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Pricing segmentation and MBA course choice

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conference contribution
posted on 2002-01-01, 00:00 authored by Pauline Hagel, Robin Shaw
The consensus from studies of the price-demand relationship for higher education is that this relationship is negative but small. This paper investigates the circumstances in which demand for an MBA is positive to price increases. A survey of currently enrolled MBA students, and prospective MBA students, found that most students displayed the expected price elasticity in a conjoint analysis of hypothetical MBA course ratings. However, 12 per cent of respondents exhibited “reversal” behaviour regarding price. Profiling these respondents using discriminant analysis suggested that “reversals” seemed prepared to pay more for a course at a high prestige university, if they could study off-campus using print-based materials.

History

Pagination

3341 - 3347

Location

Melbourne, Victoria

Open access

  • Yes

Start date

2002-12-02

End date

2002-12-04

ISBN-13

9780730025627

ISBN-10

0730025624

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2002, The authors

Editor/Contributor(s)

R Shaw, S Adam, H McDonald

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