The use of analogies in forecasting the annual sales of new electronics products
Author(s) -
Paul Goodwin,
Karima Dyussekeneva,
Sheik Meeran
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
ima journal of management mathematics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.484
H-Index - 34
eISSN - 1471-6798
pISSN - 1471-678X
DOI - 10.1093/imaman/dpr025
Subject(s) - econometrics , computer science , product (mathematics) , series (stratigraphy) , analogy , time series , electronics , operations research , industrial engineering , economics , mathematics , engineering , machine learning , paleontology , linguistics , philosophy , geometry , electrical engineering , biology
Mathematical models are often used to describe the sales and adoption patterns of products in the years following their launch and one of the most popular of these models is the Bass model. However, using this model to forecast sales time series for new products is problematical because there is no historic time series data with which to estimate the model’s parameters. One possible solution is to fit the model to the sales time series of analogous products that have been launched in an earlier time period and to assume that the parameter values identified for the analogy are applicable to the new product. In this paper, we investigate the effectiveness of this approach by applying four forecasting methods based on analogies (and variants of these methods) to the sales of consumer electronics products marketed in the USA. We found that all the methods tended to lead to forecasts with high absolute percentage errors, which is consistent with other studies of new product sales forecasting. The use of the means of published parameter values for analogies led to higher errors than the parameters we estimated from our own data. When using our own data, averaging the parameter values of multiple analogies rather than relying on a single most-similar, product led to improved accuracy. However, there was little to be gained by using more than five or six analogies
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