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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

Veblen Effects in a Theory of Conspicuous Consumption

Authors
Laurie Simon Hodrick and B. Douglas Bernheim
Date
January 1, 1996
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Economic Review

We examine conditions under which "Veblen effects" arise from the desire to achieve social status by signaling wealth through conspicuous consumption. While Veblen effects cannot ordinarily arise when preferences satisfy a "single-crossing property," they may emerge when this property fails. In that case, "budget" brands are priced at marginal cost, while "luxury" brands, though not intrinsically superior, are sold at higher prices to consumers seeking to advertise wealth.

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Heuristiques et Biais Decisionnels en Marketing

Authors
Michel Tuan Pham
Date
January 1, 1996
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Recherche et Applications en Marketing

Classical economic theory mainly examines decision making from a normative perspective. Social and cognitive psychology's view of decision making is more descriptive. This article presents a structured synthesis of a third stream of research, which intersects economics and psyhology, and is known as Behavioral Decision Theory. This stream of research shows that decision makers often deviate from prescritive norms. This article explains why such deviations occur and what they imply for marketing.

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Reasons for Substantial Delay in Consumer Decision-Making

Authors
Eric Greenleaf and Donald Lehmann
Date
September 1, 1995
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

This study proposes a typology of reasons why people substantially delay important consumer decisions The delay reasons we study are drawn from delay typologies identified in other contexts as well as from the product diffusion literature. Two studies reported here examine why subjects delay consumer decisions. These support most of the reasons in the proposed typology, while some unanticipated delay reasons also emerge.

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When Does Advertising Have an Impact? A Study of Tracking Data

Authors
Rajeev Batra, Donald Lehmann, Joanne Burke, and Jae H. Pae
Date
September 1, 1995
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Advertising Research

This paper attempts to find characteristics of product categories, brands, and ad copy that lead to either increased or decreased effectiveness of advertising spending on ad awareness, brand awareness, or purchase intentions, as measured through tracking data.

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The Effects of Advertised and Observed Quality on Expectations About New Product Quality

Authors
Praveen Kopalle and Donald Lehmann
Date
August 1, 1995
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

The authors describe a model of the effects of advertised and observed quality on consumer expectations about new product quality. They test the model using data from two computer-controlled shopping experiments. In both studies, quadratic and gamma specifications for the effect of advertising claim discrepancy on expectation change fit better than a linear model. Furthermore, the adaptive expectations framework describes the updating of consumer expectations when the consumer observes the quality of the new product.

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The Impact of Bundle Type Price Framing and Familiarity on Evaluation of the Bundle

Authors
Bari Harlam, Aradhna Krishna, Donald Lehmann, and Carl Mela
Date
May 1, 1995
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Business Research

Bundling of products is very prevalent in the marketplace. For example, travel packages include airfare, lodging, and a rental car. Considerable economic research has focused on the change in profits and consumer surplus that ensues if bundles are offered. There is relatively little research in marketing that deals with bundling, however. In this article we concentrate on some tactical issues of bundling, such as which types of products should be bundled, what price one can charge for the bundle, and how the price of the bundle should be presented to consumers to improve purchase intent.

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Using Fuzzy Set Theoretic Techniques to Identify Preference Rules from Interactions in the Linear Model: An Empirical Study

Authors
Carl Mela and Donald Lehmann
Date
April 28, 1995
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Fuzzy Sets and Systems

This paper seeks to establish a parametric linkage between fuzzy set theoretic techniques and commonly used preference formation rules in psychology and marketing. Such a linkage helps to benefit both fields. We accomplish this objective by using a linear model with interaction term which nests many common preference protocols; conjunction (fuzzy and), disjunction (fuzzy or), counterbalance (fuzzy xor) and linear compensatory.

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Empirical Marketing Generalization Using Meta-analysis

Authors
John Farley, Donald Lehmann, and Alan Sawyer
Date
January 1, 1995
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Marketing Science

A decade of work in marketing meta-analysis has produced empirical generalizations concerning parameters in models of advertising, price, diffusion, and consumer behavior. Results from these meta-analyses should replace the now discredited zero null hypotheses of such parameters in future work. Probably more important than nonzero "grand mean" average effects is an approach called Parametric Adjustability, which provides estimated parameter values for specific conditions reflecting markets and research technologies.

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A Note on Typicality and Utility

Authors
Miklos Sarvary
Date
January 1, 1995
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Hungarian Economic Review
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