Eric Bradlow

The K.P. Chao Professor at The Wharton School

Biography

An applied statistician, Eric uses high-powered statistical models to solve problems on everything from Internet search engines to product assortment issues. Specifically, his research interests include Bayesian modeling, statistical computing, and developing new methodology for unique data structures with application to business problems.

Eric’s research has been published in the Journal of the American Statistical Association, Psychometrika, Statistica Sinica, Chance, Marketing Science, Management Science, and the Journal of Marketing Research. His most recent study is “Putting a Price Tag on Facebook: Quantifying the Value of Online Social Networks.”

Eric has won numerous teaching awards at Wharton, including the MBA Core Curriculum teaching award, the Miller-Sherrerd MBA Core Teaching Award and the Excellence in Teaching Award. In 2009, he published (with Keith Niedermeier and Patti Williams) Marketing for Financial Advisors (McGraw-Hill).

The Wharton School

Professor Eric T. Bradlow is the K.P. Chao Professor, Professor of Marketing, Statistics, Education and Economics and Faculty Director of the Wharton Customer Analytics Initiative. An applied statistician, Professor Bradlow uses highpowered statistical models to solve problems on everything from Internet search engines to product assortment issues. Specifically, his research interests include Bayesian modeling, statistical computing, and developing new methodology for unique data structures with application to business problems.

Eric was recently named a fellow of the American Statistical Association, American Educational Research Association, is past chair of the American Statistical Association Section on Statistics in Marketing, past EditorinChief of Marketing Science, is a past statistical fellow of Bell Labs, and worked at DuPont Corporation's Corporate Marketing and Business Research Division and the Educational Testing Service.

A prolific scholar, Professor Bradlow's research has been published in toptier academic journals such as the Journal of the American Statistical Association, Psychometrika, Statistica Sinica, Chance, Marketing Science, Management Science, and Journal of Marketing Research. He also serves as Associate Editor for the Journal of the American Statistical Association and the Journal of Marketing Research, and is on the Editorial Boards of Marketing Letters, Marketing Science, Journal of Marketing Research, Quantitative Marketing and Economics, and the Quarterly Journal of Electronic Commerce.

Professor Bradlow has won numerous teaching awards at Wharton, including the Anvil Award, MBA Core Curriculum teaching award, the MillerSherrerd MBA Core Teaching award and the Excellence in Teaching Award. His teaching interests include courses in Statistics, Marketing Research, Marketing Management and PhD Data Analysis, as well as any material related to customer analytics.

Professor Bradlow earned his PhD and Master's degrees in Mathematical Statistics from Harvard University and his BS in Economics from the University of Pennsylvania.

Tong Lu, Eric Bradlow, J. Wesley Hutchinson, Binge Consumption of Online Content.

Daniel Zantedeschi, Elea McDonnell Feit, Eric Bradlow (2016), Measuring MultiChannel Advertising Response, Management Science.

Julie Novak, Eleanor McDonnell Feit, Shane T. Jensen, Eric Bradlow (Working), Bayesian Imputation for Anonymous Visits.

Valeria Stourm, Eric Bradlow, Peter Fader (2015), Stockpiling Points in Linear Loyalty Programs, Journal of Marketing Research, 52 (2), pp. 253267.

Abstract: Customers often stockpile reward points in linear loyalty programs (i.e., programs that do not explicitly reward stockpiling) despite several economic incentives against it (e.g., the time value of money). The authors develop a mathematical model of redemption choice that unites three explanations for why customers seem to be motivated to stockpile on their own, even though the retailer does not reward them for doing so. These motivations are economic (the value of forgone points), cognitive (nonmonetary transaction costs), and psychological (customers value points differently than cash). The authors capture the psychological motivation by allowing customers to book cash and point transactions in separate mental accounts. They estimate the model on data from an international retailer using Markov chain Monte Carlo methods and accurately forecast redemptions during an 11month outofsample period. The results indicate substantial heterogeneity in how customers are motivated to redeem and suggest that the behavior in the data is driven mostly by cognitive and psychological incentives.      

Yao Zhang, Eric Bradlow, Dylan Small (2015), Predicting Customer Value Using Clumpiness: From RFM to RFMC, Marketing Science, 34 (2), pp. 195208.

P. Wang, Eric Bradlow, Edward I. George (2014), MetaAnalyses Using Information Reweighting: An Application to Online Advertising, Quantitative Marketing and Economics, 12 (2), pp. 209233.

Eric Schwartz, Eric Bradlow, Peter Fader (2014), Model Selection Using Database Characteristics: Developing a Classification Tree for Longitudinal Incidence Data , Marketing Science , 33 (2), pp. 188205.

Abstract: When managers and researchers encounter a data set, they typically ask two key questions: (1) Which model (from a candidate set) should I use? And (2) if I use a particular model, when is it going to likely work well for my business goal? This research addresses those two questions and provides a rule, i.e., a decision tree, for data analysts to portend the “winning model” before having to fit any of them for longitudinal incidence data. We characterize data sets based on managerially relevant (and easytocompute) summary statistics, and we use classification techniques from machine learning to provide a decision tree that recommends when to use which model. By doing the “legwork” of obtaining this decision tree for model selection, we provide a timesaving tool to analysts. We illustrate this method for a common marketing problem (i.e., forecasting repeat purchasing incidence for a cohort of new customers) and demonstrate the method’s ability to discriminate among an integrated family of a hidden Markov model (HMM) and its constrained variants. We observe a strong ability for data set characteristics to guide the choice of the most appropriate model, and we observe that some model features (e.g., the “backandforth” migration between latent states) are more important to accommodate than are others (e.g., the inclusion of an “off” state with no activity). We also demonstrate the method’s broad potential by providing a general “recipe” for researchers to replicate this kind of model classification task in other managerial contexts (outside of repeat purchasing incidence data and the HMM framework).

Arun Gopalakrishnan, Eric Bradlow, Peter Fader (Under Revision), A CrossCohort Changepoint Model for CustomerBase Analysis.

Abstract: We introduce a new methodology that can capture and explain differences across a series of cohorts of new customers in a repeattransaction setting. More specifically, this new framework, which we call a vector changepoint model, exploits the underlying regime structure in a sequence of acquired customer cohorts, to make predictive statements about new cohorts for which the firm has little or no longitudinal transaction data. To accomplish this, we develop our model within a Hierarchical Bayesian framework to uncover evidence of regime changes for each cohortlevel parameter separately, thus disentangling potential explanations for crosscohort shifts in aggregate transaction patterns.  Calibrating the model using multicohort donation data from a nonprofit organization, we find that holdout predictions for new cohorts using this model have greater accuracy – and greater diagnostic value – compared to a variety of strong benchmarks. Our modeling approach also highlights the perils of pooling data across cohorts without accounting for crosscohort shifts, thus enabling managers to quantify their uncertainty about potential regime changes and avoid “old data” aggregation bias.

Eric Schwartz, Eric Bradlow, Peter Fader (Under Revision), Customer Acquisition via Display Advertising Using MultiArmed Bandit Experiments.

Abstract: Online advertisers regularly deliver several versions of display ads in a single campaign across many websites in order to acquire customers, but they are uncertain about which ads are most effective. As the campaign progresses, they adapt to intermediate results and allocate more impressions to the better performing ads on each website. But how should they decide what percentage of impressions to allocate to each ad?  This paper answers that question, resolving the classic "explore/exploit" tradeoff using multiarmed bandit (MAB) methods. However, this marketing problem contains challenges, such as hierarchical structure (ads within a website), attributes of actions (creative elements of an ad), and batched decisions (millions of impressions at a time), that are not fully accommodated by existing MAB methods. We address this marketing problem by utilizing a hierarchical generalized linear model with unobserved heterogeneity combined with an algorithm known as Thompson Sampling. Our approach captures how the impact of observable ad attributes on ad effectiveness differs by website in unobserved ways, and our policy generates allocations of impressions that can be used in practice. We implemented this policy in a live field experiment delivering over 700 million ad impressions in an online display campaign with a large retail bank. Over the course of two months, our policy achieved an 8% improvement in the customer acquisition rate, relative to a control policy, without any additional costs to the bank. Beyond the actual experiment, we performed counterfactual simulations to evaluate a range of alternative model specifications and allocation rules in MAB policies.

Eric Bradlow Bradlow Clumpiness Spreadsheet.

Past Courses

MKTG212 DATA & ANLZ FOR MKTG DEC

Firms have access to detailed data of customers and past marketing actions. Such data may include instore and online customer transactions, customer surveys as well as prices and advertising. Using realworld applications from various industries, the goal of the course is to familiarize students with several types of managerial problems as well as data sources and techniques, commonly employed in making effective marketing decisions. The course would involve formulating critical managerial problems, developing relevant hypotheses, analyzing data and, most importantly, drawing inferences and telling convincing narratives, with a view of yielding actionable results.

MKTG399 INDEPENDENT STUDY

MKTG611 MARKETING MANAGEMENT

This course addresses how to design and implement the best combination of marketing efforts to carry out a firm's strategy in its target markets. Specifically, this course seeks to develop the student's (1) understanding of how the firm can benefit by creating and delivering value to its customers, and stakeholders, and (2) skills in applying the analytical concepts and tools of marketing to such decisions as segmentation and targeting, branding, pricing, distribution, and promotion. The course uses lectures and case discussions, case writeups, student presentations, and a comprehensive final examination to achieve these objectives.

MKTG612 DYNAMIC MKTG STRATEGY

Building upon Marketing 611, the goal of this course is to develop skills in formulating and implementing marketing strategies for brands and businesses. The course will focus on issues such as the selection of which businesses and segments to compete in, how to allocate resources across businesses, segments, and elements of the marketing mix, as well as other significant strategic issues facing today's managers in a dynamic competitive environment. ,A central theme of the course is that the answer to these strategic problems varies over time depending on the stage of the product life cycle at which marketing decisions are being made. As such, the PLC serves as the central organizing vehicle of the course. We will explore such issues as how to design optimal strategies for the launch of new products and services that arise during the introductory phase, how to maximize the acceleration of revenue during the growth phase, how to sustain and extend profitability during the mature phase, and how to manage a business during the inevitable decline phase.

MKTG613 STRATGIC MKTG SIMULATION

Building upon Marketing 611, Marketing 613 is an intensive immersion course designed to develop skills in formulating and implementing marketing strategies for brands and businesses. The central activity will be participation in a realistic integrative product management simulation named SABRE. In SABRE, students will form management teams that oversee all critical aspects of modern product management: the design and marketing of new products, advertising budgeting and design, sales force sizing and allocation, and production planning. As in the real world, teams will compete for profitability, and the success that each team has in achieving this goal will be a major driver of the class assessment. ,The SABRE simulation is used to convey the two foci of learning in the course: the changing nature of strategic problems and their optimal solutions as industries progress through the product life cycle, and exposure to the latest analytic tools for solving these problems. Specifically, SABRE management teams will receive training in both how to make optimal use of marketing research information to reduce uncertainty in product design and positioning, as well as decision support models to guide resource allocation.

MKTG899 INDEPENDENT STUDY

A student contemplating an independent study project must first find a faculty member who agrees to supervise and approve the student's written proposal as an independent study (MKTG 899). If a student wishes the proposed work to be used to meet the ASP requirement, he/she should then submit the approved proposal to the MBA adviser who will determine if it is an appropriate substitute. Such substitutions will only be approved prior to the beginning of the semester.

MKTG956 EMPIRICAL MODELS MKTG A

This course is designed to generate awareness and appreciation of the way several substantive topics in marketing have been studied empirically using quantitative models. This seminar reviews empirical models of marketing phenomena including consumer choice, adoption of new products, sales response to marketing mix elements, and competitive interaction. Applies methods and concepts developed in econometrics and statistics but focuses on substantive issues of model structure and interpretation, rather than on estimation techniques. Ultimately, the goals are a) to prepare students to read and understand the literature and b) to stimulate new research interests. By the end of the course, students should be familiar with the key issues and approaches in empirical marketing modeling.

MKTG957 EMPIRICAL MODELS MKTG B

This course is designed to generate awareness and appreciation of the way several substantive topics in marketing have been studied empirically using quantitative models. This seminar reviews empirical models of marketing phenomena including consumer choice, adoption of new products, sales response to marketing mix elements, and competitive interaction. Applies methods and concepts developed in econometrics and statistics but focuses on substantive issues of model structure and interpretation, rather than on estimation techniques. Ultimately, the goals are a) to prepare students to read and understand the literature and b) to stimulate new research interests. By the end of the course, students should be familiar with the key issues and approaches in empirical marketing modeling.

MKTG995 DISSERTATION

MKTG999 INDEPENDENT STUDY

Requires written permission of instructor and the department graduate adviser.

STAT101 INTRO BUSINESS STAT

Data summaries and descriptive statistics; introduction to a statistical computer package; Probability: distributions, expectation, variance, covariance, portfolios, central limit theorem; statistical inference of univariate data; Statistical inference for bivariate data: inference for intrinsically linear simple regression models. This course will have a business focus, but is not inappropriate for students in the college.

STAT111 INTRODUCTORY STATISTICS

Introduction to concepts in probability. Basic statistical inference procedures of estimation, confidence intervals and hypothesis testing directed towards applications in science and medicine. The use of the JMP statistical package.

STAT500 APPLIED REG & ANALY VAR

An applied graduate level course in multiple regression and analysis of variance for students who have completed an undergraduate course in basic statistical methods. Emphasis is on practical methods of data analysis and their interpretation. Covers model building, general linear hypothesis, residual analysis, leverage and influence, oneway anova, twoway anova, factorial anova. Primarily for doctoral students in the managerial, behavioral, social and health sciences.

STAT501 INT TO NONP & LOGLIN MOD

An applied graduate level course for students who have completed an undergraduate course in basic statistical methods. Covers two unrelated topics: loglinear and logit models for discrete data and nonparametric methods for nonnormal data. Emphasis is on practical methods of data analysis and their interpretation. Primarily for doctoral students in the managerial, behavioral, social and health sciences. May be taken before STAT 500 with permission of instructor.

J.B. Steenkamp LongTerm Impact Award, IJRM Best Paper, 2016 Anvil Award, Best Teacher in Wharton MBA Program, 2015 Inaugural Fellow of the University of Pennsylvania, 2009 Fellow of the American Education Research Association, 2009 Finalist, H. Paul Root Award, Best Paper in Journal of Marketing, 2009 Finalist, John D.C. Little Best Paper Award, 2008 Wharton East WEMBA Teaching Award, 2008 American Marketing Association EXPLOR Award, 2007 Wharton East WEMBA Teaching Award, 2007 Wharton School, MBA Excellence in Teaching Award, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2006 Description

Wharton School, MBA Excellence in Teaching Award

NCME Technical or Scientific Contribution to the Field of Educational Measurement: Development of Testlet Response Theory, 2006 Wharton East WEMBA Teaching Award, 2006 Wharton School, MBA Excellence in Teaching Award, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2006 “Goes Above and Beyond the Call of Duty” Wharton MBA Teaching Award, 2006 Fellow of the American Statistical Association, 2005 Description

Fellow of the American Statistical Association

First recipient of The K.P. Chao Professorship, 2005 Description

Named the first recipient of The K.P. Chao Professorship

Helen Kardon Moss Anvil Award Finalist, 20012002, 20042005, 2005 Appointed Fellow of the American Statistical Association, 2005 Finalist, Paul E. Green Award for the best paper in Journal of Marketing Research, 2004 Description

“A Learningbased Model for Imputing Missing Levels in Partial Conjoint Profiles,” coauthored with Y. Hue and TH Ho, lead article and discussion paper, Vol. XLI (November 2004), 36938

Wharton Undergraduate Excellence in Teaching Award, 2004, 2004 Wharton School, MBA Excellence in Teaching Award, 2003 Description

2003, 2004, 2005

AERA Outstanding Reviewer, 2003 Description

AERA Outstanding Reviewer

Wharton West WEMBA Teaching Award, 2003 Description

Wharton West WEMBA Teaching Award

AERA Outstanding Reviewer, 2003 Helen Kardon Moss Anvil Award Finalist, 2002 Description

20012002, 20042005

MillerSherrerd MBA Core Teaching Award, 1999 Description

1999, 2000, 2001, 2002

Wharton MBA Core Curriculum Teaching Award, 1998 Description

1998, 1999, 2001

Appointed Research Consultant, AT&T Bell Laboratories, 1997 Description

Appointed Research Consultant, AT&T Bell Laboratories

Finalist, American Statistical Association Savage Award Dissertation Prize, 1997 Description

Finalist, American Statistical Association Savage Award Dissertation Prize

E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Company young researcher award, 1992 Description

Corporate Marketing Division

Harvard University Derek Bok Center for excellence in teaching, 1988 Description

4time winner

A Statistical Look at Roger Clemens Career, New York Times 02/10/2008

Knowledge @ Wharton

Will Microsoft’s LinkedIn Purchase Pay Off?, Knowledge @ Wharton 06/16/2016 What’s Behind Google’s Alphabet Restructuring?, Knowledge @ Wharton 08/14/2015 How Brands Can Build Better Loyalty Programs, Knowledge @ Wharton 06/30/2015 Are Your Customers ‘Clumpy’? What Bingebuying Means for Marketers, Knowledge @ Wharton 12/17/2014 Alibaba’s Next Move: Grow Abroad, or Go Deeper into China?, Knowledge @ Wharton 10/01/2014 Why Consumers Aren’t Buying the Idea of Mobile Wallets – Yet, Knowledge @ Wharton 08/13/2014 How to Fix Google+: Accentuate the Positive, Knowledge @ Wharton 06/11/2014 Finding a Place for Market Research in a Big Data, Techenabled World, Knowledge @ Wharton 01/29/2014 In a Dysfunctional Industry, Pandora Seeks an Algorithm for Profitability, Knowledge @ Wharton 07/31/2013 Advice for YouTube: Find a Subscription Model to Keep Viewers Clicking, Knowledge @ Wharton 07/17/2013 Predicting — and Monetizing — the Lifespan of a Tweet, Knowledge @ Wharton 06/17/2013 The ‘Social’ Credit Score: Separating the Data from the Noise, Knowledge @ Wharton 06/05/2013 On Wall Street, Netflix Is a Comeback Kid — But Can It Stay on Top?, Knowledge @ Wharton 06/05/2013 The Mysterious World of Bitcoin: Does It Have Staying Power?, Knowledge @ Wharton 04/24/2013 As Companies Focus on Services, Will Hardware Become Irrelevant?, Knowledge @ Wharton 11/07/2012 Box Office Blues, Knowledge @ Wharton 09/05/2012 Finding the Right Tool to Unlock the Power of Data, Knowledge @ Wharton 08/29/2012 Does NBC’s Olympic Coverage Deserve the Gold?, Knowledge @ Wharton 08/13/2012 What Can We Learn from Netflix?, Knowledge @ Wharton 08/07/2012 NBC’s Olympic Tape Delays: #Failing All the Way to the Top?, Knowledge @ Wharton 08/03/2012 How Yahoo Can Search for its Growth Engine, Knowledge @ Wharton 07/13/2012 Digging Below the Surface of Microsoft’s Tablet Strategy, Knowledge @ Wharton 06/21/2012 Calling Facebook: Do You Really Need a Phone?, Knowledge @ Wharton 06/07/2012 How Baby Names Can Help Marketers Predict the Next Big Thing, Knowledge @ Wharton 04/27/2012 Yelp’s Impending IPO: What’s the Review?, Knowledge @ Wharton 02/21/2012 Experts All Atwitter about Super Bowl Ads, Knowledge @ Wharton 02/06/2012 Customer Analytics: A New Lifeline for the Red Cross and Other Nonprofits?, Knowledge @ Wharton 02/01/2012 $133,000 Per Second, Knowledge @ Wharton 01/09/2012 The Customer Lifetime Value Equation: Will It Pay Off for Tech Companies?, Knowledge @ Wharton 12/07/2011 Is Going to College Worth the Investment?, Knowledge @ Wharton 10/26/2011 Yahoo: Let’s Make a Deal, Knowledge @ Wharton 10/24/2011 Social Media in the CSuite: Listening, Learning and Creating a Strategy from the Top Down, Knowledge @ Wharton 10/12/2011 Will iPhone 4S Help Sprint Race Ahead?, Knowledge @ Wharton 10/05/2011 Dos and Don’ts for Amazon’s Redesign, Knowledge @ Wharton 09/06/2011 Can Anyone Create a Hackerproof Cyberspace?, Knowledge @ Wharton 07/06/2011 Research Round Up: Overconfident CEOs, How to Boost Instore Sales and the Role of Nerves in Negotiation, Knowledge @ Wharton 06/08/2011 Risky Business Becomes Riskier: A New Playbook for How Artists Are Compensated, Knowledge @ Wharton 02/16/2011 An Apple for Teacher, Knowledge @ Wharton 02/09/2011 Three Questions about the AOLHuffington Post Deal, Knowledge @ Wharton 02/08/2011 From Soccer to the Super Bowl: Measuring How and Where Fans ‘Consume’ Sports, Knowledge @ Wharton 02/02/2011 ‘Greenomics’: Making Cents in a LowCarbon World, Knowledge @ Wharton 01/12/2011 Surrounded by Rivals, Can Research in Motion — and the BlackBerry — Prove That It’s Hip to be Square?, Knowledge @ Wharton 12/08/2010 Tablet Wars: Can Rivals Unseat the iPad?, Knowledge @ Wharton 11/10/2010 Tackling the Concussion Issue: Can the NFL Protect Both Its Players and Its Product?, Knowledge @ Wharton 11/10/2010 Apple, Google and Others: Vying for Prime Time in the Digital Living Room, Knowledge @ Wharton 09/15/2010 Going Mobile: How iAd and AdMob Move Apple vs. Google to a New Playing Field, Knowledge @ Wharton 05/26/2010 Can Twitter Promote Itself into Profitability?, Knowledge @ Wharton 05/26/2010 ‘Act Now, Apologize Later’: Will Users ‘Friend’ Facebook’s Latest Intrusion on Privacy?, Knowledge @ Wharton 05/12/2010 Betting on Future Movie Receipts: Beware the Hollywood Lemons, Knowledge @ Wharton 04/28/2010 Be There or Be Square: The Rise of Locationbased Social Networking, Knowledge @ Wharton 04/14/2010

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