Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems 132 Ursula H. Funke Mathematical Models in Marketing A Collection of Abstracts Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems Managing Editors: M. Beckmann and H. P. Künzi Operations Research 132 Ursula H. Funke Mathematical Models in Marketing A Collection of Abstracts With aPreface by M. Beckmann Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg GmbH 1976 Editorial Board H. Albach · A. V. Balakrishnan · M. Beckmann (Managing Editor) P. Dhrymes · J. Green · W. Hildenbrand · W. Krelle H. P. Kilnzi (Managing Editor) · K. Ritter · R. Sato · H. Schelbert P. Schtinfeld Managing Editors Praf. Dr. M. Beckmann Prof. Dr. H. P. Kilnzi Brown University Universităt Zilrich Providence, Rl 02912/USA 8090 Zilrich/Schweiz Author Prof. Dr. Ursula H. Funke Department of Economics Brown University Providence R.l. 02912/USA Library of Coagress Ca\alogiag In P11blic:atlon Data Funke, Urs ula, 1939- Mathematical models in ma.rketing. (Lecture notes in economica and mathematical systems : Operations resea.rch ; 13~) Bibliography: p. Includea indexes. 1. Marketing--Ma.thematical ODdels, I. Title, II. Serles: Lecture notes in economica a.nd ma.thematica.l. system.s ; 132. HF5415.l25.F86 658.8'001'51 76-44509 AMS Subject Classifications (1970): 90A10, 90A15, 90899 ISBN 978-3-540-07869-2 ISBN 978-3-642-51565-1 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-51565-1 This work is subject to copyright. Ali rights are reserved, whether the whole or pari of the material is concerned, specifically those of translation, re printing, re·use of illustrations, broadcasting, reproduction by photocopying machi ne or similar means, and storage in data banks. Under § 54 of the German Copyright Law where copies are made for other than private use, a fee is payable to the publisher, the amount of the fee to be determined by agreement with the publisher. © by Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 1976 Originally published by Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg New York in 1976 Among ~e most active fields in operations Rese~rcn in re cent years Marketing nas been outstanding. One index of operations Researcn activity in marketing is the number of books and articles on marketing subjects containing mathematical models. This collection of abstracts includes from the 1940's 1 model, 1950's 12 models, 1960's 80 models, 1970's (so far) 58 models. Here and in the following we have excluded mere statistical moqels of the regression or analysis of variance types. A diffi cUlty facing the reader is not just the abundance of articles and the reappearance of basically the same models in various forms, but their dispersion over a great number of journals both in the marketing and in the Operations Research fields. (22 have been covered here) • As one remedy to this situation there have appeared several books of readings in which key articles have been reprinted, sometimes with editorial comment. Same of these are: F.M. Bass, et. al., (eds.), Mathematical Models and Methods in Marketing, Homewood, Illinois: R.D. Irwin, Inc., 1961. R.E. Frank, A.A. Kuehn, and W.F. Massy, Quantitative Techniques in Marketing Analysis, Text and Readings, Homewood, Illinois: R.D. Irwin, Inc., 1962. B. Montgomery and G.L. Urban, Applications of Management Science in Marketing, Englewood-Cliffs: Prentice-Rall, !nc., 1970. R.L. Day and T.E. Ness, Marketing Models: Behavioral Science Applications, Scranton-Toronto-London: International Textbook Company, 1971. L. Day and J. ~arsons, Marketing Models: Quantitative Applications, Scranton-Toronto-London: International Textbook Company, 1971. The aims of the present monograph are more ambitlous. It is an attempt to collect all significant articles and books that contain mathematical models on marketing subjects. It seems to us that the greatest usefulness is achieved not by reprinting but by abstracting from these articles the types of mathematical model used. This has been done, wherever possible, in the authors' own notation and words (but without their assistance). The format used and the cla5sification that has emerged are explained in the introduction. It is impossible to summarize the state of the art as it emerges from these abstracts in a few paragraphs, and no such attempt will be made here. The field is in astate of flux, and no common framework is apparent in terms of which all theoretical ideas can be readily organized. This would signal the need for efforts to develop such a general theoretical framework on the basis of a unified theory of behavior. As far as sellers behavior goes, the well-known economic model of profit maximizing behavior and its variants of the sales maximization and satisficing types would seem to offer promising starting points. Things are more tricky at the consumer's or buyer's end. Here it would seem that the economic theory of choice as formulated in utility theory would have to be brought in. But at present, utility theory i5 not formulated in a way that allows for brand switching, or responses to advertising, packaging or other forms of marketing effort. Ursula Funke and I have made an attempt at reformulat~ng utility models for purposes of marketing theory in the paper, "~roduct Attraction, Marketing Effort and Sales: Towards a v Utili ty Model of Market Eehav;lQr," U41J to which we refer the intere$ted reader. It remains for me to reccrd the pleasure I had ~n collaborating with Ursula Funke on this project. Both the article, which summarizes our theoretical results, and this collection cf abstracts, which was preliminary to our theoretical efforts, have been sponsored by Grant No. Be 272124 from the "Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. " We should like to express our sincere gratitude for this support. Providence, April 1976 Martin J. Beckmann INTRODUCTION Mathematical models can be classified in a number of ways, e.g., static and dynamic; deterministic and stochastic; linear and nonlinear; individual and aggregate; descriptive, predictive, and normative; according to the mathematical technique applied or according to the problem area in which they are used. In marketing, the level of sophistication of the mathe matical models varies considerably, so that a nurnber of models will be meaningful to a marketing specialist without an extensive mathematical background. To make it easier for the nontechnical user we have chosen to classify the models included in this collection according to the major marketing problem areas in which they are applied. Since the emphasis lies on mathematical models, we shall not as a rule present statistical models, flow chart models, computer models, or the empirical testing aspects of these theories. We have also excluded competitive bidding, inventory and transportation models since these areas do not form the core of ·the marketing field. The mathematical formulation of human behavior and particularly consumer behavior is only in its infancy. In marketing the chief development of mathematical models beg an after World War 11 with a major thrust in the early 1960's. So far, it seems to have been mainly an Anglo-Saxon affair and we have, therefore, concentrated on the Arnerican and British literature. (See, however, entries #41, 88, 94, 113, 118.) The models included in this collection have been selected on the basis of being either meaningful in terms of actual applica ti on or historically important or worthwhile for their own sake. Within the nine subject categories they are arranged chronologically except in cases where one article is an extension of another. References at the end of the abstract refer to closely related models. VIII Since the model categories frequently overlap and some models treat several subjects simultaneously (example: "Advertising and Promotion Effects on Consumer Response to New Products"), the classification of some models is somewhat arbitrary. The reader is referred to the subject index. Part 1 contains models of consumer purchasing behavior, the center of marketing. The first subclass consists of brand choice models in general; new product models are listed in Part 4.1. Brand choice models are as a rule stochastic models. The development of stochastic models of buying behavior began in the late 1950's. There have been four major model-building approaches: zero-order models, Markov models, linear learning models, and probabilistic diffusion models. Each presumes a different consumer behavior process. Whereas the zero-order model assumes that past brand choices do not affect future bran~ choices, the two-state Markov model postulates that only the most re cent purchase affects the current brand choice decision. The learning model presumes that brand choice is dependent upon the complete history of past purchases. The probability diffu sion model, finally, is a zero-order model in which the probability of choosing a particular brand may change between purchases; it allows nonstationarity in the probability of brand choice, but, in contrast to the linear learning and Markov models, assumes that this nonstationarity is not due to purchase event feedback. In the late 1960's marketing theorists began to look to the behavioral sciences and formulated buyer attitude models. These deal with the relationship between consumers' attitude toward a product and brand choice behavior. The category Other Consumer Behavior Models contains product attribute models, models where the demand is affected by dealer or store location, consumer utility models, a model of demand with variable consumer preferences, and a model of consumer behavior with and without knowledge of the price distribution. Part 2 considers Advertising and Sales Promotion models where the term sales promotion covers a wide variety of sales stimulating devices, such as temporary price reductions, premiums, coupons, and sampling. The technique of programming dominates the models in Media Selection. The abundance of models in Advertising Expenditure reflects the importance of advertising in marketing research and in most firms' budgets. Some theoretical results justify the common empirical use of a percentage-of-sales-rule in advertising budget decisions (see, for instance, model #56). A large number of models in the category Sales Response to Advertising treats a central question in advertising: the measurement problem, as well as the dura tion and stability of advertising's effects. The category Other Models of Advertising and Sales Promotion comprises models of promotional competition and the diffusion of knowledge. Part 3 considers the subject of pricing whose importance to the firm is not mirrored by the number of models represented here. There are two reasons for this. First, the mathematical models of general price theory are widely published and assumed known. Second, many advertising, new product, and marketing mix models contain the pricing variable. Four out of five new products fail. With market research focussing on this problem it is not surprising that the category Product Models consists mostly of new product models. They range from the simple Fourt-Woodlock model to Massy's STEAM model. Part 5 is directed at the problem area of sales forecasting. Sales forecasting or rnarket share expressions are found in models of all categories. Besides the five models presented here, other fore casting models are to be found especially in the New Product category (e.g., #96, 108, and 109). x The Faeility Loeation Models of Part 6 treat the loeation of a warehouse or retail outlet as adecision variable of the firm. In most economies personal selling represents a larger marketing expenditure than advertising. Model building started early in this field, and the Sales Force Model category contains the earliest paper in this collection (1943). Most articles deal with salesmen scheduling and routing, i.e., with the problem of allocating sales effort among customers, geographical areas, and time, whereas the Montgomery-Silk-Zaragoza model investigates the problem of allocating selling effort across a firm's product Une. Part 8, Marketing Mix Models, comprises models of market response to more than one marketing variable. Models which consider several variables but with, the emphasis on one variable, for example advertising, are listed under that variable. Part 9, finally, contains two models of market simulation of which MATE represents business games, and one model of trade area boundaries. This collection does not claim to be exhaustive, rather it is intended to be representative. Its main purpose is to provide a survey of the state of the art which may be useful to the marketing researcher, to the general Operations Research practitioner, and to the teacher of management scisnce courses. I am grateful to the Economics Department of Brown University for providing a stimulating environment and the facilities to undertake this research. My gratitude extends to Nancy Kimelman for helping with the indices and to the department's capable secretary, Marion Anthony. I am deeply indebted to Martin J. Beckmann, colleague, "Meister," and friend. I thank Wolfgang for his understanding and patience and dedicate this volume to my parents, Hertha and Erwin Rehbinder. Providence, April 1976 Ursula H. Funke
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