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Using Rates as Stand Alone Measures of Performance!

Using Rates as Stand Alone Measures of Performance!. Ted Mitchell. You own a car. Last month you got 30 miles per gallon . From this information can I tell how many miles you drove last month? From this information can I tell how many gallons of gas you used last month?

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Using Rates as Stand Alone Measures of Performance!

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  1. Using Rates as Stand Alone Measures of Performance! Ted Mitchell

  2. You own a car • Last month you got 30 miles per gallon. • From this information can I tell how many miles you drove last month? • From this information can I tell how many gallons of gas you used last month? • Knowing the miles per gallon tells me nothing about the distance you travelled or the number of gallons you used.

  3. Two Exam questions • Biz-Café #1 is selling coffee at a rate of 18 cups per hour. • 1) How many hours a week was it open? • 2) How many cups did it sell last week? • Knowing the Rate of Sales tells you nothing about the amount of coffee sold or the number of hours the café was open!

  4. You have a car and • You consider it to be a Two Factor Machine • That converts an Input to an Output. • You got 30 miles per gallon. • What was the Output from your car/machine? • What was the Input into your car/machine?

  5. Car as a Two-Factor Machine • Output: Distance in Miles= (conversion rate, r)x (Input: Gallons of Gas) • Miles Travelled = 30 miles per gallon x (number of gallons) • The rate of 30 miles per gallon implies the output and the input • 30 units of output per one unit of input • Rate is the output/input • Rate is the miles/gallons, Rate is miles per gallon, mpg

  6. We use rates and ratios to describe • Business machines because the rates and ratios provide us with a short-hand description of a simple machine’s output and input!

  7. We use rates and ratios to describe • Business machines because the rates and ratios provide us with a description of a simple machine’s output and input!

  8. We use rates and ratios to describe • Business machines because the rates and ratios provide us with a description of a simple machine’s output and input! • Rate = Output / Input

  9. You have a second version car and • You consider it to be a Two Factor machine • That converts an input to an output. • You travel at a speed of 80 miles per hour. • What was the output from your car/machine? • What was the input to your car/machine? • Output: Distance Travelled in Miles = (conversion rate, r) x (Input hours travelled) • Conversion rate: Output/Input • Conversion rate = miles / hour, • Conversion rate = miles per hour, mph

  10. Inputs and Outputs • Can be very abstract • Hours (measures of time) • Awareness (measures of cognition) • Loyalty (measures of commitment) • Preference (measures of desire) • Attention episodes • Convenience (measures of utility)

  11. Two More Exam questions • Biz-Café #1 is selling coffee at a rate of 18 cups per hour. • 1) When Biz-Café #1 is visualized as a marketing machine, what is the machine’s output? • Output: Quantity of cups of coffee sold, Q • 2) When Biz-Café #1 is visualized as a marketing machine, what is the input to the machine? • Input: Number of Hours of Store Operation, H • 18 units of output per 1 unit of input

  12. Sometimes Rates are Ambiguous

  13. Sometimes Rates are Ambiguous

  14. Before You Calculate • 1) Know the complete description of the machine’s factors and the output of the machine • Output = Conversion rate x Input • 2) Get rid of the percents

  15. Basic Two-Factor Marketing Machine?

  16. Two Factor Model of Biz-Cafe • As a marketing machine that converts hours of operation, H, into cups of coffee sold, Q. • Output: cups of coffee = (conversion rate, r) x (Input: the number of hours of operation) • You have observed Biz-Café #1 selling 2,016 cups a week when it was open for 112 hours • What is the conversion rate of the Biz-Café Machine #1? • Conversion rate, r = Output/Input • Conversion rate, r = 2,016 cups/112 hours • Conversion rate, r = 18 cups per hour

  17. Basic Two-Factor Marketing Machine?

  18. Can you use a Calibrated Two-Factor marketing machine for Forecasting? • Answer: • YES!

  19. Basic Two-Factor Marketing Machine?

  20. Will it be a good forecast? • With only a single performance having been observed and used for the machine’s calibration it is NOT likely to be a very accurate forecast

  21. Improving the Forecasting accuracy requires two or more observations

  22. Six Exam Questions • Biz-Café run by student #1 is selling coffee at a rate of 18 cups per hourBiz-Café run by student #2 is selling coffee at a rate of 22 cups per hour. • 1) Which café is open longer? • 2) Which café is selling more coffee? • 3) Is it safe to assume that both students sold the same amount of coffee? • 4) Is it safe to assume that both cafes were open for the same number of hours? • 5) Did café #1 sell less cups than café #2? • 6) Did Café #2 stay open more hours than café #1?

  23. What is the average rate?

  24. Two Exam Questions • Biz-Café run by student #1 is selling coffee at a rate of 18 cups per hour • Biz-Café run by student #2 is selling coffee at a rate of 22 cups per hour. • 1) What is the average rate at which the two cafes are selling coffee? • 2) How much information do you need to calculate the average rate of the two cafes?

  25. What is the average rate?

  26. Is there any useful information in the knowledge of cups per hour??? • Biz-Café run by student #1 is selling coffee at a rate of 18 cups per hour • Biz-Café run by student #2 is selling coffee at a rate of 22 cups per hour. • 1) Which café is more efficient at converting hours of operation into cups sold

  27. What can you say?

  28. Knowing the machine’s efficiency • Tells us nothing about the machine’s relative performance in terms of output and input • Do NOT assume that higher efficiency resulted in higher levels of output or less amounts of input • You need more information! • The machine is an identity if you know one more piece of information you can calculate the third!

  29. Need the Full Description?

  30. Avoid making Dumb assumptions? You can NOT assume that a higher efficiency resulted in a larger output!

  31. In finance and investing it is common • To adopt a policy choosing investments or projects based on the largest projected rate of return (IRR) • An investment policy of maximizing the rate of return is valid if and only if the projects have the same capital requirements (inputs) and risk • In marketing it is invariably wrong to follow a policy of maximizing a rate of return if the goal is to maximize the size of the return

  32. Avoid making Dumb assumptions? Do NOT blindly adopt policies of maximizing a rate of return if the goal is maximize the return

  33. To compare performances • Of two machines and use the differences between them for diagnostic purposes • You must have the description of the machines’ two factors of production and their outputs

  34. Rules for Rates and Ratios • 1) Do NOT use rates and ratios as stand alone measures of performance • 2) Do NOT assume the inputs and/or the outputs are equal or constant • 3) Do NOT calculate the average rate as the simple mean of the rates involved • 4) Do NOT assume that a performance with a higher rate of efficiency must have a higher level of output • 5) Do NOT adopt a policy of maximizing a rate of return when choosing between machines when the goal is to maximize marketing output

  35. DO NOT use Rates as Stand Alone Measures of Performance! Ted Mitchell

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