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General Paper

Obviating some of the theoretical barriers of data envelopment analysis-discriminant analysis: an application in predicting cluster membership of customers

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Pages 674-683 | Received 24 Jun 2013, Accepted 17 Mar 2014, Published online: 21 Dec 2017
 

Abstract

Data envelopment analysis-discriminant analysis (DEA-DA) has been used for predicting cluster membership of decision-making units (DMUs). One of the possible applications of DEA-DA is in the marketing research area. This paper uses cluster analysis to cluster customers into two clusters: Gold and Lead. Then, to predict cluster membership of new customers, DEA-DA is applied. In DEA-DA, an arbitrary parameter imposing a small gap between two clusters (η) is incorporated. It is shown that different η leads to different prediction accuracy levels since an unsuitable value for η leads to an incorrect classification of DMUs. We show that even the data set with no overlap between two clusters can be misclassified. This paper proposes a new DEA-DA model to tackle this issue. The aim of this paper is to illustrate some computational difficulties in previous DEA-DA approaches and then to propose a new DEA-DA model to overcome the difficulties. A case study demonstrates the efficacy of the proposed model.

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to thank the two anonymous reviewers for valuable suggestions and comments. The research was supported by the Czech Science Foundation (GACR project 14-31593S) and through the European Social Fund within the project CZ.1.07/2.3.00/20.0296.

Notes

1 This variable is a qualitative criterion. For this qualitative variable, each customer is rated on a 5-point Likert scale. Five-point scales are common for evaluation in terms of qualitative data and are often accompanied by interpretations such as: 1=very bad, 2=bad, 3=medium, 4=good, 5=very good, which are easily understood by the decision maker.

2 This variable is also a qualitative criterion.

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