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L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019
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Page 1: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

L/O/G/O

Credit Card Development Strategiesfor the Youth Market:

The Use of Conjoint Analysis

Ivan Prasetya – 29009018

Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019

Page 2: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Overviews

• Introduction• Research Questions• Methodology• Analysis and Results• Discussions and Implications

Page 3: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Introduction

• During the 1980s and the early 1990s, individual and organizational demand for financial services have increased substantially Financial institutions of different types have started scanning their competitive business environment more closely and have tried to design and implement proactive marketing strategies

Page 4: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Introduction (cont’d)

• Over the last few years the college population has evolved into a class of “solid citizens,” and, with significant disposable income, they are being wooed strenuously (Abend, 1985)

• College students’ spending on products for the family exceed $35 billion in 1985, $40 billion in 1986, and $60 billion in 1991

Page 5: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Introduction (cont’d)

• In addition, 69 per cent of them (college students) have credit cards, 42 per cent have a department store credit card and 23 per cent have a gasoline card to help them do their shopping (Hall, 1987)

• 71 per cent of the people whose ages are between 18 and 25 developed their first brand loyalties as teenagers (Yankelovich, Skelly, and White; 1980) Youth costumers are loyal costumers

Page 6: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Introduction (cont’d)

• Charge card transactions in 1989 totalled $296.9 billion, up 15 per cent from the year before (Faulkner and Gray’s; 1991)

• Annual College Track Survey found a 37 per cent increase in general credit card ownership for full-time undergraduates at four-year colleges between 1988 and 1990 and 90 per cent of card holding students report credit cards and bills are listed in their own names

Page 7: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Introduction (cont’d)

Youth costumers Important potential credit card market

Page 8: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Research Questions

The primary objective of this study To explore the perceptions of the college students toward the credit cards

Page 9: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Research Questions (cont’d)

• What are the factors that affect college students’ credit card choice decision?

• What are the relative importance of these factors in their overall credit card choice?

• What are the managerial implications of these behavioural patterns?

Page 10: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Methodology

• A full profile conjoint analysis Used in the study

• Conjoint analysis Decompositional method that estimates the structure of a consumer’s preference (i.e., estimates preference parameters such as part-worths, importance weights, ideal points), given his or her overall evaluations of a set of alternatives that are pre specified in terms of levels of different attributes (Green and Srinivasan, 1990)

Page 11: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Methodology (cont’d)

There are three basic major phases in conducting a full profile conjoint study:

1. The design phase Developing product profile for consumers to evaluate

2. The analysis phase Estimating consumers’ utility functions

3. The simulation phase Simulating consumer purchasing behaviour to evaluate various strategies for product positioning, pricing, and segmentation

Page 12: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Methodology (cont’d)

• Full profile studies generally use orthogonal designs which represent a good compromise solution to the problem of trade-off between the number of profiles in a design and the precision of the utility function

Page 13: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Methodology (cont’d)

The six variables that students consider while evaluating the credit card alternatives (from literature review)

Page 14: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Methodology (cont’d)

• A fractional factorial design, using Bretton Clark Conjoint Designer, eliminated the number of cards from 486 to 18 which were considered reasonable for a subject to evaluate

• By using those 18 cards a research instrument was designed

• Subject were asked to evaluate 18 credit cards in term of “likelihood of consideration” for obtaining credit cards selected on an 11-point scale, ranging from “000” (definitely would not consider) to “100” (definitely would consider)

Page 15: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results

• The data for the study Collected by personal interviews with 102 undergraduate students attending two state colleges in south Florida, and 127 undergraduate students attending a state college in south central Pennsylvania

Page 16: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

Profile of Respondents

Page 17: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

Beta Coefficients of the Factor Levels for an Individual Respondent

Page 18: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

• The results support a comment made by a CEO: “…these people (students) are seeking for lowest fee and interest rate” (Duffy, 1990)

• The beta coefficient for the first level of fifth factor (9 per cent interest rate) was 30.00 and the range of the level coefficients for that factor was the largest That factor was seen more important than the other factors for that particular respondent

• Also, R2 is 95.7 per cent or adjusted R2 88 per cent The respondent behaved linearly or a high model fit was achieved

Page 19: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)• The summary of the group statistics for all respondents

Page 20: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

• “The interest rate” and “the payment type” were seen to be the most important factors by the respondents The range among the factor levels give the importance of the variable(s)

• They are willing to postpone their payments but do not want to take high financial responsibilities in the future

Page 21: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

• 18 cards used in the study

Page 22: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

• The distribution of the weights for each factor levels

Page 23: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

• Type of payment and interest rate The two most differentiating factors in credit card choice over and above the other factors

Page 24: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

• From the previous results Five hypothetical credit cards were created which were not included in the original design

• Simgraf-simulation program was used to test the market and to find the market shares of hypothetical credit cards for the same respondents by using conjoint function built

Page 25: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

• The hypothetical credit cards and market shares

Page 26: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

• If we keep all the factor levels the same for credit card number 1 but just change the type of payment from “deferred” to “all it once” The market shared declined significantly as we indicated earlier that type of payment was one of the most differentiating factors

• If the credit card developers want to capture the college students’ market, they should emphasize those two factors more than the others in their strategic marketing plans

Page 27: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

• The market shares of credit cards by sex

Page 28: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

• The distribution of preferred weights (%) for each factor by sex

Page 29: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Analysis and Results (cont’d)

• Lower interest rates are considered more important for males than for females

Page 30: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Discussions and Implications

• College students Significant number of freshman being admitted to college every year and with a reported $13 billion in discretionary Enormous market for credit cards

• Because of this, it is not unusual for them to waive some important requirements such as previous credit histories, income requirements and parental co-signatures to attract these students

Page 31: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Discussions and Implications (cont’d)

• The study results indicate The interest rate and the type of payment are the two most important factors for the college students

• If the importance of each product attributes and the trade-offs between the attribute levels are understood, managers can develop a better product and a better marketing plan to reach the college student market

• In developing marketing plans, credit card executives should place more importance on those attributes which are deemed the most important by the college students

Page 32: L/O/G/O Credit Card Development Strategies for the Youth Market: The Use of Conjoint Analysis Ivan Prasetya – 29009018 Ubaidillah Zuhdi – 29009019.

Thank You

Terima kasih

 どうもありがとうございました 


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