Description
Methodology to efficiently segment markets for public transportation offerings has been introduced and exemplified in an application to an urban travel corridor in which high tech companies predominate. The principal objective has been to introduce and apply multivariate methodology to efficiently identify segments of work commuters and their demographic identifiers. A set of attributes in terms of which service offerings could be defined was derived from background studies and focus groups of work commuters in the county. Adaptive choice conjoint analysis was used to derive the importance weights of these attributes in available service offering to these commuters. A two-stage clustering procedure was then used to explore the grouping of individual’s subsets into homogeneous sub-groups of the sample. These subsets are commonly a basis for differentiation in service offerings that can increase total ridership in public transportation while approximating cost neutrality in service delivery. Recursive partitioning identified interactions between demographic predictors that significantly contributed to the discrimination of segments in demographics. Implementation of the results is discussed.
Publication Date
3-1-2015
Publication Type
Report
Topic
Workforce and Labor
MTI Project
1232
Mineta Transportation Institute URL
https://transweb.sjsu.edu/research/Managerial-Segmentation-Service-Offerings-Work-Commuting
Keywords
Urban work commuting, Multivariate methodology, Market segmentation, Design of service offerings
Disciplines
Transportation
Recommended Citation
Steven Silver. "Managerial Segmentation of Service Offerings in Work Commuting, MTI Report WP 12-02" Mineta Transportation Institute (2015).
Research Brief