Advanced Consumer Science
for Product Innovation
The Sequel to Targeting the Consumer II
Herb Meiselman
and
Hal MacFie
21-23 October 2008
Venue:
MicroTek Computer Training Facility
90 Broad Street
11th Floor
Manhattan, New York, NY 10004
Course Organiser
Herb Meiselman
Rockport, Massachusetts
For course details and registration email: HerbertLMeiselman@verizon.net
Class size strictly limited. Please register early without
obligation.
Sensory and consumer research is
changing, and those who practice traditional sensory research
and look at consumer research as just demographics are being
left behind. Successful innovation demands working relationships
with product managers and with marketing. Sensory and consumer
research need to have the tools to add to the mix of talents
in NPD. This course is aimed at providing the knowledge
and tools to enhance the contribution of our research to
the innovation process.
Targeting the Consumer III builds on
the success of our two Targeting the Consumer courses.
It adds entirely new material to some topics such as Consumer
Segmentation, and offers entirely new topics such as Price
and Brand. In this way, Sensory and Consumer Testing can
become a more valuable component of the New Product Development
process, by offering new methods, new data and new statistical
analysis techniques.
Targeting the Consumer III is an entirely
new course. It is appropriate for those who have taken
Targeting I and/or II, and to advanced people in sensory
and consumer science, who have professional training and
experience. Sharing participants' experience is a part
of all Targeting the Consumer courses.
ABOUT THE LECTURERS
Instructors for Targeting the Consumer
II are Dr. Herb Meiselman and Dr. Hal MacFie, both Editors
of Food Quality and Preference. Dr. MacFie was formerly
the Director of the Institute of Food Research, Reading,
UK, and the Director of its Consumer Research Department.
Dr. MacFie is a statistician by training. He currently is
an internationally active consultant and lecturer in sensory,
consumer and statistical methodology. Dr. Meiselman is a
psychologist by training, and was the most senior research
psychologist working for the US Army's research establishment,
working at the Natick Laboratories before his recent retirement.
He consults for both industry and national and international
governments in consumer and sensory methods, and their basis
in consumer psychology.
Targeting the Consumer III
Morning 1, Session
1:
| Review and update of
TI and TII topics: |
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More reasons to be
careful with CLTs
CLTs, restaurants, cafeterias, and HUTs
Crossover Prefmapping
Kano analysis ideas - satisfaction coefficients, quality
index
Meals cross culturally - a challenge for product developers
Should panelists choose their samples? |
Afternoon 1,
Session 2:
| Beyond Liking: |
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Consumer Research -
role in product innovation
Why is innovation so important, the Ehrenberg model
Why do so many products fail
Finding new ideas
Compelling research is crucial
The concept comes first
Branded trials are the future |
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| The new frontier: predicting
moods and emotions associated with foods. |
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What are mood and emotion?
Positive and negative emotions.
Is mood important in choosing foods?
Physical and cognitive performance and mood.
Mood research requires rigorous methods.
Measuring short term and long term effects.
Mood questionnaires: POMS, MAACL-R, BMIS
Facial scales: Noldus, Emotionomics, PreMo
A new emotion questionnaire from McCormick
Exercise: measure your emotions. |
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| The Kansei approach
to putting emotion into design |
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Kansei approach
Successful applications
A worked example
Will it work for sensory? |
Morning 2, Session
3:
| Novel Products: |
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Measuring consumer
attitudes toward product novelty
Variety Seeking
Sensation Seeking (SS)
Long and Short Questionnaires of SS
Neophobia
Neophobia and Choice
Neophobia in children and adolescents
Is neophobia more than reluctance to try foods?
Exercise: How open are you to new foods? Do you experiment
with foods
for excitement. |
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| A survey of new commercial
consumer research methods for innovation. |
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Textclus - computer
analysis of focus groups
Zoom out ,Brain Writing, Wind Tunnelling
Exercises |
Afternoon 2, Session 4:
| Price: |
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- Measuring consumer
attitudes towards price. (with exercise)
Price
Price as quality and price as value
Willingness to Pay
Purchase Intent |
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| Markets and auctions
- a review and some practical ideas |
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Vickrey auctions
A better solution
Exercise |
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| Structural equation
modeling |
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A new mathematical
tool: structural equation modeling. Can it help us?
Structural equation modeling-principles
Application to sensory data
Consumer behaviour modeling
Software demonstration |
Morning 3, Session 5:
| Product involvement/Product
importance: |
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Measuring attitudes
toward product involvement and importance (with exercise)
What is product involvement?
Background of involvement in the service industry
Early involvement questionnaires.
Food involvement questionnaire.
Involvement research and application
Involvement and the testing of product users and non-users
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How much does habit
determine product choice?
What is habit and how does it develop?
Are some consumer choice patterns merely habit?
Representing habit in consumer choice models.
Modifying habits - a challenge for product development. |
Afternoon 3, Session 6:
| Branding/Advertising/Promotion |
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The use of sensory to support
advertising and defend claims
Means End Chains - does it work?
The revised ASTM document -
Statistical testing of superiority, parity and unsurpassed
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| The new frontier -
Use of internet in Consumer Research |
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On-line consumer panels
On-line communities
Discussion forums
Using Chat rooms with children |
About the Course Venue:
Location: MediaTek
Training Facilities
90 Broad Street
11th Floor
New York, NY 10004
The MicroTek
New York City training center is located in the heart
of the financial district in downtown Manhattan just 2-blocks
south of the New York Stock Exchange. In addition to purpose
built training facilities there are ample computers to
catch up on e-mail at the breaks and over lunch.
We believe these to be among the
best training facilities in Manhattan. The MicroTek New
York City training center is located in the heart of the
financial district in downtown Manhattan just 2-blocks
south of the New York Stock Exchange There are ample computers
to catch up on e-mail at the breaks and over lunch.
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Lobby
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Rest Area
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Email Area
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Training Room
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Close proximity to hotels, public
transportation, and points of interest such as the Statue
of Liberty and Ellis Island makes the computer facility
a great location
Go to: http://www.mclabs.com/facilities/New_York/
For Photo tour and details of location, nearby hotels
etc
For interest we are staying
at the Club Quarters downtown which is only 3 short
blocks from the facility.
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To
pay your registration fee by credit or debit
card on-line please click the appropriate
button:
Refunds will
be at the discretion of Dr Halliday MacFie.
-WorldPay is a
Secure Site-
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REGISTRATION FORM
Registration Policy: Courses are limited
in size in order to promote discussion. Therefore registration
is not final until payment is received. Unpaid spaces
will be opened to new registrants 30 days ahead of courses.
Cancellation of registration can be made up to 30 days
ahead, and return of payments, minus reasonable administrative
expenses, will be made for these cancellations. Cancellations
within 30 days of the course start will receive a credit
for a future course.
Yes: Please enrol me in Targeting III
21-23 October 2008
For electronic
bank transfers:
Account Name:
Herbert L Meiselman
Account Name: Herbert L Meiselman
Citizen's Bank, 1 Citizen Drive, Riverside RI 02915 USA
Account 1130996406, Route Code 011500120, Swift Code CTZIUS33
Mailing address for registration
and payment:
Dr. Herb Meiselman
PO Box 28
Rockport MA 01966 USA
tel 978-546-1045
fax 978-546-6233
email: HerbertLMeiselman@verizon.net