US20090299870A1 - Consumptible identification system and method - Google Patents
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- US20090299870A1 US20090299870A1 US12/536,680 US53668009A US2009299870A1 US 20090299870 A1 US20090299870 A1 US 20090299870A1 US 53668009 A US53668009 A US 53668009A US 2009299870 A1 US2009299870 A1 US 2009299870A1
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- G06—COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
- G06Q—INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- G06Q30/00—Commerce
- G06Q30/02—Marketing; Price estimation or determination; Fundraising
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- G—PHYSICS
- G06—COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
- G06Q—INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- G06Q30/00—Commerce
- G06Q30/018—Certifying business or products
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- G—PHYSICS
- G06—COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
- G06Q—INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- G06Q30/00—Commerce
- G06Q30/06—Buying, selling or leasing transactions
- G06Q30/0601—Electronic shopping [e-shopping]
Definitions
- the present invention generally relates to computer networked consumer and seller matching systems and methods, and particularly relates to identification of a consumptible based on a prioritization of consumer needs relating to the consumptible that expresses a relative reference of the consumer pertaining to the needs.
- Today's Internet search tools may be successful at helping a consumer find a consumptible, such as a product or service, according to specific consumptible attributes.
- a consumer accessing a searchable web site providing listings for houses may obtain a list of homes in a consumer-specified area that match search criteria for price, number of bedrooms, number of baths, square footage, and similar search criteria that are objectively measurable in a directly quantifiable fashion.
- search criteria for price, number of bedrooms, number of baths, square footage, and similar search criteria that are objectively measurable in a directly quantifiable fashion.
- one may expect in other domains to obtain, for example, an identification of an automobile based on price, horsepower, wheelbase, torque, towing capacity, and similar criteria that are objectively measurable in a directly quantifiable fashion.
- Today's tools suffer from the need to require a particular consumer to identify an appropriate set of consumptible attributes with specific values and/or value ranges when searching for a matching consumptible. As a result, today's tools fail to accurately match a consumptible to a particular consumer's subjectively perceptible needs relating to consumer benefits derived from one or more consumptible attributes.
- Today's Internet search tools are unsuitable for assisting consumers in making decisions because consumers needing assistance in identifying a consumptible that meets their individual needs typically may not be experts in fields relating to the corresponding consumptible categories. As a result, they typically lack the expertise required to translate their subjectively perceived needs relating to customer benefits into the consumptible attributes and associated performance values from which those benefits are derived. Therefore, the need remains for a consumptible identification system and method that successfully matches a consumptible identity to a particular consumer based on a prioritization of consumer needs and expertly identified relationships between consumer needs and consumptible identities associated with the consumptible category.
- the present invention fulfills this need.
- the present invention is advantageous over previous networked consumer assistance tools in that it may identify consumptibles based on needs of particular consumers without requiring that the consumer translate their individual needs into specific values of consumptible attributes. It is further advantageous in that it may prompt consumers to visually compare consumer needs for a given consumptible category, thereby obtaining a consumer-specific prioritization of expertly identified needs that may have been expertly correlated to existing consumptible performance attributes and consumptibles.
- the foregoing advantage may be further developed by permitting a consumer to select or otherwise specify a subset of predetermined needs from a superset of predetermined needs for the consumptible category, thereby quickly focusing the need comparison and consumptible identification procedure.
- the present invention may still be further advantageous in that it may allow experts to separately control for variability in consumer needs and functionally contextual factors relating to consumptible attributes.
- the present invention may yet further be advantageous in that it may encourage consumers to provide full specifications for predefined consumptible attributes, survey consumer needs across various consumer categories, obtain information relating to contextual utility of consumptible attributes, and monitor performance of particular consumptibles; this aggregated information may be useful to sellers for further consumptible development.
- Yet further areas of applicability of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description provided hereinafter. It should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating the preferred embodiment of the invention, are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
- FIG. 1 is a partial-perspective block diagram of the system of the present invention
- FIG. 2 is a block diagram depicting system processes according to a relationship acquisition procedure in accordance with the present invention
- FIG. 3A is a block diagram depicting need to attribute relationship strengths stored in a consumptible rating database for use with the present invention
- FIG. 3B is a block diagram depicting relative consumptible attribute performance values stored in a consumptible rating database in accordance with the present invention
- FIG. 4A is a data flow diagram depicting data progression in accordance with the present invention.
- FIG. 4B is a graph depicting a utility curve in accordance with the present invention.
- FIG. 4C is a block diagram depicting relative consumptible attribute performance values generated by use of the utility curve of FIG. 4B ;
- FIG. 5 is a block diagram depicting system processes according to a consumptible information acquisition process in accordance with the present invention
- FIG. 6 is a block diagram depicting system processes according to a consumptible identification procedure in accordance with the present invention.
- FIG. 7 is a flow diagram depicting a method of consumptible identification for use with a computer network in accordance with the present invention.
- FIG. 1 illustrates one embodiment of the system according to the present invention implemented with communications network 10 , such as the Internet, that may connect system server 12 with plurality of client terminals 14 , which may include expert computer 16 , seller computer 18 , and consumer computer 20 .
- Server 12 may run software providing category selection interface 22 , which may be adapted to allow a user to select a consumptible category, and a plurality of interface modules 24 , 26 , and 28 , which may allow consumers, sellers, and experts to interact with various databases 30 , 32 , 34 , and 36 .
- Consumer interface module 24 may permits a consumer using consumer computer 20 to create a user account in user accounts database 30 and store consumer category data, such as demographics, psychographics, and ethnograhics, therein. It also may allow the consumer to search consumptible rating database 36 by prioritizing consumer needs associated with a consumer-specified category, and store data relating to consumer needs in aggregated data database 32 .
- seller interface module 26 may permit a seller using seller computer 18 to create an account in user accounts database 30 and store a consumptible identity and detailed specs for a particular consumptible in consumptible information database 34 .
- expert interface module 28 may permit an expert using expert computer 16 to access consumptible information database 34 in a consumptible category designated in an expert account of user accounts database 30 , and to provide rating scales and/or relationships to consumptible rating database 36 for the corresponding consumptible category.
- Categorized weights reflecting expert knowledge relating to a consumptible category and stored in a corresponding expert account may control the degree to which an opinion of a particular expert influences a particular category.
- FIG. 2 illustrates a sub-embodiment of a relationship acquisition process involving experts in accordance with the present invention.
- category selection interface 22 of relationship acquisition module 38 may obtain consumptible categories 39 from consumptible rating database 36 and communicate available categories 40 to an expert via user interface 42 .
- the expert may respond via interface 42 with a category selection 44 , and a selected category 46 may in turn be communicated to rating scale acquisition module 48 .
- Module 48 may further be receptive of expert-defined consumer needs 50 and measurable consumptible attributes 52 A for selected category 46 , and needs and attributes 54 may be output in the form of a rating scale illustrated with reference to FIG. 3A .
- consumer needs may related to consumptible attributes as rows and columns in matrix 56 for the selected category, and this rating scale may stored in consumptible rating database 36 ( FIG. 2 ) of data store 58 , and further communicated to need-attribute relationship acquisition module 60 .
- Module 60 may communicate combinatorial need-attribute pairs 62 to the expert with a request for a numerical rating 64 expressing an expert judgment of a relationship strength expressing how well a consumptible attribute meets a consumer need.
- Information relating needs to attributes 66 may then be stored as relationships 67 ( FIG. 3 ) in corresponding cells 68 of matrix 56 .
- FIG. 5 illustrates a sub-embodiment of a consumptible information acquisition process involving sellers according to the present invention.
- category selection interface 22 of inventory accumulator 70 may communicate consumptible categories 41 to a seller as available categories 40 via user interface 42 .
- the seller may respond with a category selection 44 , and selected category 46 may be communicated to consumptible information acquisition module 72 .
- Corresponding measurable consumptible category attributes 52 A of consumptible rating database 36 may be retrieved by module 72 and communicated to the seller at 52 B via interface 42 .
- the seller may provide detailed consumptible specifications 74 for each consumptible attribute associated with the selected category, as well as the consumptible identity 76 .
- Acquired consumptible information 78 may then be stored in consumptible information database 34 of data store 58 .
- a revisiting expert and/or subsequently contributing expert selecting a consumptible category 46 having consumptible information already stored in consumptible information database 34 may further receive combinatorial attribute and consumptible identity pairs 80 for selected category 46 from attribute-consumptible relationship acquisition module 82 based on attributes 52 B and consumptible information 78 of consumptible information database 34 .
- the expert may further receive detailed specifications for each attribute and consumptible identity associated with selected category 46 based on consumptible information 78 .
- the expert may respond to the resulting prompts with a numerical rating 84 indicating relative, contextual utility of a particular consumptible's actual performance value with respect to a consumptible attribute of the category.
- Information relating attributes to consumptible identities 86 may then be stored as relationships 88 ( FIG. 3 ) in corresponding cells 90 of matrix 92 associated with selected category 46 ( FIG. 2 ) in consumptible rating database 36 .
- Information 86 respective of a particular attribute may constitute a utility curve. For example, if a consumptible attribute corresponds to towing capacity of a vehicle, and a number of classes of recreational equipment increases exponentially over a linear weight range, and then decreases logarithmically over a higher weight range, then this information may be reflected in the expertly defined relationships between towing capacity and consumptible identifications. Thus, a vehicle able to tow most recreational vehicles in addition to most trailers may have twice the score respective to towing capacity compared to a vehicle with ninety-percent of the same towing capacity that can only haul small recreational equipment and one class of moving trailer.
- a vehicle with ten times the towing capacity that can only tow ten percent more classes of equipment may have only a slightly higher score respective to towing capacity.
- the expert may control for relative utility of consumptibles in a quantifiable functional context independently of subjectively perceived consumer needs.
- FIG. 4B experts may be asked to develop an actual utility curve 136 ( FIG. 4B ). Accumulated data from the weighted experts may be compiled into a map or table as graphed in FIG. 4B . Then, a function may be implemented to populate a row of a matrix 42 A for a consumptible category attribute, such as towing capacity of a vehicle, relative to particular vehicle models V 1 -V 4 ( FIG. 4B ) having actual performance values specified for the attribute; the actual performance values may be specified, for example, by sellers at a time of registration of the vehicle models in association with the consumptible category. As a result, consumptible categories 40 ( FIG.
- consumptible identities 76 may point to consumptible identities 76 , which may in turn have actual performance values 138 specified for the consumptible attributes of the categories according to specifications provided by sellers. These actual performance values may be filtered through an expertly provided utility curve 136 and/or interpreted by experts based on relative utility to arrive at relative consumptible attribute performance values 138 specified for the consumptible attributes of the categories relative to the consumptible identities of the categories. In turn, need to attribute relationship strengths 140 may be used in conjunction with the relative consumptible attribute performance values 138 to identify prioritized consumptible identities 142 for a category based on prioritized consumer needs 144 for the category.
- FIG. 6 illustrates a sub-embodiment of a consumptible identification procedure according to the present invention.
- a consumer may receive a list of available consumptible categories 40 via user interface 42 from category selection interface 22 based on designated consumptible categories 41 of data store 58 .
- the consumer's category selection 44 may result in communication of selected category 46 to need prioritization module 88 and matching function 89 of matching module 91 .
- Need prioritization module 88 may communicate combinatorial need pairs 93 to the user based on selected category 46 and needs 94 associated with selected category 46 according to consumptible rating database 36 of data store 58 .
- Combinatorial need pairs may provide a rating scale to the particular consumer that permits the particular consumer to perform need to need comparisons with respect to the combinatorial pairs of consumer needs using, for example, drag bars permitting the consumer to visually and intuitively illustrate a proportion of priority divided between competing consumer needs.
- the resulting comparison selections 96 communicated to need prioritization module 88 are particularly well suited to obtaining ratio scale numbers that may be used to compute the prioritization 98 of consumer needs based on the need to need comparisons as a row average of normalized columns, and the prioritization of consumer needs may further be communicated to matching function 89 .
- matching function 89 may access consumptible rating database 36 of data store 58 based on selected category 46 and prioritization 98 , and may obtain a consumer-dependent rating of consumptibles 100 for the category that may be communicated to the consumer via interface 42 .
- a consumer selecting a consumptible category corresponding to “automobiles” may be presented with a checklist including dozens of selectable consumer needs relating to the “automobiles” category.
- the consumer may select four of these needs, including “low price”, “easy to drive”, “stylish”, and “reliable”.
- the consumer may next be presented with a visual representation of combinatorial pairs of consumer needs with color coded drag bars expressing a bivalent spectrum. The consumer may drag the bars left or right for each combinatorial pair to express a priority-based distribution of comparative importance value for each need compared to every other need of the category. With four needs, there are six combinatorial pairs.
- a row average may be computed for each consumer need based on the comparisons, and the “need priority” column of matrix 56 ( FIG. 3 ) may be populated with values representing a percentage of priority placed on the corresponding consumer needs by the particular consumer.
- These scalar values may then be multiplied by scalar values stored in cells 68 in accordance with relationships 67 , and the column results for each attribute, such as “drag coefficient”, “horse power”, “price with option package”, and “lemon law claims per annum”, may be added together to obtain consumer-specific priority values which populate the “attribute priority” row.
- attribute priorities may then be used to populate the attribute priorities column of matrix 92 , and may similarly be multiplied by scalar values of cells 90 and added together for each consumptible identity to obtain consumer-specific priority values that may populate the “consumptible priority” row.
- These consumptible priorities may then be used as consumptible ratings, and consumptible identities may be communicated to the consumer together with their ratings, a bar graph visually depicting their ratings, and a pie chart visually depicting the computed values representing percentage of priority placed on the corresponding consumer needs by the particular consumer that resulted in the consumer-specific ratings.
- FIG. 7 illustrates an embodiment of a method of the present invention.
- the method may proceed with development of consumer needs related to consumptible attributes for one or more consumptible categories at step 104 .
- consumptible categories may be designated at step 106
- expert identifications of consumptible attributes and consumer needs may be obtained for each designated category at step 108 .
- Step 108 may be performed separately for each category, with a primary expert for the category defining the columns and rows of a resulting matrix.
- the primary expert for each category may also provide initial relationship data for the category that relate the consumer needs to the consumptible attributes in step 110 .
- step 110 additional experts may provide more relationship data in step 110 for the category that may be used to adjust the initial relationship data according to weighted values assigned to the contributing experts based on their knowledge with respect to the particular consumptible category.
- the attributes defined for a consumptible category may be used to prompt a seller of a consumptible in the category for detailed consumptible specifications for each attribute at step 112 .
- the specifications may be used by knowledgeable experts in step 114 when obtaining relationship data from the experts relating consumptible attributes to consumptible identities based on relative utility of performance values with respect to the consumptible category attributes.
- consumptible identities may be matched to particular consumers based on a consumer-specific prioritization of consumer needs at step 116 . Accordingly, need to need comparisons of combinatorial pairs of consumer needs may be obtained from individual consumers at step 118 , and consumer-specific prioritizations of consumer needs may be computed at step 120 based on the need to need comparisons. Next, consumer-specific prioritizations of consumptible attributes may be computed at step 122 based on the consumer specific prioritizations of consumer needs and expertly defined relationships between consumer needs and consumptible attributes.
- individual existing consumptibles may be rated for individual consumers by computing consumer-specific prioritizations for consumptible identities at step 124 based on the consumer-specific prioritizations of consumptible attributes and the expertly defined relationships between the consumptible attributes and the consumptible identities. These consumer-specific ratings may then be communicated to the individual consumers at step 126 , with the method ending at 128 .
- the method of the present invention have further steps directed to the consumptible development side, such as obtaining consumer category information (demographics, psychographics, ethnograhics) at step 130 .
- data may be aggregated at step 132 , including consumer category information obtained in step 130 and consumer needs obtained in step 116 , and this aggregated data may be used at step 134 to assist in redeveloping existing consumptibles and/or developing new consumptibles.
- the consumer needs and consumer category information may be used to obtain consumer category specific prioritizations of consumer needs for various consumptible categories.
- step 116 performance of a particular consumptible relative to commonly expressed consumer needs may be obtained on step 116 and aggregated in step 132 , and this information may be used in step 134 to identify consumptibles in need of redevelopment.
- the detailed specifications obtained in step 104 may be aggregated at step 132 and used to provide information on existing consumptible attributes that developers may otherwise have to obtain by other means.
- the expertly developed matrices constructed in step 104 to relate consumer needs to consumptible attributes can be aggregated at step 132 and used as part of a House of Quality as known in the art of Quality Function Deployment (QFD) to assist in developing consumptibles.
- QFD Quality Function Deployment
- the utility curve expressed in the relationships obtained in step 114 may further be used in a cost-benefit analysis to identify an optimal consumptible attribute value in a given market context.
- the present invention may be implemented to service consumers of varying levels of expertise relating to one or more consumptible categories.
- the present invention may be implemented to allow a consumer to specify a specific and/or range of performance values for one or more consumptible attributes, and combine these limitations with the prioritization of needs relating to consumer benefits derived from one or more consumptible attributes.
- a consumer may be initially presented with a list of consumptible needs, such as doors, comfort, speed, and towing capacity, for a selected category, such as automobiles.
- the consumer may be allowed to select to express a specific number of doors for the vehicle, such as four, and further to select to compare two of the needs, such as comfort and speed.
- the matching module may filter the consumptible identities of the category by constructing, on the fly, a matrix of automobile models having four doors related to all of the consumptible attributes for the category.
- the automobile models may subsequently be related to the attributes using the appropriate utility curves.
- the prioritization of the two needs may then be related to the attributes, and a prioritization of automobiles having four doors obtained.
- equivalent filtering methods may include rescoring of prioritized consumptible identities based on the specified performance value, and/or other ways of rendering non-conforming consumptible identities ineligible.
- the description of the invention is merely exemplary in nature and, thus, variations that do not depart from the gist of the invention are intended to be within the scope of the invention.
- the present invention may be less advantageously accomplished by relating consumer needs directly to consumptible identities, without the interim steps of relating to consumptible attributes and using utility curves.
- actual performance values of consumptibles may alternatively be linearly mapped to consumptible category attributes.
- the prioritizations of consumer needs may be accomplished by other means than a need to need comparison, and use of a pie chart to display the needs with pie piece dividers that can be dragged to adjust the priorities is another example of an intuitive graphical user interface for obtaining the consumer-specific priorities.
- various alternative embodiments may communicate the results in additional ways, such as by normalizing priorities associated with consumptible attributes and/or consumptible identities and graphically displaying them to consumers as pie charts.
- two-dimensional matrices may be used to visually communicate the processes of the present invention, it should be readily understood that various data structures and complementary referencing algorithms can be employed to accomplish the present invention in a variety of ways, as with lookup tables and/or vectors with three or more dimensions.
- the present invention may be employed in various market contexts including, for example, contract evaluation.
- equipment specifications may listed on rows of a matrix as consumer needs, and design elements for meeting the consumptible specifications that make up a given proposal may be listed on the columns as consumptible attributes.
- the consumptible category may corresponds to a contract to supply new equipment, and the proposal submitting entity can perform the relationship matrix work.
- the consumer the one issuing the Request For Proposal (RFP) and needing the new equipment, may be able to have their experts also perform relationship matrix work to judge how well a proposal meets the RFP.
- RFP Request For Proposal
Abstract
A consumptible identification system for use with a computer network includes a need prioritization module adapted to obtain a prioritization of consumer needs associated with a consumptible category from a particular consumer, wherein the prioritization expresses a preference of the particular consumer pertaining to at least one need associated with the category relative to at least one other need associated with the category. It further includes a matching module adapted to match a comsumptible identity to the particular consumer based on the prioritization of consumer needs and relationships between consumer needs and consumptible identities associated with the consumptible category. In addition, it has a user interface adapted to communicate the consumptible identity to the particular consumer.
Description
- This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/449,860 filed on May 30, 2003. The disclosure of the above application is incorporated herein by reference.
- The present invention generally relates to computer networked consumer and seller matching systems and methods, and particularly relates to identification of a consumptible based on a prioritization of consumer needs relating to the consumptible that expresses a relative reference of the consumer pertaining to the needs.
- Today's Internet search tools may be successful at helping a consumer find a consumptible, such as a product or service, according to specific consumptible attributes. For example, a consumer accessing a searchable web site providing listings for houses may obtain a list of homes in a consumer-specified area that match search criteria for price, number of bedrooms, number of baths, square footage, and similar search criteria that are objectively measurable in a directly quantifiable fashion. Similarly, one may expect in other domains to obtain, for example, an identification of an automobile based on price, horsepower, wheelbase, torque, towing capacity, and similar criteria that are objectively measurable in a directly quantifiable fashion. Today's tools, however, suffer from the need to require a particular consumer to identify an appropriate set of consumptible attributes with specific values and/or value ranges when searching for a matching consumptible. As a result, today's tools fail to accurately match a consumptible to a particular consumer's subjectively perceptible needs relating to consumer benefits derived from one or more consumptible attributes.
- Today's Internet search tools are unsuitable for assisting consumers in making decisions because consumers needing assistance in identifying a consumptible that meets their individual needs typically may not be experts in fields relating to the corresponding consumptible categories. As a result, they typically lack the expertise required to translate their subjectively perceived needs relating to customer benefits into the consumptible attributes and associated performance values from which those benefits are derived. Therefore, the need remains for a consumptible identification system and method that successfully matches a consumptible identity to a particular consumer based on a prioritization of consumer needs and expertly identified relationships between consumer needs and consumptible identities associated with the consumptible category. The present invention fulfills this need.
- In accordance with the present invention, a consumptible identification system for use with a computer network includes a need prioritization module adapted to obtain a prioritization of consumer needs associated with a consumptible category from a particular consumer, wherein the prioritization expresses a preference of the particular consumer pertaining to at least one need associated with the category relative to at least one other need associated with the category. It further includes a matching module adapted to match a consumptible identity to the particular consumer based on the prioritization of consumer needs and relationships between consumer needs and consumptible identities associated with the consumptible category. In addition, it has a user interface adapted to communicate the consumptible identity to the particular consumer.
- The present invention is advantageous over previous networked consumer assistance tools in that it may identify consumptibles based on needs of particular consumers without requiring that the consumer translate their individual needs into specific values of consumptible attributes. It is further advantageous in that it may prompt consumers to visually compare consumer needs for a given consumptible category, thereby obtaining a consumer-specific prioritization of expertly identified needs that may have been expertly correlated to existing consumptible performance attributes and consumptibles. The foregoing advantage may be further developed by permitting a consumer to select or otherwise specify a subset of predetermined needs from a superset of predetermined needs for the consumptible category, thereby quickly focusing the need comparison and consumptible identification procedure. The present invention may still be further advantageous in that it may allow experts to separately control for variability in consumer needs and functionally contextual factors relating to consumptible attributes. The present invention may yet further be advantageous in that it may encourage consumers to provide full specifications for predefined consumptible attributes, survey consumer needs across various consumer categories, obtain information relating to contextual utility of consumptible attributes, and monitor performance of particular consumptibles; this aggregated information may be useful to sellers for further consumptible development. Yet further areas of applicability of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description provided hereinafter. It should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating the preferred embodiment of the invention, are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
- The present invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
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FIG. 1 is a partial-perspective block diagram of the system of the present invention; -
FIG. 2 is a block diagram depicting system processes according to a relationship acquisition procedure in accordance with the present invention; -
FIG. 3A is a block diagram depicting need to attribute relationship strengths stored in a consumptible rating database for use with the present invention; -
FIG. 3B is a block diagram depicting relative consumptible attribute performance values stored in a consumptible rating database in accordance with the present invention; -
FIG. 4A is a data flow diagram depicting data progression in accordance with the present invention; -
FIG. 4B is a graph depicting a utility curve in accordance with the present invention; -
FIG. 4C is a block diagram depicting relative consumptible attribute performance values generated by use of the utility curve ofFIG. 4B ; -
FIG. 5 is a block diagram depicting system processes according to a consumptible information acquisition process in accordance with the present invention; -
FIG. 6 is a block diagram depicting system processes according to a consumptible identification procedure in accordance with the present invention; and -
FIG. 7 is a flow diagram depicting a method of consumptible identification for use with a computer network in accordance with the present invention. - The following description of the preferred embodiment(s) is merely exemplary in nature and is in no way intended to limit the invention, its application, or uses.
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FIG. 1 illustrates one embodiment of the system according to the present invention implemented withcommunications network 10, such as the Internet, that may connectsystem server 12 with plurality ofclient terminals 14, which may includeexpert computer 16,seller computer 18, andconsumer computer 20.Server 12 may run software providingcategory selection interface 22, which may be adapted to allow a user to select a consumptible category, and a plurality ofinterface modules various databases Consumer interface module 24, for example, may permits a consumer usingconsumer computer 20 to create a user account inuser accounts database 30 and store consumer category data, such as demographics, psychographics, and ethnograhics, therein. It also may allow the consumer to searchconsumptible rating database 36 by prioritizing consumer needs associated with a consumer-specified category, and store data relating to consumer needs in aggregateddata database 32. Similarly,seller interface module 26 may permit a seller usingseller computer 18 to create an account inuser accounts database 30 and store a consumptible identity and detailed specs for a particular consumptible inconsumptible information database 34. Further,expert interface module 28 may permit an expert usingexpert computer 16 to accessconsumptible information database 34 in a consumptible category designated in an expert account ofuser accounts database 30, and to provide rating scales and/or relationships toconsumptible rating database 36 for the corresponding consumptible category. Categorized weights reflecting expert knowledge relating to a consumptible category and stored in a corresponding expert account may control the degree to which an opinion of a particular expert influences a particular category. -
FIG. 2 illustrates a sub-embodiment of a relationship acquisition process involving experts in accordance with the present invention. For example,category selection interface 22 ofrelationship acquisition module 38 may obtain consumptible categories 39 fromconsumptible rating database 36 and communicateavailable categories 40 to an expert viauser interface 42. The expert may respond viainterface 42 with acategory selection 44, and aselected category 46 may in turn be communicated to ratingscale acquisition module 48.Module 48 may further be receptive of expert-defined consumer needs 50 and measurableconsumptible attributes 52A for selectedcategory 46, and needs andattributes 54 may be output in the form of a rating scale illustrated with reference toFIG. 3A . Therein, consumer needs may related to consumptible attributes as rows and columns in matrix 56 for the selected category, and this rating scale may stored in consumptible rating database 36 (FIG. 2 ) ofdata store 58, and further communicated to need-attributerelationship acquisition module 60.Module 60, in turn, may communicate combinatorial need-attribute pairs 62 to the expert with a request for anumerical rating 64 expressing an expert judgment of a relationship strength expressing how well a consumptible attribute meets a consumer need. Information relating needs toattributes 66 may then be stored as relationships 67 (FIG. 3 ) incorresponding cells 68 of matrix 56. -
FIG. 5 illustrates a sub-embodiment of a consumptible information acquisition process involving sellers according to the present invention. Therein,category selection interface 22 ofinventory accumulator 70 may communicateconsumptible categories 41 to a seller asavailable categories 40 viauser interface 42. The seller may respond with acategory selection 44, and selectedcategory 46 may be communicated to consumptibleinformation acquisition module 72. Corresponding measurable consumptible category attributes 52A ofconsumptible rating database 36 may be retrieved bymodule 72 and communicated to the seller at 52B viainterface 42. In response to the resulting prompts, the seller may provide detailedconsumptible specifications 74 for each consumptible attribute associated with the selected category, as well as theconsumptible identity 76. Acquiredconsumptible information 78 may then be stored inconsumptible information database 34 ofdata store 58. - Returning to
FIG. 2 , a revisiting expert and/or subsequently contributing expert selecting aconsumptible category 46 having consumptible information already stored inconsumptible information database 34 may further receive combinatorial attribute and consumptible identity pairs 80 for selectedcategory 46 from attribute-consumptiblerelationship acquisition module 82 based onattributes 52B andconsumptible information 78 ofconsumptible information database 34. The expert may further receive detailed specifications for each attribute and consumptible identity associated with selectedcategory 46 based onconsumptible information 78. The expert may respond to the resulting prompts with anumerical rating 84 indicating relative, contextual utility of a particular consumptible's actual performance value with respect to a consumptible attribute of the category. Information relating attributes toconsumptible identities 86 may then be stored as relationships 88 (FIG. 3 ) in correspondingcells 90 of matrix 92 associated with selected category 46 (FIG. 2 ) inconsumptible rating database 36. -
Information 86 respective of a particular attribute may constitute a utility curve. For example, if a consumptible attribute corresponds to towing capacity of a vehicle, and a number of classes of recreational equipment increases exponentially over a linear weight range, and then decreases logarithmically over a higher weight range, then this information may be reflected in the expertly defined relationships between towing capacity and consumptible identifications. Thus, a vehicle able to tow most recreational vehicles in addition to most trailers may have twice the score respective to towing capacity compared to a vehicle with ninety-percent of the same towing capacity that can only haul small recreational equipment and one class of moving trailer. Similarly, a vehicle with ten times the towing capacity that can only tow ten percent more classes of equipment may have only a slightly higher score respective to towing capacity. As a result, the expert may control for relative utility of consumptibles in a quantifiable functional context independently of subjectively perceived consumer needs. - Alternatively, experts may be asked to develop an actual utility curve 136 (
FIG. 4B ). Accumulated data from the weighted experts may be compiled into a map or table as graphed inFIG. 4B . Then, a function may be implemented to populate a row of a matrix 42A for a consumptible category attribute, such as towing capacity of a vehicle, relative to particular vehicle models V1-V4 (FIG. 4B ) having actual performance values specified for the attribute; the actual performance values may be specified, for example, by sellers at a time of registration of the vehicle models in association with the consumptible category. As a result, consumptible categories 40 (FIG. 4A ) may point toconsumptible identities 76, which may in turn have actual performance values 138 specified for the consumptible attributes of the categories according to specifications provided by sellers. These actual performance values may be filtered through an expertly providedutility curve 136 and/or interpreted by experts based on relative utility to arrive at relative consumptibleattribute performance values 138 specified for the consumptible attributes of the categories relative to the consumptible identities of the categories. In turn, need to attributerelationship strengths 140 may be used in conjunction with the relative consumptibleattribute performance values 138 to identify prioritizedconsumptible identities 142 for a category based on prioritized consumer needs 144 for the category. -
FIG. 6 illustrates a sub-embodiment of a consumptible identification procedure according to the present invention. Therein, a consumer may receive a list of availableconsumptible categories 40 viauser interface 42 fromcategory selection interface 22 based on designatedconsumptible categories 41 ofdata store 58. The consumer'scategory selection 44 may result in communication of selectedcategory 46 to needprioritization module 88 and matchingfunction 89 of matchingmodule 91. Needprioritization module 88 may communicate combinatorial need pairs 93 to the user based on selectedcategory 46 and needs 94 associated with selectedcategory 46 according toconsumptible rating database 36 ofdata store 58. Combinatorial need pairs may provide a rating scale to the particular consumer that permits the particular consumer to perform need to need comparisons with respect to the combinatorial pairs of consumer needs using, for example, drag bars permitting the consumer to visually and intuitively illustrate a proportion of priority divided between competing consumer needs. The resultingcomparison selections 96 communicated to needprioritization module 88 are particularly well suited to obtaining ratio scale numbers that may be used to compute theprioritization 98 of consumer needs based on the need to need comparisons as a row average of normalized columns, and the prioritization of consumer needs may further be communicated to matchingfunction 89. In turn, matchingfunction 89 may accessconsumptible rating database 36 ofdata store 58 based on selectedcategory 46 andprioritization 98, and may obtain a consumer-dependent rating ofconsumptibles 100 for the category that may be communicated to the consumer viainterface 42. - In an example of operation according to the present invention, a consumer selecting a consumptible category corresponding to “automobiles” may be presented with a checklist including dozens of selectable consumer needs relating to the “automobiles” category. In response, the consumer may select four of these needs, including “low price”, “easy to drive”, “stylish”, and “reliable”. The consumer may next be presented with a visual representation of combinatorial pairs of consumer needs with color coded drag bars expressing a bivalent spectrum. The consumer may drag the bars left or right for each combinatorial pair to express a priority-based distribution of comparative importance value for each need compared to every other need of the category. With four needs, there are six combinatorial pairs. A row average may be computed for each consumer need based on the comparisons, and the “need priority” column of matrix 56 (
FIG. 3 ) may be populated with values representing a percentage of priority placed on the corresponding consumer needs by the particular consumer. These scalar values may then be multiplied by scalar values stored incells 68 in accordance withrelationships 67, and the column results for each attribute, such as “drag coefficient”, “horse power”, “price with option package”, and “lemon law claims per annum”, may be added together to obtain consumer-specific priority values which populate the “attribute priority” row. These attribute priorities may then be used to populate the attribute priorities column of matrix 92, and may similarly be multiplied by scalar values ofcells 90 and added together for each consumptible identity to obtain consumer-specific priority values that may populate the “consumptible priority” row. These consumptible priorities may then be used as consumptible ratings, and consumptible identities may be communicated to the consumer together with their ratings, a bar graph visually depicting their ratings, and a pie chart visually depicting the computed values representing percentage of priority placed on the corresponding consumer needs by the particular consumer that resulted in the consumer-specific ratings. -
FIG. 7 illustrates an embodiment of a method of the present invention. Beginning at 102 the method may proceed with development of consumer needs related to consumptible attributes for one or more consumptible categories atstep 104. Thus, consumptible categories may be designated atstep 106, and expert identifications of consumptible attributes and consumer needs may be obtained for each designated category atstep 108. Step 108 may be performed separately for each category, with a primary expert for the category defining the columns and rows of a resulting matrix. The primary expert for each category may also provide initial relationship data for the category that relate the consumer needs to the consumptible attributes instep 110. Then, additional experts may provide more relationship data instep 110 for the category that may be used to adjust the initial relationship data according to weighted values assigned to the contributing experts based on their knowledge with respect to the particular consumptible category. Meanwhile, the attributes defined for a consumptible category may be used to prompt a seller of a consumptible in the category for detailed consumptible specifications for each attribute atstep 112. Then, the specifications may be used by knowledgeable experts instep 114 when obtaining relationship data from the experts relating consumptible attributes to consumptible identities based on relative utility of performance values with respect to the consumptible category attributes. These experts may be different from the experts who provide relationships between consumer needs and consumptible attributes, and may be employed to development utility curves for various consumptible attributes relating actual performance value to actual functional value within a market context as previously discussed. Then, the relationships between the consumptible attributes and the consumptible identities may be mapped in an automated fashion using the performance values expressed in the detailed specifications to obtain a relative functional value using the utility curve that identifies a relationship between the consumptible identity and the consumptible attribute. - With relationships between consumer needs and consumptible identities expertly defined at 104, consumptible identities may be matched to particular consumers based on a consumer-specific prioritization of consumer needs at
step 116. Accordingly, need to need comparisons of combinatorial pairs of consumer needs may be obtained from individual consumers atstep 118, and consumer-specific prioritizations of consumer needs may be computed atstep 120 based on the need to need comparisons. Next, consumer-specific prioritizations of consumptible attributes may be computed atstep 122 based on the consumer specific prioritizations of consumer needs and expertly defined relationships between consumer needs and consumptible attributes. Then, individual existing consumptibles may be rated for individual consumers by computing consumer-specific prioritizations for consumptible identities atstep 124 based on the consumer-specific prioritizations of consumptible attributes and the expertly defined relationships between the consumptible attributes and the consumptible identities. These consumer-specific ratings may then be communicated to the individual consumers atstep 126, with the method ending at 128. - The method of the present invention have further steps directed to the consumptible development side, such as obtaining consumer category information (demographics, psychographics, ethnograhics) at
step 130. Also, data may be aggregated atstep 132, including consumer category information obtained instep 130 and consumer needs obtained instep 116, and this aggregated data may be used atstep 134 to assist in redeveloping existing consumptibles and/or developing new consumptibles. For example, the consumer needs and consumer category information may be used to obtain consumer category specific prioritizations of consumer needs for various consumptible categories. Further, performance of a particular consumptible relative to commonly expressed consumer needs may be obtained onstep 116 and aggregated instep 132, and this information may be used instep 134 to identify consumptibles in need of redevelopment. Still further, the detailed specifications obtained instep 104 may be aggregated atstep 132 and used to provide information on existing consumptible attributes that developers may otherwise have to obtain by other means. Yet further, the expertly developed matrices constructed instep 104 to relate consumer needs to consumptible attributes can be aggregated atstep 132 and used as part of a House of Quality as known in the art of Quality Function Deployment (QFD) to assist in developing consumptibles. The utility curve expressed in the relationships obtained instep 114 may further be used in a cost-benefit analysis to identify an optimal consumptible attribute value in a given market context. - It is important to note that various alternative embodiments of the present invention may be implemented to service consumers of varying levels of expertise relating to one or more consumptible categories. As a result, the present invention may be implemented to allow a consumer to specify a specific and/or range of performance values for one or more consumptible attributes, and combine these limitations with the prioritization of needs relating to consumer benefits derived from one or more consumptible attributes. For example, a consumer may be initially presented with a list of consumptible needs, such as doors, comfort, speed, and towing capacity, for a selected category, such as automobiles. In this example, the consumer may be allowed to select to express a specific number of doors for the vehicle, such as four, and further to select to compare two of the needs, such as comfort and speed. In this case, the matching module may filter the consumptible identities of the category by constructing, on the fly, a matrix of automobile models having four doors related to all of the consumptible attributes for the category. The automobile models may subsequently be related to the attributes using the appropriate utility curves. The prioritization of the two needs may then be related to the attributes, and a prioritization of automobiles having four doors obtained. It should be readily understood that equivalent filtering methods may include rescoring of prioritized consumptible identities based on the specified performance value, and/or other ways of rendering non-conforming consumptible identities ineligible.
- The description of the invention is merely exemplary in nature and, thus, variations that do not depart from the gist of the invention are intended to be within the scope of the invention. For example, the present invention may be less advantageously accomplished by relating consumer needs directly to consumptible identities, without the interim steps of relating to consumptible attributes and using utility curves. Also, actual performance values of consumptibles may alternatively be linearly mapped to consumptible category attributes. Further, the prioritizations of consumer needs may be accomplished by other means than a need to need comparison, and use of a pie chart to display the needs with pie piece dividers that can be dragged to adjust the priorities is another example of an intuitive graphical user interface for obtaining the consumer-specific priorities. Still further, various alternative embodiments may communicate the results in additional ways, such as by normalizing priorities associated with consumptible attributes and/or consumptible identities and graphically displaying them to consumers as pie charts. Still further, although two-dimensional matrices may be used to visually communicate the processes of the present invention, it should be readily understood that various data structures and complementary referencing algorithms can be employed to accomplish the present invention in a variety of ways, as with lookup tables and/or vectors with three or more dimensions. Yet further, the present invention may be employed in various market contexts including, for example, contract evaluation. In this embodiment, equipment specifications may listed on rows of a matrix as consumer needs, and design elements for meeting the consumptible specifications that make up a given proposal may be listed on the columns as consumptible attributes. In this context, the consumptible category may corresponds to a contract to supply new equipment, and the proposal submitting entity can perform the relationship matrix work. However, the consumer, the one issuing the Request For Proposal (RFP) and needing the new equipment, may be able to have their experts also perform relationship matrix work to judge how well a proposal meets the RFP. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Claims (20)
1. A system for recommending a product identity to a user from a plurality of product identities, comprising:
a product database storing quantifiable product attributes for a category of goods, the category of goods having a plurality of product identities belonging thereto, each product identity having a set of quantifiable product attributes associated therewith, wherein each quantifiable product attribute has a quantification;
a relationship data structure defining a plurality of relationships between the quantifiable product attributes belonging to the category of goods and subjective properties relating to the category of goods, wherein a relationship represents a correlation of one of the quantifiable product attributes to one of the subjective properties relating the category of goods, wherein a plurality of different predefined subjective properties relate to the category of good;
a user interface that displays the subjective properties relating to the category of goods and that receives from the user an amount of importance for at least two of the subjective properties relating to the category of good; and
a prioritization module that determines a product identity recommendation for the user based on the inputted amount of importance of subjective properties relating to category of goods by:
calculating prioritization scores of the product attributes using the inputted amount of importance of the at least two subjective properties and the relationship data structure; and
calculating rankings of the different product identities using the calculated prioritization scores of the product attributes and the quantifications of the product attributes of the product identities stored in said product database; and
determining a product identity recommendation based on the rankings of the different product identities.
2. The system of claim 1 wherein the user interface displays the subjective properties to the user and the user indicates an amount of importance of at least two of the subjective properties with respect to other subjective properties relating to the category of goods.
3. The system of claim 2 wherein the prioritization module calculates prioritization score for each product attribute by:
a) determining a percentage of importance of the subjective properties using the amounts of importance of the subjective properties with respect to the other subjective properties;
b) multiplying the percentage of importance of each of the subjective properties with the corresponding correlation between the subjective property and the product attribute whose prioritization score is being calculated; and
c) summing up the products calculated in step b) for each product attribute.
4. The system of claim 1 wherein for each product identity, the prioritization scores for the quantifiable product attributes are multiplied by the corresponding quantifications of the quantifiable product attribute of the product identity and the resulting products are summed, wherein the resulting sums for the product identities are compared to one another to determine a ranking of product identities.
5. The system of claim 1 further comprising a property-attribute relationship acquisition module that communicates subjective property and quantifiable product attribute pairs to an expert and that receives the correlation between the communicated subjective property and the quantifiable product attribute pair from the expert, wherein the relationships between the quantifiable product attributes and subjective properties are defined by the expert.
6. The system of claim 5 wherein the relationship data structure is a matrix whose elements represent the correlations of the quantifiable product attributes to the subjective properties.
7. The system of claim 1 further comprising a product identity acquisition module that receives a potential product identity from a source of a product having said potential product identity and receives the at least some of the quantifiable product attributes of said potential product identity from said producer, wherein said potential product identity becomes one of the product identities of the plurality of product identities.
8. The system of claim 1 further comprising an attribute-identity acquisition module that communicates at least one product identity and a quantifiable product attribute associated with said communicated product identities to an expert and receives quantifications for the quantifiable product attributes of the communicated product identities, wherein said quantifications are stored in said product database.
9. The system of claim 8 wherein the quantification is a numerical rating indicating an absolute or relative performance value for the product identity with respect to other product identities.
10. The system of claim 8 wherein the quantifications of the quantifiable product attributes of the product identities within the category of goods are defined by utility curves.
11. The system of claim 1 wherein the category goods is selected by the user from a plurality of categories of goods.
12. A method for recommending a product identity having quantifiable product attributes from a plurality of different product identities to a consumer comprising:
presenting, on a display unit, a plurality of different subjective properties relating to a category of goods to a user, wherein the plurality of different product identities belong to the category of goods and the plurality of different subjective properties are properties of the plurality of different product identities;
receiving, via a user interface, user input indicating amounts of importance of the subjective properties to the user;
calculating, on a processor, prioritization scores of quantifiable product attributes for the user using on the inputted amount of importance of each subjective property and a plurality of relationships between the quantifiable product attributes associated with the plurality of different product identities and the subjective properties relating to the category of goods, wherein a relationship represents a correlation of one of the quantifiable product attributes to one of the subjective properties;
calculating, on the processor, a product ranking for each product in the plurality of different products using on the prioritization scores of product attributes and quantifications of the product attributes for each product identity of the plurality of different product identities; and
presenting to the user a recommended product based on the product rankings for each product.
13. The method of claim 12 wherein the user interface displays the subjective properties to the user and the user indicates an amount of importance of at least two of the subjective properties with respect to other subjective properties relating to the category of goods.
14. The method of claim 12 wherein calculating the prioritizations scores further comprises:
a) determining a percentage of importance of the subjective properties from the amounts of importance;
b) multiplying the percentage of importance of each of the subjective properties with the corresponding correlation between the subjective property and the product attribute whose prioritization score is being calculated; and
c) summing up the products calculated in step b) for each quantifiable attribute product attribute.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein for each product identity, the prioritization scores for the quantifiable product attributes are multiplied by the corresponding quantifications of the quantifiable product attribute of the product identity and the resulting products are combined, wherein the resulting values for the product identities are compared to one another to determine a product ranking of product identities.
16. The method of claim 12 further comprising communicating a plurality of categories of goods to the user and receiving the category of goods from the plurality of categories of goods from the user, via the user interface.
17. The method of claim 12 further comprising communicating pairs of subjective properties and quantifiable product attributes to an expert and receiving the correlation between the communicated subjective property and the quantifiable product attribute from the expert, wherein the relationships between the quantifiable product attributes belonging to the category of goods and subjective properties relating to the category of goods are defined by the expert and loaded onto a computer readable medium associated with said system.
18. The method of claim 12 further comprising receiving a product identity from a producer of a product having said product identity and receiving at least some of the quantifiable product attributes of the product identity from said producer.
19. The method of claim 12 wherein the quantification is a numerical rating indicating a relative performance value for the product identity with respect to other product identities.
20. The method of claim 12 wherein the user is presented with the means to transact a purchase for the product identities which receive a ranking.
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