Purchase Incidence:: Purchase Incidence Purchase Timing Brand Choice Integrated Models of Incidence, Timing and Choice
Purchase Incidence:: Purchase Incidence Purchase Timing Brand Choice Integrated Models of Incidence, Timing and Choice
Stochastic models of consumer behavior are often classified according to the type of behavior they attempt to describe. The major categories are:
• Purchase Incidence
• Purchase Timing
• Brand Choice
• Integrated models of incidence, timing and choice
Purchase incidence, purchase timing and brand choice are described by stochastic processes, i.e., families of random variables (X1) indexed by t varying in an index set T(t ϵT). A random or
stochastic variable is a variable which can assume different values (or alternative value intervals) with some probability other than one. The values the random variable can take are defined in
the state space which is the collection of possible outcomes of the stochastic process under study. For instance, if the process is the purchasing of a specific brand, the state space for one trial is
Y(es), N(o), and for two trials it is (YY, YN, NY, NN).
1. Purchase Incidence:
Here, α & β are parameters of the gamma distribution and Γ(β ) is the gamma function. The gamma distribution is a very flexible distribution that can take on a variety of shapes
In this model, the number of purchases for a (randomly selected) individual can be shown to follow a Negative Binomial Distribution:
2. Purchase timing:
Purchase timing models are intrinsically related to purchase incidence models in that the choice of a distribution for interpurchase times at the same time defines the distribution of purchase
incidence.
• HAZARD MODELS:
The major advantage of this approach is that it accounts for so-called right-censoring. Right censoring occurs if a sample of consumers or households is observed for a time period of fixed
length only, causing longer interpurchase times to have a larger probability of falling (partially) outside the observation period. If one does not account for right censoring, we obtain biased
estimates.
In hazard models the probability of a purchase during a certain time interval, say t to t + Δt, given that is has not occurred before t, is formulated as:
In discrete-time hazard models, the probability of a purchase is specified directly for given values of Δt :
where y is the number of events that has occurred during the interval [t, t + Δt ].
In the continuous-time approach Δt approaches zero to yield a continuous hazard rate λ(t). The hazard rate can be interpreted as the instantaneous rate of purchasing at time t. The distribution
function of interpurchase times can then be derived:
i.e. the probability that brand j is purchased at time t, given that brand i was purchased at t-1, brand k at t-2, .. .. These probabilities are called transition probabilities.
Here, we will talk about 2 types of Markov Models: Zero order & First order model.
Here, we will see 2 models: Multinomial Logit Model & Markov Response Model.
Considering 2 brands, 1 & 2, the brand loyalty for brand 1 is defined as:
Here, the values of the transition probabilities are not restricted to the range zero to one.
4. Integrated models of incidence, timing and choice:
The basic setup of this approach is as follows:
• Assume a Poisson distribution for purchase frequency, y: P(y I λ)
• Assume a gamma heterogeneity distribution for the purchase rate: G(λ)
• Obtain the unconditional distribution of y by integrating out the heterogeneity distribution. This leads to a NBD : NBD(y) = f P(y I λ )G(λ)d λ.
• Assume a multinomial distribution for choice, x: M(x I p).
• Assume a Dirichlet heterogeneity distribution for the choice probabilities: D(p).
• 6. Obtain the unconditional distribution of x by integrating out the heterogeneity distribution. This leads to a Dirichlet-Multinomial (DM) distribution: DM(x) = ʃ M(x I p)D(p)dp.
• In the final step, the joint distribution of purchase frequency and choice is obtained, assuming independence: NBDM(y, x) = NBD(y) · DM(x).