Abstract
We investigate the role of potential weekly brand-specific characteristics that influence consumer choices, but are unobserved or unmeasurable by the researcher. We use an empirical approach, based on the estimation methods used for standard random coefficients logit models, to account for the presence of such unobserved attributes. Using household scanner panel data, we find evidence that ignoring such time-varying latent (to the researcher) characteristics can lead to two types of problems. First, consistent with previous literature, we find that these unobserved characteristics may lead to biased estimates of the mean price response parameters. This argument is based on a form of price endogeneity. If marketing managers set prices based on consumer willingness to pay, then the observed prices will likely be correlated with the latent (to the researcher) brand characteristics. We resolve this problem by using an instrumental variables procedure. Our findings suggest that simply ignoring these attributes may also lead to larger estimates of the variance in the heterogeneity distribution of preferences and price sensitivities across households. This could overstate the benefits from marketing activities such as household-level targeting. We resolve the problem by using weekly brand intercepts, embedded in a random coefficients brand choice model, to control for weekly brand-specific characteristics, while accounting for household heterogeneity. Overall, our results extend the finding on the endogeneity bias from the mean of the heterogeneity distribution (i.e., the price effect) to include the variance of that distribution.
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Correlates of Buying Behavior for Grocery Products
Do heavy buyers of a grocery product have different economic characteristics than light buyers? Are private-brand-prone customers really different? Are customers who exhibit a h...
Modeling Household Purchase Behavior with Logistic Normal Regression
Abstract The successful development of marketing strategies requires the accurate measurement of household preferences and their reaction to variables such as price and advertis...
A Price Expectations Model of Customer Brand Choice
The authors develop, calibrate, and test a disaggregate model of customer brand choice with customers’ price expectations as the mediating construct. They use a two-stage modeli...
Quality Tier Competition: How Price Change Influences Brand Choice and Category Choice
The authors demonstrate that competition among brands in different quality tiers can be asymmetric both in brand choice (“what”) and in category choice (“whether”). They also in...
Is There a Generalized Price-Quality Relationship?
There is much evidence that a relationship exists between a product's price and its perceived quality [8, 9, 12, 13]. However, no study gives evidence that the pricequality rela...
Publication Info
- Year
- 2005
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 51
- Issue
- 5
- Pages
- 832-849
- Citations
- 130
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1287/mnsc.1040.0323