Importance-Performance Analysis
Importance-Performance Analysis (IPA) is a simple, durable diagnostic for deciding where to focus improvement effort by combining how much customers care about each attribute with how well the offering performs on it. John Martilla and John James introduced it in a 1977 Journal of Marketing note, using automobile-dealer service data to show that satisfaction depends jointly on the salience of attributes and judgments of actual performance. The technique plots each attribute as a point on a two-dimensional grid — importance on one axis, performance on the other — divided into four quadrants by crosshairs, and reads off a managerial action for each quadrant. The headline insight is that high-importance, low-performance attributes are where to 'concentrate here,' while resources poured into low-importance, high-performance attributes represent 'possible overkill.' Because it rests on a clear conceptual link between salient-attribute importance and performance, IPA pairs naturally with structured customer-needs work such as the Voice of the Customer. Its visual action grid makes priorities legible to managers without statistical training, which is why it has spread far beyond its original marketing context.
Bronrecord
Citaten letterlijk overgenomen uit het bronrecord van de methode. Hieruit wordt geen verificatie op claimniveau afgeleid.
- Martilla, J. A., & James, J. C. (1977). Importance-Performance Analysis. Journal of Marketing, 41(1), 77-79. · DOI 10.1177/002224297704100112
- Griffin, A., & Hauser, J. R. (1993). The Voice of the Customer. Marketing Science, 12(1), 1-27. · DOI 10.1287/mksc.12.1.1
Gecureerde claims
Claims opgeslagen in het bewijsregister, elk met zijn eigen beoordeling.
Deze weergave verzint geen claimbeoordeling als het register er geen heeft.
Gerelateerde methoden
Gegenereerd uit de methodegraaf en getoond als machinaal voorgestelde relaties — er wordt geen bewijsclaim afgeleid.