Test, and Strategy Implications for a Dynamic Model of Consumer Response

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe and evaluate the application of a dynamic stochastic model of consumer response to a new transportation service and the marketing strategies used during its introduction, based on survey data during the first 11 weeks of service.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-Reflection and Articulated Consumer Preferences

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that if consumers are not first given tasks to encourage preference self-reflection, unstructured methods may not measure accurate and enduring preferences, and evidence suggests that consumers learn their preferences as they make realistic decisions.
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Predicting Sales Takeoff for Whirlpool's New Personal Valet

TL;DR: In this article, a model of the takeoff in sales of new products is proposed to provide some guidance on complex managerial decisions, such as whether to pull the plug on a new product with lackluster sales (prior to takeoff) or persist with a product that could ultimately be a failure.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Multivariate Statistical Methods

TL;DR: In this article, a text designed to make multivariate techniques available to behavioural, social, biological and medical students is presented, which includes an approach to multivariate inference based on the union-intersection and generalized likelihood ratio principles.
Book

Multivariate statistical methods

TL;DR: In this article, a text designed to make multivariate techniques available to behavioural, social, biological and medical students is presented, which includes an approach to multivariate inference based on the union-intersection and generalized likelihood ratio principles.
Journal ArticleDOI

A New Product Growth for Model Consumer Durables

TL;DR: A growth model for the timing of initial purchase of new products is developed and tested empirically against data for eleven consumer durables, and a long-range forecast is developed for the sales of color television sets.
Book ChapterDOI

A new product growth model for consumer durables

Frank M. Bass
- 01 Jan 1976 - 
TL;DR: In this article, a growth model for the timing of initial purchase of new products is proposed, and a behavioral rationale for the model is offered in terms of innovative and imitative behavior.