What Can Conjoint Analysis Do for You? - YouTube

Channel: Sawtooth Software

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Have you ever had to make a decision between two or more options, in a situation where
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there are some things you like about one option and some things you like about the other?
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Of course you have.
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Now think of all the organizations out there trying to create successful products and services,
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not to mention sell them at just the right price. It's a complex, competitive world,
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and many managers are just making educated guesses about how best to appeal to consumers.
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Well, there's a proven approach for these product and service providers. It's called
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conjoint analysis.
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So what is conjoint analysis, and what can it do for you?
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Conjoint analysis is a marketing insight technique for predicting how products you create or
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re-design should perform when taken to market.
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Companies win over consumers by putting in the right features and charging the right
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price. For example, smartphone manufacturers are packing more and more capabilities into
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these tiny devices, with billions of dollars at stake if they get the right combinations
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of features and price.
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Hotels and resorts fine-tune their facilities and service levels to appeal to specific target
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markets, such as business travelers or luxury vacationers.
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Consumer packaged goods companies tweak their packaging, flavors, and nutritional contents
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to appeal to new market segments and create successful line extensions.
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Next let's consider Jane, who works for a company that manufacturers bazoogles.
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A rival company across town came out with a new bazoogle and Jane's sales have gone
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in the wrong direction. Now, she's got a crisis on her hands.
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Bazoogles can have 2 to 4 snozzles, large or small monitors, and varying levels of noise,
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zoinks and whizbangs.
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The problem is, there are 1000s of combinations of features, and Jane needs to come up with
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the right combination at the right price to regain market share.
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Jane has some ideas that she could concept test among a sample of potential customers.
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She could describe potential bazoogles and ask potential customers to tell her how much
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they would like to buy each one.
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Of course, she doesn't have enough time, money, or customers to do enough of these
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concept tests.
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What she really needs is a smarter, more scientific way to test the thousands of possible bazoogles
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to find the optimal one. That's where conjoint analysis comes in.
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To start, Jane does some research so she can list the key attributes and levels of her
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and her competitors' bazoogles.
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For example, a bazoogle could have 3 snozzles, a small monitor, high noise, and shoot out
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30 zoinks per minute.
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Conjoint analysis software systematically combines the features from Jane's list to
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show competing bazoogles at different prices. Consumers simply pick one from each scenario,
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much like they'd do in the real world. You can see why it's often called discrete choice
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analysis.
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Across a sample of respondents, numerous combinations are shown and the software keeps track of
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how often different features were chosen at different prices when offered on different
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bazoogles.
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Using statistical analysis, the software estimates preference scores for each consumer in the
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sample. Combinations of features that are chosen a lot get high utility scores.
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In essence, conjoint analysis has taken a snapshot of each consumer's brain and derived
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a statistic model that quantifies the preferences that lead them to choose different bazoogles
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and pay for them the way they do.
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It's almost like Jane has captured 100s of virtual consumers with their decision-making
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rules within the software on her computer.
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She's now got a what-if market simulator that acts like a voting machine for bazoogles.
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She can specify any of 1000s of potential bazoogles in her conjoint analysis software,
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and the virtual consumers' will vote on those potential bazoogles versus her competitors'.
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Better yet, if Jane knew something about the cost of manufacturing the features, the software
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could search all potential bazoogles to find the one that's likely to beat the competition
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and maximize profit.
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Most any time people face decisions among different options made up of conjoined features,
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you could develop key insights into consumer choice using conjoint analysis. As you can
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imagine, the potential applications are numerous.
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And if you want to make more than one version of your product to target distinct market
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segments, conjoint analysis helps you do that too.
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Conjoint analysis is unlike common survey approaches that try to ask respondents what's
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important in a product and how much they're willing to pay.
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Instead, respondents choose from realistic product options like they would in the real
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world.
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The most commonly used conjoint analysis approach today is Choice-Based Conjoint (CBC).
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It's based on the some of the same theories that won Dr. Dan McFadden the Nobel Prize
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in Economics.
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We hope this presentation has helped to explain some basics of conjoint analysis and show
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how it can benefit those trying to create the right product at the right price for consumers.
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If you'd like to learn more about conjoint analysis, feel free to visit us at SawtoothSoftware.com.