Danış, Dilek GünneçRaghavan, S.2017-02-062017-02-062017-120011-7315http://hdl.handle.net/10679/4771https://doi.org/10.1111/deci.12246Accounting for social network effects in marketing strategies has become an important issue. Taking a step back, we seek to incorporate and analyze social network effects on new product development and then propose a model to engineer product diffusion over a social network. We build upon the share-of-choice (SOC) problem, which is a strategic combinatorial optimization problem used commonly as one of the methods to analyze conjoint analysis data by marketers in order to identify a product with largest market share, and show how to incorporate social network effects in the SOC problem. We construct a genetic algorithm to solve this computationally challenging (NP-Hard) problem and show that ignoring social network effects in the design phase results in a significantly lower market share for a product. In this setting, we introduce the secondary operational problem of determining the least expensive way of influencing individuals and strengthening product diffusion over a social network. This secondary problem is of independent interest, as it addresses contagion models and the issue of intervening in diffusion over a social network, which are of significant interest in marketing and epidemiological settings.engrestrictedAccessIntegrating social network effects in the share-of-choice problemarticle4861098113100041813270000310.1111/deci.12246Genetic algorithmMarketingOptimizationPeer InfluenceProduct designSocial networks2-s2.0-84992549051