Latest on Marketing
Marketing Faculty
CBS Faculty Research on Marketing
Linking Customer Assets to Financial Performance
- Authors
- Date
- August 1, 2002
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Service Research
As more firms adopt a customer asset management approach to their business, it has become increasingly important to understand how customer management efforts relate to the financial performance of the firm. Of specific interest to shareholders is the relationship between traditional financial measures and customer-centric measures. The customer-centric measure that has received the most attention is customer lifetime value (CLV).
Search and Alignment in Judgment Revision: Implications for Brand Positioning
- Authors
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Michel Tuan Pham and A. Muthukirishnan
- Date
- April 1, 2002
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Marketing Research
This article proposes a model of judgment revision, which posits that counterattitudinal challenges to a brand initially trigger a memory search for proattitudinal information about this brand. The proattitudinal information accessible from memory is then aligned with information contained in the challenge in order to assess the diagnosticity of the challenge, that is, how much it "damages" the retrieved brand information. If the challenge is not perceived to be diagnostic, the retrieved brand information is used to defend the previous attitudinal position.
A Meta-analysis of the Impact of Price Presentation on Perceived Savings
- Authors
- Date
- January 1, 2002
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Retailing
Pricing is one of the most crucial determinants of sales. Besides the actual price, how the price offering is presented to consumers also affects consumer evaluation of the product offering. Many studies focus on "price framing," i.e., how the offer is communicated to the consumer?is the offered price given along with a reference price, is the reference price plausible, is a price deal communicated in dollar or percentage terms. Other studies focus on "situational effects," e.g., is the evaluation for a national brand or a private brand, is it within a discount store or a specialty store.
Temporal Differentiation and the Market for Second Opinions
- Authors
- Date
- January 1, 2002
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Marketing Research
The author studies the pricing of information with private value (e.g., management consulting, legal advice, medical diagnosis). Anecdotal evidence shows that in some of these markets, competing information sellers split the business to sell only first or second opinions to their customers. The author explains this pricing practice by showing that second-opinion markets are a result of temporal differentiation.
Macroeconomic Determinants of Consumer Price Knowledge: A Meta-Analysis of Four Decades of Research
- Authors
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Donald Lehmann and Alfred Holden
- Date
- December 1, 2001
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- International Journal of Research in Marketing
For the past four decades, dozens of researchers have studied consumer price knowledge, often with disagreements on the extent of consumer' ignorance about prices. While some of these disagreements have been attributed to research design variations among studies, no inquiry has yet been made on the role of the economic environment on consumer price knowledge. Nevertheless, environmental factors such as interest rates, unemployment, and economic growth may significantly influence consumers' knowledge of prices.
Affect Monitoring and the Primacy of Feelings in Judgment
- Authors
- Date
- September 1, 2001
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Consumer Research
Multidisciplinary evidence suggests that people often make evaluative judgments by monitoring their feelings toward the target. This article examines, in the context of moderately complex and consciously accessible stimuli, the judgmental properties of consciously monitored feelings.
Brand Custodianship: A New Primer for Senior Managers
- Authors
- Date
- August 8, 2001
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- European Management Journal
Traditionally the management of brands has been entrusted to middle management. However, it is becoming increasingly apparent that brands are of such critical strategic importance, that they are more appropriately placed under the direct responsibility of senior management. Indeed, we believe that senior managers should act as brand custodians. For this new responsibility, senior managers need integrative overviews of brands and their management.
Strategic Management of Expectations: The Role of Disconfirmation Sensitivity and Perfectionism
- Authors
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Praveen Kopalle and Donald Lehmann
- Date
- August 1, 2001
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Marketing Research
The authors suggest that people strategically manage—specifically, lower—their expectations to increase future satisfaction. Consumers who are more disconfirmation sensitive, that is, those who are more satisfied (dissatisfied) when a product performs better (worse) than expected, are hypothesized to have lower expectations. In contrast, the authors expect that consumers who are perfectionists will have higher expectations than those who are not. Results from a laboratory experiment and a field study are consistent with the hypotheses.