Response Analysis

31
Response Analysis

description

Response Analysis. Example: Opening of Cinema/ Children’s Park/Exhibition Center. To find consumer responses to opening of Cinema, Children’s park or Exhibition 903 respondents were asked to rate each alternative on a 5 point scale: 1(v.low) to 5 (v.high) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Response Analysis

Page 1: Response Analysis

Response Analysis

Page 2: Response Analysis

Example: Opening of Cinema/ Children’s Park/Exhibition

Center• To find consumer responses to opening of

Cinema, Children’s park or Exhibition

• 903 respondents were asked to rate each alternative on a 5 point scale: 1(v.low) to 5 (v.high)

• The analyst also collected demographic data on the respondents

Page 3: Response Analysis

Example: Opening of Cinema/ Children’s Park/Exhibition Center• Dependent var - % of positive responses• Indep variables (with coding in parenthesis)

Gender: Male (1), Female (2)Age: 16-20 (1)

21-24 (2)25-34 (3)35-44 (4)45-54 (5)55-64 (6)65+ (7)

Socio-economic group had 6 categories:A(1), B(2), C1(3), C2(4) etc

Page 4: Response Analysis

Response Analysis: Chi-Squared Automatic Interaction

Detection(CHAID)• CHAID is a dependence method.

• For given dep var. we want technique that can

1. Indicate indep. var. that most affect dep. var.

2. Identify mkt. segments that differ most on these important. indep. var.

• Early interaction detection method is AID

• AID employs hierarchical binary splitting algorithm

Page 5: Response Analysis

Response Analysis: CHAID (contd)• General procedure

1. First select indep. var. whose subgroups differ most w.r.t dep. var.2. Each subgroup of this var. is further divided into subgroups on remaining variables3. These subgroups are tested for differences on dep. var. 4. Var. with greatest difference is selected next5. Continue until subgroups are too small

Page 6: Response Analysis

Response Analysis: CHAID (contd)

• Brief description of AID1. Designate dep. and indep. Variables2. Each indep. var. divided into categories3. Split population into 2 groups on “best”indep. var.4. Further dichotomize each of these groups successively 5. Continue splitting each resulting subgroups until

no indep. var. meets selection criteria

Page 7: Response Analysis

Response Analysis: CHAID (contd)

• Limitations of AID

1. Not a classical statistical model

2. Hypothesis and inference tests not possible

3. Multivariable not multivariate procedure. All variables are not considered

simultaneously

4. Does not adjust for fact that there are many ways to dichotomize indep. variable

Page 8: Response Analysis

Response Analysis: CHAID (contd)• CHAID is more flexible than AID• Advantages of CHAID over AID

1. All var. dep. or indep. can be categorical

2. CHAID selects indep. var. using Chi-square test.

3. CHAID not restricted to binary splits

4. Solves problem of simultaneous inference using Bonferroni multiplier

5. Automatically tests for and merges pairs ofhomogenous categories in indep. var.

Page 9: Response Analysis

Response Analysis: CHAID (contd)• CHAID distinguishes 3 types of indep. variables

- Monotonic

- Free

- Floating• Basic components of CHAID analysis

1. A categorical dep. var.

2. A set of categorical indep. variables

3. Settings for various CHAID parameters

4. Analyze subgroups and identify “best” indep. var.

Page 10: Response Analysis

Multiple Discriminant Analysis and Logistic Regression(MDA & LR)

• Appropriate when dep. var. is categorical and indep. var. are metric

• MDA derives variate that best distinguishes between a priori groups

• MDA sets variate’s weights to maximize between-group variance relative to within-group variance

Page 11: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• For each observation we can obtain a Discriminant Z-score

• Average Z score for a group gives Centroid• Classification done using Cutting Scores which

are derived from group centroids• Statistical significance of Discriminant Function

done using distance bet. group centroids• LR similar to 2-group discriminant analysis

Page 12: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• Six-stage model building for MDA• Stage 1: Research problem/Objectives

a. Evaluate differences bet. avg. scores for a priori groups on a set of variables

b. Determine which indep. variables account for most of the differences bet. groups

c. Classify observations into groups

Page 13: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• Stage 2: Research designa. Selection of dependent and

independent variables

b. Sample size considerations

c. Division of sample into analysis and holdout sample

Page 14: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• Stage 3: Assumptions of MDAa. Multivariate normality of indep. var.b. Equal covariance matrices of groupsc. Indep. vars. should not be highly correlatedd. Linearity of discriminant function

• Stage 4: Estimation of MDA and assessing fita. Estimation can be

i. Simultaneousii. Stepwise

Page 15: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• Step 4: Estimation and assessing fit (contd)

b. Statistical significance of discrim function

i. Wilk’s lambda, Hotelling’s trace, Pillai’s criterion, Roy’s greatest root

ii. For stepwise method, Mahalanobis D2 iii. Test stat sig. of overall discrimination between groups and of each discriminant function

Page 16: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• Step 4: Estimation and assessing fit (contd)c. Assessing overall fit

i. Calculate discrim. Z-score for each obs.ii. Evaluate group differences on Z scores iii. Assess group membership prediction

accuracy. To do this we need to address following- rationale for classification matrices

Page 17: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• Step 4: Estimation and assessing fit (contd)

c. Assessing overall fit(contd.)

iii. Address the following (contd.)

- cutting score determination

- consider costs of misclassification

- constructing classification matrices

- assess classification accuracy

- casewise diagnostics

Page 18: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• Stage 5: Interpretation of results

a. Methods for single discrim. function

i. Discriminant weights

ii. Discriminant loadings

iii. Partial F-values

b. Additional methods for more than 2 functions

i. Rotation of discrim. functions

ii. Potency index

Page 19: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• Stage 6: Validation of results

Page 20: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• For 2 groups LR is preferred to MDA because

1. More robust to failure of MDA assumptions

2. Similar to regression, so intuitively appealing

3. Has straightforward statistical tests

4. Can accommodate non-linearity easily

5. Can accommodate non-metric indep var. through dummy variable coding

Page 21: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• Six stage model building for LR• Stage 1: Research prob./objectives (same as MDA)• Stage 2: Research design (same as MDA)• Stage 3: Assumptions of LR (same as MDA)• Stage 4: Estimating LR and assessing fit

a. Estimation uses likelihood of an event’s occurence

Page 22: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• Stage 4: Estimating LR and assessing fit (contd)b. Assessing fit

i. Overall measure of fit is -2LL

ii. Calculation of R2 for Logit

iii. Assess predictive accuracy

Page 23: Response Analysis

MDA and LR (contd)

• Step 5: Interpretation of results

a. Many MDA methods can be used

b. Test significance of coefficients

• Step 6: Validation of results

Page 24: Response Analysis

Example: Discriminant Analysis

• HATCO is a large industrial supplier• A marketing research firm surveyed 100 HATCO

customers• There were two different types of customers: Those

using Specification Buying and those using Total Value Analysis

• HATCO mgmt believes that the two different types of customers evaluate their suppliers differently

Page 25: Response Analysis

Example: Discriminant Analysis

• The mktg research firm gathered data, from HATCO’s customers, on 7 variables1. Delivery speed2. Price level3. Price flexibility4. Manufacturer’s image5. Overall service6. Salesforce image7. Product quality

Page 26: Response Analysis

Example: Discriminant Analysis

• Stage 1: Objectives of Discriminant AnalysisWhich perceptions of HATCO best distinguish firms using each buying approach?

• Stage 2: Research designa. Dep var is the buying approach of customers. It is categorical. Indep var are X1 to X7 as mentioned aboveb. Overall sample size is 100. Each group exceeded the minimum of 20 per groupc. Analysis sample size was 60 and holdout sample size was 40

Page 27: Response Analysis

Example: Discriminant Analysis

• Stage 3: Assumptions of MDAAll the assumptions were met

• Stage 4: Estimation of MDA and assessing fit

Before estimation, we first examine group means for X1 to X7 and the significances of difference in meansa. Estimation is done using the Stepwise procedure. - - The indep var which has the largest Mahalanobis D2 distance is selected first and so on, till none of the remaining variables are significant- The discriminant function is obtained from the unstandardized coefficients

Page 28: Response Analysis

Example: Discriminant Analysis

• Stage 4: Estimation of MDA and assessing fit (cont)b. Univariate and multivariate aspects show significancec. Discrim Z-score for each observation and group centriods were calculated- The cutting score was calculated as -0.773- Classification matrix was calculated by classifying an observation as Specification buying/Total value analysis if it’s Z-score was less/greater than –0.773- Classification accuracy was obtained and assessed using certain benchmarks

Page 29: Response Analysis

Example: Discriminant Analysis

• Step 5: Interpretation-Since we have a single discriminant function, we will look at the discriminant weights, loadings and partial F values- Discriminant loadings are more valid for interpretation. We see that X7 discriminates the most followed by X1 and then X3

- Going back to table of group means, we see that firms employing Specification Buying focus on ‘Product quality’, whereas firms using Total Value Analysis focus on ‘Delivery speed’ and ‘Price flexibility’ in that order

Page 30: Response Analysis

Example: Logistic Regression

• A cataloger wants to predict response to mailing• Draws sample of 20 customers• Uses three variables

- RESPONSE (0=no/1=yes) the dep var

- AGE (in years) an indep var

- GENDER (0=male/1=female) an indep var• Use Dummy variables for categorical variables

Page 31: Response Analysis

Example: Logistic Regression

• Running the logistic regression program givesG = -10.83 + .28 AGE +2.30 GENDER

• Here G is the Logit of a yes response to mailing• Consider a male of age 40. His G or logit score is

G(0, 40) = -10.83 + .28*40 + 2.30*0 = .37 logit• A female customer of same age would have

G(1, 40) = -10.83 + .28*40 + 2.30*1 = 2.67 logits • Logits can be converted to Odds which can be converted to

probabilities• For the 40 year old male/female prob is p = .59/.93