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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

On the Experience and Engineering of Consumer Pride, Consumer Excitement, and Consumer Relaxation in the Marketplace

Authors
Michel Tuan Pham and Jennifer Sun
Date
March 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Retailing

This article presents new conceptual and managerial insights about consumer experiences of positive emotions in the marketplace and how to engineer these emotional experiences for business purposes. Specifically, we provide an in-depth conceptual analysis of three positive emotions that are of high relevance for marketers: (1) consumer pride, (2) consumer excitement, and (3) consumer relaxation.

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Branding in a Hyperconnected World: Refocusing Theories and Rethinking Boundaries

Authors
Vanitha Swaminathan, Alina Sorescu, Jan-Benedict E.M. Steenkamp, Thomas Clayton Gibson O'Guinn, and Bernd Schmitt
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing

Technological advances have resulted in a hyperconnected world, requiring a reassessment of branding research from the perspectives of firms, consumers, and society. Brands are shifting away from single ownership to shared ownership, as heightened access to information and people is allowing more stakeholders to cocreate brand meanings and experiences alongside traditional brand owners and managers.

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Modeling Dynamic Heterogeneity Using Gaussian Processes

Authors
Ryan Dew, Yang Li, and Asim Ansari
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

Marketing research relies on individual-level estimates to understand the rich heterogeneity of consumers, firms, and products. While much of the literature focuses on capturing static cross-sectional heterogeneity, little research has been done on modeling dynamic heterogeneity, or the heterogeneous evolution of individual-level model parameters. In this work, the authors propose a novel framework for capturing the dynamics of heterogeneity, using individual-level, latent, Bayesian nonparametric Gaussian processes.

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The Smartphone as a Pacifying Technology

Authors
Shiri Melumad and Michel Tuan Pham
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Journal of Consumer Research

In light of consumers’ growing dependence on their smartphones, this article investigates the nature of the relationship that consumers form with their smartphone and its underlying mechanisms. We propose that in addition to obvious functional benefits, consumers in fact derive emotional benefits from their smartphone—in particular, feelings of psychological comfort and, if needed, actual stress relief. In other words, in a sense, smartphones are not unlike adult pacifiers.

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Inspiring Brand Positionings with Mixed Qualitative Methods: A Case of Pet Food

Authors
Robert Morais
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Business Anthropology

Qualitative research is often used by marketers to develop new brand positionings. This case illustrates how two sequentially applied qualitative approaches were used to generate positionings for a pet food brand. The methods included psychologically oriented focus groups and anthropologically informed ethnographies. When implemented independently by a single market research company, the two approaches inspired highly distinctive brand positionings.

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Rethinking Design Thinking

Authors
Robert Morais
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Medium

This article starts with the premise that while Design Thinking has value, there are yawning gaps in the research components of the process. More disciplined research will enable design thinkers to create better, more human-centered designs.

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Search Query Formation by Strategic Consumers

Authors
Jia Liu and Olivier Toubia
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Quantitative Marketing and Economics

Submitting queries to search engines has become a major way for consumers to search for information and products. The massive amount of search query data available today has the potential to provide valuable information on consumer preferences. In order to unlock this potential, it is necessary to understand how consumers translate their preferences into search queries. Strategic consumers should attempt to maximize the information content of the search results, conditional on a set of beliefs on how the search engine operates.

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Uniting the Tribes: Using Text for Marketing Insights

Authors
Jonah Berger, Ashlee Humphreys, Stephan Ludwig, Wendy Moe, Oded Netzer, and David Schweidel
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing

Words are part of almost every marketplace interaction. Online reviews, customer service calls, press releases, marketing communications, and other interactions create a wealth of textual data. But how can marketers best use such data? This article provides an overview of automated textual analysis and details how it can be used to generate marketing insights. The authors discuss how text reflects qualities of the text producer (and the context in which the text was produced) and impacts the audience or text recipient.

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Multiperiod Contracting and Salesperson Effort Profiles: The Optimality of "Hockey Stick," "Giving Up" and "Resting on Laurels"

Authors
Kinshuk Jerath and Fei Long
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

We study multi-period sales-force incentive contracting where salespeople can engage in effort gaming, a phenomenon that has extensive empirical support. Focusing on a repeated moral hazard scenario with two independent periods and a risk-neutral agent with limited liability, we conduct a theoretical investigation to understand which effort profiles the firm can expect under the optimal contract.

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