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Marketing

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Marketing Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Marketing Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Marketing

Idea Generation, Creativity, and Prototypicality

Authors
Olivier Toubia and Oded Netzer
Date
January 1, 2017
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Marketing Science

In this paper we show how simple text mining and semantic network analysis may be used to (i) improve our theoretical understanding of idea generation, (ii) help people improve the creativity of their ideas. From a theoretical perspective, we contribute to the cognitive idea generation literature by establishing a link between the set of concepts used to form an idea and the creativity of the idea. Each idea contains a subset of the semantic network of concepts related to the topic.

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Marketing and Personality

Authors
Sandra Matz and Jacob B. Hirsh
Date
January 1, 2017
Format
Chapter
Book
The Wiley Encyclopedia of Personality and Individual Differences
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Psychological Targeting as an Effective Approach to Digital Mass Persuasion

Authors
Sandra Matz, M. Kosinski, G. Nave, and D. Stillwell
Date
January 1, 2017
Format
Journal Article
Journal
PNAS

People are exposed to persuasive communication across many different contexts: Governments, companies, and political parties use persuasive appeals to encourage people to eat healthier, purchase a particular product, or vote for a specific candidate. Laboratory studies show that such persuasive appeals are more effective in influencing behavior when they are tailored to individuals' unique psychological characteristics. However, the investigation of large-scale psychological persuasion in the real world has been hindered by the questionnaire-based nature of psychological assessment.

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The Relationship between Consumer Shopping Stress and Purchase Abandonment in Task-Oriented and Recreation-Oriented Consumers

Authors
Carmen-Maria Albrecht, Stefan Hattula, and Donald Lehmann
Date
January 1, 2017
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science

Shopping is sometimes a source of stress, leading to avoidance coping behavior by consumers. Prior research suggests that store-induced stress makes shopping an adverse experience and thus negatively affects consumers' purchase likelihood. We propose that consumers' response to shopping stress depends on their motivational orientation. The greater the in-store stress, the more likely task-oriented consumers are to abandon the trip without making purchases. However, recreation-oriented consumers will be, up to a point, less likely to end the trip.

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Can a Toy Encourage Lower Calorie Meal Bundle Selection in Children? A Field Experiment on the Reinforcing Effects of Toys on Food Choice

Authors
Martin Reimann and Kristen Lane
Date
January 1, 2017
Format
Journal Article
Journal
PLOS ONE
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Ethics in the Anthropology of Business

Authors
Timothy de Waal Malefyt and Robert Morais
Date
January 1, 2017
Format
Book
Publisher
Routledge

Ethics in business is a major topic both in the social sciences and in business itself. Anthropologists, long attendant to the intersection of ethics and practice, are particularly well suited to offer vital insights on the subject.

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How Word-of-Mouth Transmission Encouragement Affects Consumers' Transmission Decisions, Receiver Selection, and Diffusion Speed

Authors
Andrew T. Stephen and Donald Lehmann
Date
December 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
International Journal of Research in Marketing

This research considers how marketers can encourage or 'nudge' consumers to transmit word of mouth (WOM), such as referrals or recommendations to friends, in a manner that helps reach, inform, or influence large numbers of consumers quickly, which is an outcome referred to as faster diffusion. Building on studies showing diffusion is faster when higher-connectivity people are involved; the authors propose a mechanism based on network externalities that encourages regular customers to select receivers who have higher levels of social connectivity.

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Functional Alibi

Authors
Anat Keinan, Ran Kivetz, and Oded Netzer
Date
October 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Academy of Consumer Research
Spending money on hedonic luxuries often seems wasteful, irrational, and even immoral. We propose that adding a small utilitarian feature to a luxury product can serve as a <em>functional alibi</em>, justifying the indulgent purchase and reducing indulgence guilt. We demonstrate that consumers tend to inflate the value, and usage frequency, of utilitarian features when they are attached to hedonic luxuries.
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Saving the Masses: The Impact of Perceived Efficacy on Charitable Giving to Single vs. Multiple Beneficiaries

Authors
Eesha Sharma and Vicki Morwitz
Date
July 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes

People are more generous toward single than toward multiple beneficiaries, and encouraging greater giving to multiple targets is challenging. We identify one factor, perceived efficacy, which enhances generosity toward multiple beneficiaries. We investigate relationships between perceived self-efficacy (believing one can take steps to make an impact), response efficacy (believing those steps will be effective), and charitable giving.

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