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The quantity of any good demanded by consumers is dependent on the attributes and benefits of an offering, the rate at which marginal utility of the offering decreases, and the availability of substitutes. Traditional conjoint models focus on attributes and benefits, but have not incorporated...
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Ultimately, patents have value to the extent to which the product features enabled by the patents have economic value in the marketplace. That is, products which are enhanced by inclusion of patented features should generate incremental profits to the firm offering the enhanced product. Measures...
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Observational data on either individual or aggregate demand is often not sufficient to identify consumer preferences due to lack of variation in prices or product features, or the desire to study product features not currently available. Choice-based conjoint analysis offers a solution to this...
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Firms develop products by manipulating the attributes of offerings, and consumers derive utility from the benefits that the attributes afford. While the field of marketing has long been aware of the distinction between attributes and benefits, it has not developed methods for understanding how...
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