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Marketing Metrics Summary - University of Amsterdam - Master's BA Digital Marketing

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A complete marketing metrics summary. It includes lectures and all the information and materials required to study for the exam. Grade: 7.5.

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Week 1 - Lecture 1
Consumer Preferences:

●​ (New) Product Design:
○​ It all starts with understanding your customers…
■​ goals/needs/preferences:
●​ Psychological needs (e.g., the social status associated with
products)
●​ Functional needs (e.g., does it fulfill its intended purpose?)
○​ How do they trade off these preferences for money?
■​ Would they rather keep their money in their pocket (or buy an
alternative product)?
●​ Customer process (from identifying needs to a purchase):




○​
●​ How to measure customer value?




○​
●​ A historical perspective:
○​ Thurstone presented an idea to measure consumer preferences in 1931 at a
meeting of the Econometric Society.
■​ “Perhaps the simplest experimental method that comes to mind is to
ask a subject to fill in the blank space in a series of choices of the
following type: eight hats and eight pairs of shoes vs six hats and __
pairs of shoes”.

, ○​ One of the combinations, such as eight hats and eight pairs of shoes, is
chosen as a standard, and each of the other combinations is compared
directly with it.
○​ The academic crowd heavily opposed that idea that non-market (non-actual)
behavior could teach us something about consumers.
○​ In 1942, other academics summarized Thurstone’s ‘futile’ attempt as:
■​ “The fundamental shortcomings probably cannot be overcome in any
experiment involving economic stimuli and human beings”.
○​ Only from the 1960s onwards academics really continued to try to extract
valuable information from stated preferences.
●​ Stated vs. revealed preferences:
○​ Survey, for example, intention to buy (stated preferences):
■​ To hard a question
■​ Overconfident about buying probability.
○​ Self-reported importance weights
■​ Lack of discrimination, everything is important (=unconstrained
measure)
○​ Trade-offs:
■​ Benefits and costs
■​ What is desired most (=constrained measure)
○​ Behavioral measures (revealed preferences):
■​ Counts
■​ Salesforce reports
●​ Intention vs. purchase:




○​
●​ Difference between “what people say and do”:
○​ The goal is to figure out what they will do, not what they say they will do.




○​

,●​ Is there any value in asking people what they want an existing/ a new product to look
like?
○​ Consumers face different types of decisions daily: consumers are good at
making trade-offs (decisions) between benefits and costs.
■​ So, let’s make respondents make trade-offs!
○​ Conjoint analysis: a survey-based statistical technique designed for
consumers to make trade-offs, forcing them to reveal their true preferences.
○​ Produces a mathematical system of preferences.
●​ Unconstrained vs. constrained (scanners):
○​




●​ Conjoint analysis: ​
○​ Consumers evaluate products; they have to make trade-offs.
○​ What is a product?
■​ From a very functional perspective: a collection of attributes.
●​ Conjoint world:
○​ In conjoint, we treat all products as a bundle of attributes (not quite that
different from the real world).
○​ Examples of attributes for a new phone:
■​ Size of phone, camera(s), CPU, price, color
○​ Examples of levels of attributes:
■​ Price: low (500), medium (850), high (1200).
■​ camera : 12 megapixels, 32 megapixels…
■​ Size of phone: 5.8 inch, 6.5 inch, 7.2 inch…
○​ Does this only hold for phones?
■​ Shoes:
●​ Type: sneakers, boots,...
●​ Color: black, white,…
●​ Price: …
■​ Courses:
●​ Attendance: mandators, optional
●​ Assignments: 0,2,6

, ●​ Methods: qualitative, quantitative
●​ Conjoint: why does it work?
○​ Relate the rating (or choice, see later slides) on the attribute levels:
■​ We decompose the overall utility in partworths.
■​ We uncover the relative importance of each attribute.
●​ Conjoint: the process
○​ Step 1: attributes
○​ Step 2: attribute levels
○​ Step 3: profiles
○​ Step 4: type of conjoint
○​ Step 5: utilities/partworths
●​ Step 1: Attributes:
○​ How to decide on which attributes to include:
■​ Focus groups, interviews with the NPD team, analysis of the current
market, pre-tests.
■​ Not too many attributes (keep it simple here)
●​ Pick the most important ones
●​ Consumers may get confused with too many
■​ Pizza:
●​ Crust
●​ Toppings
●​ Price
●​ Cheese type
●​ Cheese amount
●​ Step 2: attribute levels:
○​ Need to cover the whole range of attribute levels (e.g., price ranging from low
to high).
○​ Can be:
■​ low/medium/high (e.g., price)
■​ yes/no (e.g.Is there pepperoni on the pizza?)
■​ Best to limit the # of levels
■​ Best to keep # of levels roughly the same for different attributes (e.g.,
3 different price levels, 3 different toppings…)




■​
●​ Step 3: develop profiles:
○​ Factorial design: all possible combinations of all levels of alternatives. In our
specific case, this means 3x3x3x3x4x3=324(!) theoretical bundles:
■​ Example of a bundle:

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