Customer Choice Tutorial
Customer Choice Tutorial
TUTORIAL
VERSION v130522
Tutorial
Overview
The customer choice (logit) model is an individual-level response model that
helps analyze and explain the choices individual customers make in a market.
The customer choice model helps firms understand the extent to which factors
such as the price of a brand or its ease of installation influence a customer's
choice. A brand's purchase probability at the individual level can be
aggregated to determine the brand's market share at the market level.
Firms also can use customer choice analysis to develop marketing programs
tailored to specific market segments, or even to individual customers.
Further, if a company has purchase data about its products versus those of its
competitors (product choice data), as well as some observed independent
variables (e.g., gender, price, promotion), it can use customer choice modeling
to answer such questions as:
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Getting Started
Customer choice analysis allows you to use your own data directly or to use a
preformatted template.
Because customer choice models require a specific data format, users with
their own data should to review the preformatted template to learn about the
appropriate structure.
This section explains how to create an easy-to-use template to enter your own data.
If you want to run customer choice analysis immediately, open the example file
OfficeStar Data (Customer Choice).xls and jump to Step 2: Running analysis. By
default, the example files install in My Documents/My Marketing Engineering/.
Step 1
Creating a template
Using the interactive assistant
In Excel, if you click on MEXL CUSTOMER CHOICE (LOGIT) CREATE TEMPLATE, a
dialog box will appear. This box represents the first step in creating a template
for running the customer choice model. The first dialog box prompts you to
use the interactive assistant.
Marketing Engineering for Excel models allow you to use the interactive
assistant, which will prompt you to enter the parameters required by the
model and build a template spreadsheet for you to enter the required data.
This generated template includes pre-selected cell ranges that correspond to
the parameters you enter.
We recommend that you use Marketing
Engineering for Excel templates to simplify subsequent analyses.
Expert users who are familiar with Marketing Engineering for Excel models and
data requirements may prefer to input data directly in an unformatted
spreadsheet. Such users should begin with the interactive assistant to become
familiar with the data format that Marketing Engineering for Excel expects.
Unless you are already familiar with the methodology, you should select yes
in response to the box that asks whether you want to use the interactive
assistant.
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With the interactive assistant, the following dialog box allows you to create a
template to run the customer choice software. All customer choice models
require at least one case per respondent (customer) and at least one
independent variable.
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After completing the dialog box, click Next to move to the subsequent dialog
box and define the customer choice template further.
There are two types of data that can be used in customer choice analysis:
One alternative (Binary choice model). This data format is suitable when
customers have two choice alternatives, such as a choice between buy
and dont buy. That is, it requires a yes-no decision process.
If you select the multiple alternatives option, you will activate the lower
portion of the dialog box, which allows you to enter the labels you want to use
to describe the various alternatives. In the box labeled Enter new Alternative
Label, enter the label for the first alternative, then click the Add button. The
alternative label appears in the list, as shown below:
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Repeat the process of adding options until you have entered all the desired
labels. You may use the Up, Down, or Delete buttons to modify your list by
simply selecting any item within the list.
If you specified the Single alternative model, the labels will automatically be
designated as Response (when the alternative is chosen) and Dummy
(when the alternative is not chosen).
If your data require a no choice option, you may specify it yourself. If you do not
specify a label for the no-choice option, the software will add this option
automatically during the analysis.
For example, if customers must choose among three brands, A, B, and C, and some
choose none of the options, the choice process actually involves four options (A, B,
C, and none). The software identifies this issue and adds the fourth option (called a
dummy) automatically. Alternatively, you may specify the four options manually.
After entering all the alternatives, click OK to generate the data collection
template, as shown below:
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You should use the Marketing Engineering for Excel templates whenever
possible; for example, the preceding dialog box allows you to specify the
parameters to use to build your template, but you must fill in the resultant
generated spreadsheet manually.
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Step 2
Alternative names for each product in the study. If the spreadsheet was
generated using the single alternative option, this column is not present.
Cases. The same customer might have been exposed to the same choice
situation, repeatedly, and these repetitions assist model estimation. If the
spreadsheet was generated using the one case per respondent option, this
column is not present.
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Step 3
Running analyses
After you enter your data in an Excel spreadsheet with the appropriate format,
click on MEXL CUSTOMER CHOICE (LOGIT) RUN ANALYSIS. The dialog box that
appears allows you to set the options to perform the customer choice analysis
of your data.
The four sections in this dialog box control the customer choice analysis.
Data
In this portion of the dialog box, you must indicate which data are present in
the spreadsheet. If you have used the interactive assistant, the software
automatically clicks the appropriate check boxes. If you are using a custom
spreadsheet, you will need to select the appropriate check boxes to indicate
which data are present.
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Step 4
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Variable Averages
This portion of the spreadsheet presents the means of each independent
variable for the group of respondents.
Variable Averages for Chosen Alternatives
This portion of the spreadsheet presents the means of each independent
variable where that alternative was the chosen alternative.
Confusion Matrix on Estimation Sample
The confusion matrix portion of the spreadsheet includes two matrices:
numerical counts and percentages for the same data.
The diagonal of both matrices appears bolded, to highlight the convergence of
the observed and predicted data. A high value or percentage at this diagonal
intersection represents a high correlation between observed and predicted
behavior.
Coefficient Estimates
This portion of the spreadsheet shows the coefficients associated with each
independent variable. Coefficients that are significantly different from 0 (at the
level of significance specified during the Run Analysis set up) appear in bold;
they are in green when positive (positive influence on the likelihood of choice)
and in red when negative.
In the OfficeStar example, past purchases has a positive influence on the
likelihood of choice (a customer is more likely to return to a store that he or
she has patronized in the past), whereas expensive has a negative impact
(people who perceive a store as expensive avoid it).
Elasticities
This portion reveals the elasticities of each independent variable in the study.
The matrix provides information about the elasticity of impact that each
variable has on choice shares. For a 1% change in an attribute in a given row,
the elasticity equals the percentage change expected in the response to that
alternative. Large values mean that changes in the variable represented in
that row have significant effects on the choice probabilities of the choice
alternatives in a specific column. The bolded cells on the diagonal indicate the
effect of a product change on that product, whereas the off-diagonal cells
reflect the effects of the same product change on a competitors product.
CUSTOMER CHOICE (LOGIT) TUTORIAL V130522
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The Hold-out worksheet will show the details of the analysis for the hold-out
sample.
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