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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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Latest on Marketing

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Marketing Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Marketing

A Bounded Rationality Model of Information Search and Choice in Preference Measurement

Authors
Cathy Yang, Olivier Toubia, and Martijn De Jong
Date
April 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

It is becoming increasingly easier for researchers and practitioners to collect eye tracking data during online preference measurement tasks. We develop a dynamic discrete choice model of information search and choice under bounded rationality, that we calibrate using a combination of eye-tracking and choice data. Our model extends the directed cognition model of Gabaix et al. (2006) by capturing fatigue, proximity effects, and imperfect memory encoding and by estimating individual-level parameters and partworths within a likelihood-based, hierarchical Bayesian framework.

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Standards of Practice for Ethnography in Industry

Authors
Allen Batteau and Robert Morais
Date
March 31, 2015
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
EPIC Perspectives

During the 2014 EPIC Conference, Allen Batteau and Robert J. Morais led a workshop entitled “Toward Conceptual, Methodological, and Ethical Standards of Practice in Business Anthropology.” This article summarizes the objectives and results of the workshop.

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The Long-Term Effect of Multichannel Usage on Sales

Authors
Tolga Bilgicer, Kamel Jedidi, Donald Lehmann, and Scott Neslin
Date
March 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Customer Needs and Solutions

The paper investigates the long-run consequences of multichannel shopping on customers' spending. Using data from a major US catalog company which introduced an online channel, our results validate previous findings that multichannel customers spend more than mono-channel customers in the short run. However, the difference in spending dissipates over time with multichannel customers reverting to their regular consumption pattern in 3 years.

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Using Single-Neuron Recording in Marketing: Opportunities, Challenges, and an Application to Fear Enhancement in Communications

Authors
Moran Cerf, Eric Greenleaf, Tom Meyvis, and Vicki Morwitz
Date
January 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

This article introduces the method of single-neuron recording in humans to marketing and consumer researchers. First, the authors provide a general description of this methodology, discuss its advantages and disadvantages, and describe findings from previous single-neuron human research. Second, they discuss the relevance of this method for marketing and consumer behavior and, more specifically, how it can be used to gain insights into the areas of categorization, sensory discrimination, reactions to novel versus familiar stimuli, and recall of experiences.

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From experiential psychology to consumer experience

Authors
Bernd Schmitt, J. Josko Brakus, and Lia Zarantonello
Date
January 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Psychology

We comment on Gilovich and colleagues' program of research on happiness resulting from experiential versus material purchases, and critique these authors' interpretation that people derive more happiness from experiences than from material possessions. Unlike goods, experiences cannot be purchased, and possessions versus experiences do not seem to form the endpoints of the same continuum.

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An Information Stock Model of Customer Behavior in Multichannel Customer Support Services

Authors
Kinshuk Jerath, Anuj Kumar, and Serguei Netessine
Date
January 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Manufacturing & Service Operations Management

We develop a model to understand and predict customers’ observed multichannel behavior in a customer support setting.

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Facebook as a Research Tool for the Social Sciences: Opportunities, Challenges, Ethical Considerations, and Practical Guidelines

Authors
M. Kosinski, Sandra Matz, Samuel Gosling, V. Popov, and D. Stillwell
Date
January 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Psychologist

Facebook is rapidly gaining recognition as a powerful research tool for the social sciences. It constitutes a large and diverse pool of participants, who can be selectively recruited for both online and offline studies. Additionally, it facilitates data collection by storing detailed records of its users' demographic profiles, social interactions, and behaviors. With participants' consent, these data can be recorded retrospectively in a convenient, accurate, and inexpensive way.

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The Future of Quantitative Marketing: Results of a Survey

Authors
Donald Lehmann, Oded Netzer, and Olivier Toubia
Date
January 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Customer Needs and Solutions

We report the results of a survey conducted in November 2014 in which 29 quantitative marketing scholars from around the world reflected on the present and future of their field. The survey focused on substantive areas, methods and tools, practical and managerial relevance, doctoral training, and promotion and tenure. The results of the survey revealed several general insights on the challenges and opportunities faced by the field of quantitative marketing research.

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The current state and future of brand experience

Authors
J. Josko Brakus, Bernd Schmitt, and Lia Zarantonello
Date
December 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Brand Management

The authors discuss the current state and future scenarios of brand experience — a new concept that they contributed to the brand management literature. Specifically, they present three research and practical trends, and marketing challenges: (i) the proliferation of settings and media that evoke brand experiences; (ii) the role of brands in consumption experiences; and (iii) the need of brand experiences to reach positive psychological outcomes.

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