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Forecasting From a Single Performance of a Marketing Machine
Having an Inverse Relationship between Input and Output
Ted Mitchell
Three Weaknesses • of Presenting a Marketing Performance as the
Single Performance of a Two-Factor Machine • 1) Overly Simplifies a Complex Process by
assuming other marketing inputs are held constant or not important in the analysis
• 2) Can only deal with a single input being converted into a single output
• 3) Need to know the in advance if the relationship between input and output is positive or inverse
The Inverse Relationship
• In a single performance of a Two-Factor Marketing Machine is
• 1) difficult to explain and conceptualize• 2) difficult to use for a simple forecast
The Two-Factor Model
• Is easily seen as equation in which the conversion rate, r, reflects a positive relationship
• Increase the product’s quality, the information about the product, the convenience of the transaction’s location and you will increase the quantity demanded
The Inverse Relationship
• Between the size of the price tag, P, and number of items sold, Q
• Is the best example of an inverse relationship between Marketing Inputs and Outputs
• when the size of the price tag is decreased then the quantity demanded will increase
The Inverse Relationship is
• Presented as slope-origin version of the demand machine
• Demand, Q =(conversion rate, r) x (inverse of price tag, 1/P)
• The conversion rate, r = Q/(1/P)• awkward to explain how the increase in the
size of the price tag is reducing the quantity demanded
A slope-origin presentation of the inverse relationship between price and quantity sold from a single performance
0, 0 Inverse of the price tag, 1/P
Amount of Product Sold, Q
Slope-Origin equation Q = r x 1/P
Conversion rate is the
slope, r = Q/(1/P)
A Single Performance of a Pricing Machine has been recorded
• The price tag was P = $3.50 on each item sold• The number of items sold was Q = 2,000 cups of coffee• You want to forecast the number of cups that will be sold if
the price tag is set a P = $4.00 on each cup• You know there is an inverse relationship between the size
of the price tag and the quantity sold• An increase in price is expected to reduce the number of
cups sold and forecasted quantity is expected to be less than 2,000 cups
• What is the forecasted number of cups sold, Q*, when the price tag on a cup is $4.00?
Example of a Simple Forecast Given an Inverse Relationship
Recorded Performance
Calibrated performance
Proposed Price and calibrated conversion rate
Forecasted Demand, Q*
Input Price Tag sizeP = $3.50
1/P = 1/$3.501/P = 0.2857
1/P = 1/$4.001/P = 0.25
Conversion rate, r
r = Q/(1/P)r = 2,000/0.2857r = 7,000
r = 7,000
Output Quantity soldQ = 2000 cups
Q = 2,000 cups Forecasted Demand, Q*
Q = r x !/PQ* = 1,750 cups will be sold
Example of a Simple Forecast Given an Inverse Relationship
Recorded Performance
Calibrated Performance
Proposed Price and calibrated conversion rate
Forecasted Demand, Q*
Input Price Tag sizeP = $3.50
1/P = 1/$3.501/P = 0.2857
1/P = 1/$4.001/P = 0.25
Conversion rate, r
r = Q/(1/P)r = 2,000/0.2857r = 7,000
r = 7,000
Output Quantity soldQ = 2000 cups
Q = 2,000 cups Forecasted Demand, Q*
Q = r x !/PQ* = 1,750 cups will be sold
Example of a Simple Forecast Given an Inverse Relationship
Recorded Performance
Calibrated Performance
Proposed Price and Calibrated conversion rate
Forecasted Demand, Q*
Input Price Tag sizeP = $3.50
1/P = 1/$3.501/P = 0.2857
1/P = 1/$4.001/P = 0.25
Conversion rate, r
r = Q/(1/P)r = 2,000/0.2857r = 7,000
r = 7,000
Output Quantity soldQ = 2000 cups
Q = 2,000 cups Forecasted Demand, Q*
Q = r x !/PQ* = 1,750 cups will be sold
Example of a Simple Forecast Given an Inverse Relationship
Recorded Performance
Calibrated Performance
Proposed Price and calibrated conversion rate
Forecasted Demand, Q*
Input Price Tag sizeP = $3.50
1/P = 1/$3.501/P = 0.2857
1/P = 1/$4.001/P = 0.25
Conversion rate, r
r = Q/(1/P)r = 2,000/0.2857r = 7,000
r = 7,000
Output Quantity soldQ = 2000 cups
Q = 2,000 cups Forecasted Demand, Q*
Q* = r x !/PQ* = 1,750 cups will be sold
Using a calibrated single performance to forecast a new quantity sold at a proposed price of $4.00 per cup
0, 0
Inverse of the Price tag, 1/P
Amount of Product Sold, Q
Slope-Origin equation Q* = 7,000 x 1/$4.00
Q* = 1,750 cups
Calibrated Conversion rate is the slope,
r = Q2,000/(1/$3.50)r = 7,000
1/$3.50 = 0.2857
1/$4.00 = 0.25
Q = 2,000 cups
Q* = 1,750 cups
The Forecast of
• Q* = 1,750 cups sold is • 1) relatively easy to forecast with an inverted
input• 2) hard to interpret the meaning of an inverted
price (a basic definition of customer value)• 3) hard to interpret the conversion rate as rate
(7,000 fold increase?)• 4) likely to be very inaccurate given it is based on
a single observed performance
The great blessing
• Is that forecasting the demand using a slope-origin model calibrated from a single performance is not used very much!!
• It is used as a naïve or benchmark forecast • Today we normally have several observed
performances to work from• A calibrated performance based on the average
of many observations is likely to be used as a benchmark or as a forecast for a small business
Any Questions
• About forecasting from a single calibrated performance of an Inverse relationship?