Affiliation:
1. An investigator, Medical School, University of California, Los Angeles
2. An associate, J.P. Morgan
3. Harris & Harris Group Professor of Finance and Director, MIT Laboratory for Financial Engineering
4. Eugene McDermott Professor, Brain Sciences and Human Behavior, McGovern Institute, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
5. A doctoral student
Abstract
Identifying winning new product concepts can be a challenging process that requires insight into private consumer preferences. To measure consumer preferences for new product concepts, the authors apply a “securities trading of concepts,” or STOC, approach, in which new product concepts are traded as financial securities. The authors apply this method because market prices are known to efficiently collect and aggregate private information regarding the economic value of goods, services, and firms, particularly when trading financial securities. This research compares the STOC approach against stated-choice, conjoint, constant-sum, and longitudinal revealed-preference data. The authors also place STOC in the context of previous research on prediction markets and experimental economics. Across multiple product categories, the authors test whether STOC (1) is more cost efficient than other methods, (2) passes validity tests, (3) measures expectations of others, and (4) reveals individual preferences, not just those of the crowd. The results show that traders exhibit a self-preference bias when trading. Ultimately, STOC offers two key advantages over traditional market research methods: cost efficiency and scalability. For new product development teams deciding how to invest resources, this scalability may be especially important in the Web 2.0 world.
Subject
Marketing,Economics and Econometrics,Business and International Management
Cited by
33 articles.
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