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Dealing with product similarity in conjoint simulations

Publication ,  Journal Article
Huber, J; Orme, B; Miller, R
December 1, 2007

One of the reasons conjoint analysis has been so popular as a management decision tool has been the availability of a choice simulator. These simulators often arrive in the form of a software or spreadsheet program accompanying the output of a conjoint study. These simulators enable managers to perform 'what if' questions about their market-estimating market shares under various assumptions about competition and their own offerings. As examples, simulators can predict the market share of a new offering; they can estimate the direct and cross elasticity of price changes within a market, or they can form the logical guide to strategic simulations that anticipate short-and long-term competitive responses (Green and Krieger 1988). © 2007 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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Publication Date

December 1, 2007

Start / End Page

347 / 362
 

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Huber, J., Orme, B., & Miller, R. (2007). Dealing with product similarity in conjoint simulations, 347–362. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-71404-0_17
Huber, J., B. Orme, and R. Miller. “Dealing with product similarity in conjoint simulations,” December 1, 2007, 347–62. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-71404-0_17.
Huber J, Orme B, Miller R. Dealing with product similarity in conjoint simulations. 2007 Dec 1;347–62.
Huber, J., et al. Dealing with product similarity in conjoint simulations. Dec. 2007, pp. 347–62. Scopus, doi:10.1007/978-3-540-71404-0_17.
Huber J, Orme B, Miller R. Dealing with product similarity in conjoint simulations. 2007 Dec 1;347–362.

DOI

Publication Date

December 1, 2007

Start / End Page

347 / 362