Michel Wedel | |
Birth Place: | The Hague, Netherlands |
Nationality: | Netherlands and United States |
Pepsico Chaired Professor of Consumer Science | |
Discipline: | Statistics, Marketing |
Education: | Leiden University, Wageningen University |
Thesis Title: | Clusterwise Regression and Market Segmentation |
Thesis Year: | 1990 |
Known For: | Market Segmentation, Eye Tracking |
Occupation: | Professor |
Michel Wedel is the PepsiCo Chaired Professor of Consumer Science in the Robert H. Smith School of Business, and a Distinguished University Professor, at the University of Maryland, College Park. He works on the development of statistical and econometric methods to analyze and predict consumer behavior, in addition to market segmentation[1] and eye tracking research.[2]
Wedel holds an MS.C. in biomathematics[3] from the University of Leiden. He has a Ph.D. in marketing from Wageningen University.[4]
Wedel develops statistical and econometric methods for research in marketing, and applies these methods to support firms' decision-making. He has worked in the areas of market segmentation,[5] advertising[6] and promotions,[7] visual marketing,[8] multidimensional scaling,[9] conjoint analysis,[10] and big data analytics.[11]
From 1982-1991, Wedel was employed at the Department of Human Nutrition, of the Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research (TNO), in Zeist, the Netherlands, where he was head of the statistics unit in the Department of Human Nutrition. In 1991, he became Professor of Marketing Research and Market Structure Analysis, Department of Economics, University of Groningen, The Netherlands, where he worked until 2002. In 2003 Wedel was appointed as the Dwight F. Benton Professor of Marketing at the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA.[12] In 2006 he moved to the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland, where he became the Pepsico Chaired Professor of Consumer Science. Wedel has had visiting positions at the University of Michigan, the University of Groningen, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, the University of New South Wales, and currently holds the Henri Theil Visiting Chair in Marketing and Econometrics, at the Econometric Institute of Erasmus University in the Netherlands.[13]
Wedel received the Dr. Hendrik Muller Prize from the Royal Dutch Academy of the Sciences for contributions to the social sciences,[14] the Charles C. Parlin award for contributions to marketing research,[15] the Gilbert A. Churchill Award for lifetime contributions to the study of marketing research,[16] the Robert J Lavidge Global Marketing Research Award,[17] the Irwin-McGraw-Hill Distinguished Marketing Educator Award,[18] and the Paul D. Converse award for outstanding contributions to the science of marketing,[19] all from the American Marketing Association.He received the Buck Weaver Award for excellence in rigor and relevance in marketing science from INFORMS.[20] He is a fellow of the American Marketing Association,[21] the American Statistical Association[22] and the Institute for Operations Research and Management Science, Society for Marketing Science.[23] The University of Groningen awarded him the 2019 Ubbo Emmius Medal,[24] the University of Maryland has recognized him with the Distinguished Scholar Teacher Award[25] and named him a Distinguished University Professor.[26] Wedel was ranked the number one marketing scholar in the world by Duke University, drawing upon a number of publications,[27] third marketing scholar in the world by volume of publications,[28] the number one economist in the Netherlands,[29] and number one Netherlands marketing scholar based on number of publications.[30]
Wedel holds a 5th dan[31] in Kyokushin Karate and was a heavy-weight full contact karate competitor. He won the Dutch (open) full contact Karate championships nine times between 1978 and 1987. His only loss was to Gerard Gordeau (Netherlands) in the final in 1980.[32] Wedel won the International Ibusz Oyama cup in Budapest (Hungary) in 1982 after beating Michael Thompson (England), won the open European Karate Championships in Alkmaar (Netherlands) in 1983 after beating Flemming Jinzen (Denmark). In 1985 he became second after losing to Andy Hug (Switzerland) in the Ibusz Oyama cup. He reclaimed that cup in 1986 after beating Gabor Peko (Hungary).[33] He became the European heavyweight champion in Katowice (Poland) in 1987, after beating Michael Thompson (England) in the final.[34] In 1986, together with Peter Smit, he participated in the 18th All Japan Tournament in Tokyo, where he was disqualified after beating Shinichi Sotodate (Japan). He participated in the 2nd (1979), 3rd (1983) and 4th (1987) World Open Karate Championships in Japan. In 1979 he was disqualified against Gary Klugiewicz (US). He lost to Akira Masuda (Japan) in 1983 and he lost to Ademir da Costa (Brazil) in 1987; finishing both times among the first 16 competitors.[35] Out of his last 25 fights, Wedel lost one, was disqualified in one, won one by decision and won 22 by knock-out.
Wedel became the coach of the Dutch National Karate team (1988-1991).[36] He wrote the book: “Kyokushin Karate: Training and Fighting” with Koen Scharrenberg,[37] and made Kyokushin training instruction videos with Andy Hug.[38] In 1994, he joined the democratic ShinKyokushin organization[39] under leadership of Kenji Midori.