| Marketing Science |
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| at the University of Florida | ||
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Vol. 12, No. 4, 1993
Analyzing Duration Times in Marketing: Evidence for the Effectiveness of Hazard Rate Models
Kristiaan Helsen and David C. Schmittlein
Some statistical methods developed recently in the biometrics
and econometrics literature show great promise for improving the analysis of
duration times in marketing. They incorporate the right censoring that is prevalent
in duration times data, and can be used to make a wide variety of useful predictions.
Both of these features make these methods preferable to the regression, logit,
and discriminant analyses that marketers have typically used in analyzing durations.
This paper is intended to fulfill three objectives. First,
we demonstrate how decision situations that involve durations differ from other
marketing phenomena. Second, we show how standard modeling approaches to handle
duration times can break down because of the peculiarities inherent in durations.
It has been suggested in recent marketing articles that an alternative to these
conventional procedures, i.e., hazard rate models and proportional hazard regression,
can more effectively handle duration type date. Third, to investigate whether
these proposed benefits are in fact delivered for marketing durations data,
we estimate and validate both conventional and hazard rate models for household
interpurchase times of saltine crackers. Our findings indicate the superiority
of proportional hazard regression methods vis-a-vis common procedures in terms
of stability and face validity of the estimates and in predictive accuracy.
(Econometric Modeling; Estimation and Other Statistical Techniques;
Pricing Research; Promotion; Regression and Other Statistical Techniques)
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