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Decision Making & Negotiations

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Decision Making & Negotiations Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Decision Making & Negotiations

Decision Making & Negotiations Research

Extracting Features of Entertainment Products: A Guided Latent Dirichlet Allocation Approach Informed by the Psychology of Media Consumption

Authors
Olivier Toubia, Garud Iyengar, Renee Bunnell, and Alain Lemaire
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

The authors propose a quantitative approach for describing entertainment products, in a way that allows for improving the predictive performance of consumer choice models for these products. Their approach is based on the media psychology literature, which suggests that people’s consumption of entertainment products is influenced by the psychological themes featured in these products. They classify psychological themes on the basis of the “character strengths” taxonomy from the positive psychology literature (Peterson and Seligman 2004).

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Sensory Variety in Shape and Color Influences Fruit and Vegetable Intake, Liking, and Purchase Intentions in Some Subsets of Adults: A Randomized Pilot Experiment

Authors
Maya Vadiveloo, Ludovica Principato, Christina Roberto, Vicki Morwitz, and Josiemer Mattei
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Food Quality and Preference

Dietary variety increases food intake, but it is unclear if sensory differences elicit increases in eating-related behaviors. Using a 4×3 between-subject pilot experiment, we examined if increasing sensory variety (control, color, shape, both color and shape) and priming individuals to notice differences or similarities in the foods (positive, neutral, negative) influenced ad libitum proximal intake, liking, and willingness to purchase pears and peppers among 164 Greater Boston adults >18y/o.

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Media and Digital Management

Authors
Eli Noam
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Book
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan

Being a successful manager or entrepreneur in the media and digital sector requires creativity, innovation, and performance. It also requires an understanding of the principles and tools of management. Aimed at the college market, this book is a short, foundational volume on media management. It summarizes the major dimensions of a business school curriculum and applies them to the entire media, media-tech, and digital sector. Its chapters cover—in a jargonless, non-technical way—the major functions of management.

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Contracting in Medical Equipment Maintenance Services: An Empirical Investigation

Authors
Tian Chan, Francis de Vericourt, and Omar Besbes
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

Maintenance service plans (MSPs) are contracts for the provision of maintenance by a service provider to an equipment operator. These plans can have different payment structures and risk allocations, which induce various types of incentives for agents in the service chain. How do such structures affect service performance and service chain value? We provide an empirical answer to this question by using a unique panel data covering the sales and service records of more than 700 diagnostic body scanners.

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You Don't Blow Your Diet on Twinkies: Choice Processes When Choice Options Conflict with Incidental Goals

Authors
Kelly Goldsmith, Elizabeth Friedman, and Ravi Dhar
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of the Association for Consumer Research

Consumers often have multiple goals that are active simultaneously and make choices to satisfy those goals. However, no work to date has studied how people choose when all available options serve a goal (e.g., a choice-set goal) that conflicts with another goal they hold (e.g., an incidental goal). We demonstrate that in such contexts, consumers are more likely to choose the option that is most instrumental for attaining the choice-set goal, even when that option poses the greatest violation of the incidental goal.

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Personalizing the Customization Experience: A Matching Theory of Mass Customization Interfaces and Cultural Information Processing

Authors
Emanuel de Bellis, Claudius Hildebrand, K. Ito, A. Herrmann, and Bernd Schmitt
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

Mass customization interfaces typically guide consumers through the configuration process in a sequential manner, focusing on one product attribute after the other. What if this standardized customization experience were personalized for consumers on the basis of how they process information? A series of large-scale field and experimental studies, conducted with Western and Eastern consumers, shows that matching the interface to consumers’ culture-specific processing style enhances the effectiveness of mass customization.

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Salesforce Contracting Under Uncertain Demand and Supply: Double Moral Hazard and Optimality of Smooth Contracts

Authors
Tinglong Dai and Kinshuk Jerath
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Marketing Science

We consider the compensation design problem of a firm that hires a salesperson to exert effort to increase demand. We assume both demand and supply to be uncertain with sales being the smaller of demand and supply and assume that, if demand exceeds supply, then unmet demand is unobservable (demand censoring).

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The Joint Impact of Revenue-Based Loyalty Program and Promotions on Consumer Purchase Behaviors

Authors
Jia Liu, Asim Ansari, and Leonard Lee
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Working Paper
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Generational Differences in Managing Personal Finances

Authors
Bruce Carlin, Arna Olafsson, and Michaela Pagel
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
AEA Papers and Proceedings

In this article, we provide a descriptive account of how people from different generations vary in their use of financial management technology, their access credit markets, and how they finance consumption and incur financial costs and penalties. We use a detailed panel of transaction-level data from Iceland on individual spending, incomes, balances, and credit limits from a personal financial management software. We find that technology adoption is faster for millennials, but use of consumer credit and financial penalties are higher for older generations.

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