Consumers in a certain state choose between three long distance telephone servic
ID: 3088338 • Letter: C
Question
Consumers in a certain state choose between three long distance telephone services. GTT, NCJ, and Dash. Aggressive marketing by all three companies results in a continual shift of customers among the three services. Each year, GTT loses 25% of its customers to NCJ and 5% to Dash, NCJ loses 10% of its customers to GTT and 25% to Dash, and Dash loses 5% of its customers to GTT and 30% to NCJ. Assuming that these percentages remain valid over a long period of time, what is each company's expected market share in the long run? So GTT expected market share is ... Dash expected share is.. NCJ expected share is...Explanation / Answer
long answer short: GTT and NJC will wither and die (0% share) and Dash will take over in about 50 years how-to guide: to illustrate this nicely as a trend graph a theoretical case, the most efficient way to generate the data is using a spreadsheet, if you are proficient with Microsoft Excel for example -make six columns, on for the current # of customers and net change for that year, for each company -to make this simple, I gave each company a 33.3% share to start with, 100 customers each; note: this is with the assumption that they start off with equal shares, use this unless otherwise specified -to find the net change for each company, GTT for example: = -0.4 * [GTT current customers] + 0.15 * [NJC current customers] ; since GTT loses a total of 40% of its business, but NJC loses 15% to GTT, giving GTT a net loss of 25 customers using the above starting data -the other companies can be done in a similar fashion, then add the net change to the current year to get the next year's customer distribution, and repeat (calculate change as a percent of current customers, and calculate for next year) -after about 30 years, the trend will be plenty abundant, I'll leave the analysis write-up up to you, by 50 years Dash will own the market (note that customer #s are integers, some accuracy will be lost in rounding, but can't display 0.8 customers realistically) -enjoy
Related Questions
drjack9650@gmail.com
Navigate
Integrity-first tutoring: explanations and feedback only — we do not complete graded work. Learn more.