Latest on Marketing
The Power of a Smile: How Airbnb Hosts Can Boost Bookings with a Simple Gesture
Advertising and Politics in the US: When Political Ads Backfire
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Facebook vs. Malaria: How Social Media Campaigns Can Influence Public Health
Creating the Next Generation of Sustainable Marketers
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Research In Brief
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Pre-checked Boxes Make People Spend More, But These ‘Dark Defaults’ Risk Jeopardizing Consumer Trust
New Study Proposes Optimal Product Ranking Strategy for Online Platforms
Elon Musk and Twitter: How He's Turned X into a Free-for-All — and Here's the Proof
Marketing Faculty
CBS Faculty Research on Marketing
How Do Consumers React to Ads That Meddle in Out-Party Primaries?
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- July 4, 2024
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Consumer Research
In 2022, Democrats spent $53 million on ads helping far-right candidates win Republican primaries. Paying for ads that support far-right candidates, the reasoning went, could help Democrats win in the general elections because it is easier to beat extreme than moderate candidates. In the current research, we ask: how do consumers react to the use of “meddle ads”? On the one hand, because of rising levels of polarization, consumers might be accepting, or even supportive, of meddle ads.
Widespread misestimates of greenhouse gas emissions suggest low carbon competence
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- June 21, 2024
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Journal Article
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- Nature: Climate Change
As concern with climate change increases, people seek to behave and consume sustainably. This requires understanding which behaviors, firms and industries have the greatest impact on emissions. Here we ask if people are knowledgeable enough to make choices that align with growing sustainability intentions.
Detecting Routines: Applications to Ridesharing CRM
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- April 1, 2024
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Marketing Research
Routines shape many aspects of day-to-day consumption. While prior work has established the importance of habits in consumer behavior, little work has been done to understand the implications of routines — which we define as repeated behaviors with recurring, temporal structures — for customer management. One reason for this dearth is the difficulty of measuring routines from transaction data, particularly when routines vary substantially across customers. We propose a new approach for doing so, which we apply in the context of ridesharing.
Presenting balanced geoengineering information has little effect on mitigation engagement
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Christine Merk and Gernot Wagner
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- January 1, 2024
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Journal Article
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- Climatic Change
‘Moral hazard’ links geoengineering to mitigation via the fear that either solar geoengineering (solar radiation management, SRM) or carbon dioxide removal (CDR) might crowd out the desire to cut emissions. Fear of this crowding-out effect ranks among the most frequently cited risks of (solar) geoengineering. We here test moral hazard versus its inverse in a large-scale, revealed-preference experiment (n~340,000) on Facebook and find little to no support for either outcome. For the most part, talking about SRM or CDR does not motivate our study population to support a large U.S.
Automating the B2B Salesperson Pricing Decisions: A Human-Machine Hybrid Approach
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Yael Karlinsky-Shichor and Oded Netzer
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- January 1, 2024
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Journal Article
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- Marketing Science
Dark defaults: How choice architecture steers political campaign donations
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- September 26, 2023
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Journal Article
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- PNAS
In the months before the 2020 U.S. election, several political campaign websites added prechecked boxes (defaults), automatically making all donations into recurring weekly contributions unless donors unchecked them. Since these changes occurred at different times for different campaigns, we use a staggered difference-in-differences design to measure the causal effects of defaults on donors’ behavior. We estimate that defaults increased campaign donations by over $43 million while increasing requested refunds by almost $3 million.
AI’s Truth, Lies, and Ethos
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- July 19, 2023
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Newspaper/Magazine Article
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- Public Anthropologist
Nudging App Adoption: Choice Architecture Facilitates Consumer Uptake of Mobile Apps.
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- July 1, 2023
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Marketing
How can firms encourage consumers to adopt smartphone apps? The authors show that several inexpensive choice architecture techniques can make users more likely to enable important app features and complete app onboarding. In six preregistered experiments (n = 5,968) and a field experiment (n = 594,997), choice architecture interventions manipulating choice sequence, color, and wording of app adoption decisions dramatically increased app adoption. Across experiments, integrating multiple feature decisions into a single choice increased adoption.
Distance and Alternative Signals of Status: A Unifying Framework
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- July 1, 2023
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Journal Article
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- Journal of Consumer Research
In the past decades, as traditional luxury goods and conspicuous consumption have become more mainstream and lost some of their signaling value, new alternative signals of status (e.g., vintage, inconspicuous consumption, sustainable luxury) have progressively emerged. This research applies the grounded theory method to establish a novel framework that systematically unifies existing conceptualizations, findings, and observations on alternative signals of status.