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  2. RFM (market research) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFM_(market_research)

    For example, a service-based business could use these calculations: Recency = 10 – the number of months that have passed since the customer last purchased [ 2 ] Frequency = the maximum of "the number of purchases by the customer in the last 12 months (with a limit of 10)" and 1

  3. Bayesian inference in marketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Bayesian_inference_in_marketing

    Subsequently, many books [5] [6] [7] and articles [8] [9] have been written about the application of Bayesian statistics to marketing decision-making and market research. It was predicted that the Bayesian approach would be used widely in the marketing field but up until the mid-1980s the methods were considered impractical. [ 10 ]

  4. Choice modelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choice_modelling

    Indeed many alternative models exist in econometrics, marketing, sociometrics and other fields, including utility maximization, optimization applied to consumer theory, and a plethora of other identification strategies which may be more or less accurate depending on the data, sample, hypothesis and the particular decision being modelled.

  5. Conjoint analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conjoint_analysis

    The market research approach, Mind Genomics (MG), is an application of Conjoint Analysis (CA). CA is carried out to evaluate consumer acceptance, presenting them with a set of product attributes and assessing their preferences for different attribute combinations by estimating the utility scores for different attribute levels.

  6. Customer analytics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customer_analytics

    Customer analytics is a process by which data from customer behavior is used to help make key business decisions via market segmentation and predictive analytics. This information is used by businesses for direct marketing, site selection, and customer relationship management. Marketing provides services to satisfy customers.

  7. Bass diffusion model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bass_diffusion_model

    The Bass model has been widely used in forecasting, especially new product sales forecasting and technology forecasting. Mathematically, the basic Bass diffusion is a Riccati equation with constant coefficients equivalent to Verhulst—Pearl logistic growth. In 1969, Frank Bass published his paper on a new product growth model for consumer ...

  8. COBRA (consumer theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COBRA_(consumer_theory)

    COBRA (consumers' online brand related activities) is a theoretical framework related to understanding consumer's behavioural engagement with brands on social media. [1] [2] COBRA in literature is defined as a “set of brand-related online activities on the part of the consumer that vary in the degree to which the consumer interacts with social media and engages in the consumption ...

  9. Segmenting-targeting-positioning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Segmenting-Targeting...

    There are two approaches to segmenting a market – a discovery approach or an analytic approach. Each approach is appropriate to the type of business and market they are approaching. [10] An analytic approach is a much more research and data based approach, where two sets of information are derived and used to segment the market. [9]