Using Conjoint Analysis To Identify Value Trade-Offs and Define Prices
Using Conjoint Analysis To Identify Value Trade-Offs and Define Prices
Agenda
• Revolutionary markets
• Lack of sufficient information required (for buyers and sellers) for
pricing
• Rare and unique products
• No reference products/ no elasticity of demand.
• Evolutionary markets
• Markets in which products currently exist.
• Customers and sellers are aware of the product categories
• Conjoint analysis is very appropriate
• Mature markets
• Products available in the markets for quite long time
• Sold through matured markets
• There is little product differentiation in commodity markets
• Example
• iPhone 2,3,4,5…., iPad mini, most of the electronic gadgets
• Automobiles with automatic vs. manual transmissions
Customer Perception
Driven Pricing
• Conjoint analysis provides much greater relevance and depth
in price setting than other methods
Why Conjoint
• In a real purchase situation, however, consumers do not
make choices based on a single attribute.
Why conjoint
• Determine attributes and attribute levels
• Select product profiles to be measured
• Choose a method of stimulus presentation
• Decide on the response method
• Collect and analyze the data
• Interpret the results
Product profiles
Brand Hard Drive RAM Screen Price
Dell 320 GB 2 GB 15.4 in $1,200
Apple 320 GB 4 GB 15.4 in $1,200
Dell 160 GB 4 GB 15.4 in $900
Apple 320 GB 2 GB 15.4 in $900
Dell 320 GB 4 GB 12.1 in $1,500
Apple 320 GB 2 GB 12.1 in $1,500
Apple 160 GB 4 GB 15.4 in $1,500
Apple 160 GB 2 GB 12.1 in $900
Apple 160 GB 4 GB 12.1 in $1,200
Dell 160 GB 2 GB 12.1 in $1,200
Dell 320 GB 4 GB 12.1 in $900
Dell 160 GB 2 GB 15.4 in $1,500
• Pictures
• Actual products or prototypes
Response method
• Conjoint treats a product as a bundle of attributes, features, and
benefits
Price Utility
Utility Value
Duration Utility • This consumer places a greater value on a 3 hour
3 hours 42 travel (the utility is 42) than on a 5 hour travel
5 hour3 22 (utility is 22).
Seat Comfort Utility
• This consumer does not differ much in the value
extra-wide seats 15
that he or she places on comfort. That is, the utilities
regular seats 12
are quite close (12 vs. 15).
Price Utility
$400 61 • This consumer places a much higher value on a
$700 5 price of $400 than a price of $700.
Choice Seat Comfort Price Duration Choice Seat Comfort Price Duration
• Branding
• National Brand
• Boutique Brand
• Price levels
• $4 or
• $7
• Each of three attribute is posed at two different levels for this example,
but more attributes can be included and more levels can be considered
Ingredient Ingredient
Attribute Alternatives
Price
Ingredient Ingredient
Rank Ordering
Price
Ingredient Ingredient
Scoring
Feature Part Worth
Utility
Ingredient Pure Mango (2+3+6+7)/4 4.5
Fruit Blend (0+1+4+5)/4 2.5
• To find the utility of a product, we simply add the part worth utilities
• We can see that the part-worth utility valuation creates the same utility
ranking as was reported in the survey ranking
Product Utility
• Because price was one of the attributes being measured in
the conjoint analysis, we can place a monetary value on
Utils.
• Over the price range from $7 to $4, the part-worth utility
ranges from 5.5 to 1.5.
• Thus, a differential Utility is valued at $.75/util
Util
$7 $4
5.5 1.5
• Potential products.
• Market a boutique brand of pure mango juice competing against an
established national brand of mango fruit blend priced at $4 would have
to market their product at a price less than $4.75 to attract this research
participant.
• $4.75 is found by adding the util difference between premium niche
versus national (-1.0 utils) and the util difference between pure mango
juice and mango fruit blend (2.0 utils), which yields 1 util, where 1 util is
valued, by the customer, at $.75
Class Work-3
1. Attributes Definition
2. Stimulus Presentation
3. Response Measurement
4. Evaluation Criterion
5. Data Analysis
5 Steps to Conjoint
Analysis
• Conjoint analysis tends to dominate pricing challenges with
evolutionary, differentiated products
• Conjoint analysis treats a product as a sum of its parts, including
features, attributes and benefits
• Conjoint analysis reveals the part-worth utility that customers place
on specific attributes.
• Dispersion between the part-worth utility functions of customers can
be used to identify market segments and estimate market shares of
products serving those market segments.
Summary