麻豆淫院


Shoppers' Spending Habits Follow Well-Known Economic Law

An am/pm store in Osaka City, Japan.
An am/pm store in Osaka City, Japan.

By analyzing 100 million receipts from 1,000 Japanese am/pm convenience stores, researchers have discovered a strong economic inequality among shoppers. Among their findings is that the top 25% and 2% of the customers in a given group account for 80% and 25% of the store鈥檚 sales, respectively.

The researchers, Takayuki Mizuno from Hitotsubashi University, and Masahiro Toriyama, Takao Terano, and Misako Takayasu from the Tokyo Institute of Technology, performed the 鈥渆conophysics鈥 study, the first to use a large, recently published point-of-sale (POS) database to analyze individual shopping habits. They presented their results at the APFA6 international conference, and have submitted their study to the Proceedings of the APFA6.

鈥淭he data we analyzed from 100 million receipts is much larger than the data in previous similar studies in the marketing field,鈥 Mizuno told 麻豆淫院Org.com. 鈥淲e scientifically studied the inequality of wealth distribution by using results with high statistical precision.鈥

One question the researchers investigated was how much a store鈥檚 sales depend on a few loyal customers. They analyzed data from customers who paid with an Edy card (a pre-paid card with a unique ID), used on about 5% of the receipts.

The researchers observed the 80/20 rule: about 80% of the store鈥檚 sales come from about 20% of its customers. The observation is not too surprising, as the so-called 鈥淧areto principle鈥 has been observed in a wide variety of economic phenomena, such as wealth distribution (20% of a nation鈥檚 citizens own 80% of its wealth). The principle has also become a rule of thumb for business owners trying to maximize profits by focusing on that high-spending 20% of the customers.

Using this data, the researchers were also able to determine the inequality of wealth distribution, which stems from the 鈥淕ini coefficient.鈥 An equal wealth distribution would relate to a coefficient of zero, and if one person were to purchase everything, the coefficient would be one. In a market economy, the coefficient is usually less than 0.4; in the convenience store data, the estimated coefficient was 0.7, implying significant inequality in the store鈥檚 sales.

鈥淲e think that the inequality of wealth distribution is representative of the larger society,鈥 Mizuno explained. 鈥淲hen Sega Corporation introduced the Edy into game arcades, similar wealth distribution was observed in the game arcades. Also, when we conducted hearing investigations with employees of convenience stores, many thought that most customers have similar buying behaviors and that the wealth distribution doesn鈥檛 have a fat-tail. Therefore, they were surprised at this research result.鈥

The researchers also analyzed an individual鈥檚 spending amount in a single shopping trip, and found that this expenditure follows a power law. Specifically, for receipt totals above about 100 yen (about US $0.86), the probability of an individual spending more yen decreases following a power function. This probability is independent of the store location, shopper鈥檚 age, and time of day.

The researchers hope that the results may assist convenience store chains in developing marketing strategies aimed at the high-spending shoppers who contribute significantly to a store鈥檚 sales.

鈥淲hen a product that a customer needs is out of stock in a store, the customer often stops going to the store in the future,鈥 Mizuno explained. 鈥淐onversely, when there are products that a new visitor needs, the store can get new regular customers. It is important that sellers always display products that the high-spending shoppers always buy. They can execute this strategy by using the purchase history that can be observed from Edy-IDs.鈥

More information: Mizuno, Takayuki, Toriyama, Masahiro, Terano, Takao, and Takayasu, Misako. 鈥淧areto law of the expenditure of a person in convenience stores.鈥 arXiv:0710.1432v1, 7 Oct 2007.

Copyright 2007 麻豆淫院Org.com.
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or part without the express written permission of 麻豆淫院Org.com.

Citation: Shoppers' Spending Habits Follow Well-Known Economic Law (2007, October 26) retrieved 9 June 2025 from /news/2007-10-shoppers-habits-well-known-economic-law.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Wolves reintroduced to Isle Royale temporarily affect other carnivores, humans have influence as well

0 shares

Feedback to editors