Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
480257 European Journal of Operational Research 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

When an organization decides on which groups of consumers it should target, the locations of these target consumers often play a role. Methods from the field of market segmentation are able to identify target groups with high benefit levels, but the expected costs of supplying products to the target groups are less well understood. These costs can play a large role if the locations of the customers, the demand locations, are geographically widely dispersed. This paper focuses on one-to-many distribution systems in which a central facility serves all demand points. We derive accurate logistics cost estimates from the dispersion of demand points for such systems, enabling a comparison of the expected logistics costs of different candidate target groups. The most accurate measure combines the average distance from the demand locations to a central location and the mutual distances between neighboring demand locations. The average of the distances between all pairs of locations forms a good alternative measure.

► Geographically dispersed target groups of consumers may be too costly to serve. ► Often, one can limit the logistics costs by limiting transportation distances. ► We use analytical distances estimations from the field of continuous approximation. ► We show that refined measures based on these results are the most accurate. ► An accurate measure for practical use is the average distance between all locations.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
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