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Articles

What are your customers looking for?

An illustration of conjoint analysis shows how to eicit consumer preferences and price perceptions for different product characteristics

Pages 16-20 | Published online: 14 Aug 2019
 

Abstract

Marketing managers often face decisions related to the introduction of a new product: what should the product look like to gain the potential consumer's preference?, should a new product be adapted to the needs and preferences of specific consumer segments?, and, if so, to what extent? what is the importance of certain characteristics or features of the new product to the acceptability of the product by the target consumers?, and so on.

Most of these questions can be answered, or an attempt to assist the decision process can be made, by establishing the importance of various product characteristics to consumer segments of the market for the particular product. This is the essence of a “conjoint measurement”, or “conjoint analysis”, a procedure that is increasingly finding its way into the practice of marketing management.

This article outlines various ways in which this technique can be applied to develop an understanding of consumer preferences and price perception. The approaches are illustrated using a study for a Belgian travel agent who wanted to find out what type of cruise appeals to a student population.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Patrick De Pelsmacker

PATRICK DE PELSMACKER holds a PhD in economics from the University of Ghent. He is Associate Professor of Marketing at the Universities of Antwerp and Brussels. His particular interests are marketing research and modelling techniques. He has written a number of articles on, amongst other things, the modelling of demand for motor cars.

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