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Strategy

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Strategy Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Strategy Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Strategy

Capacitated multi-item inventory systems with random and seasonally fluctuating demands: Implications for postponement strategies

Authors
Yossi Aviv and Awi Federgruen
Date
April 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

We address multi-item inventory systems with random and seasonally fluctuating, and possibly correlated, demands. The items are produced in two stages, each with its own lead-time; in the first stage a common intermediate product is manufactured. The production volumes in the first stage are bounded by given capacity liits. We develop an accurate lower bound and close-to-optimal heuristic strategies of simple structure. The gap between them, evaluated in an extensive numerical study, is on average only 0.45%.

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Ratio Analysis and Equity Valuation: From Research to Practice

Authors
Doron Nissim and Stephen Penman
Date
March 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Accounting Studies

Financial statement analysis has traditionally been seen as part of the fundamental analysis required for equity valuation. But the analysis has typically been ad hoc. Drawing on recent research on accounting-based valuation, this paper outlines a financial statement analysis for use in equity valuation. Standard profitability analysis is incorporated, and extended, and is complemented with an analysis of growth. An analysis of operating activities is distinguished from the analysis of financing activities. The perspective is one of forecasting payoffs to equities.

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What Is It? Categorization Flexibility and Consumers' Responses to Really New Products

Authors
C. Moreau, Arthur Markman, and Donald Lehmann
Date
March 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

To understand really new products, consumers face the challenge of constructing new knowledge structures rather simply changing existing ones. Recent research in categorization suggests that one strategy for creating representations for these new products is to use information already contained in familiar product categories. While knowledge from multiple existing categories may be relevant, little research has examined how (and if) consumers process information drawn from more than one domain.

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Beyond the Obvious: Chronic Imagery Vividness and Decision Making

Authors
Michel Tuan Pham, Tom Meyvis, and Rongrong Zhou
Date
March 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes

The authors investigate two competing hypotheses about how chronic vividness of imagery interacts with the vividness and salience of information in decision making. Results from four studies, covering a variety of decision domains, indicate that chronic imagery vividness rarely amplifies the effects of vivid and salient information. Imagery vividness may, in fact, attenuate the effects of vivid and salient information. This is because, relative to nonvivid imagers, vivid imagers rely less on information that appears obvious and rely more on information that seems less obvious.

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Market Prominence Biases in Sponsor Identification: Processes and Consequentiality

Authors
Michel Tuan Pham and Gita Johar
Date
February 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Psychology and Marketing

It has been recently suggested that sponsor identification may be biased in favor of prominent brands. All things equal, consumers are more likely to attribute sponsorship to brands that they perceive to be more prominent in the marketplace, such as large-share brands. This article offers additional empirical evidence for this phenomenon and examines the underlying processes. The results of a controlled laboratory experiment replicate the phenomenon and show that this bias arises only when consumers are unable to retrieve the name of the sponsor directly from memory.

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The Idea Itself and the Circumstances of Its Emergence as Predictors of New Product Success

Authors
Jacob Goldenberg, Donald Lehmann, and David Mazursky
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

In view of the distressingly low rate of success in new product introduction, it is important to identify predictive guidelines early in the new product development process so that better choices can be made and unnecessary costs avoided. In this paper, a framework for early analysis based on the success potential embodied in the product-idea itself and the circumstances of its emergence. Based on two studies reporting actual introductions, several determinants are identified that significantly distinguish successful from unsuccessful new products in the marketplace.

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The Important Role of Meta-analysis in International Research in Marketing

Authors
John Farley and Donald Lehmann
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
International Marketing Review

This paper considers the current thrust in marketing to create global products, brands and strategies but also to "act local" when appropriate. Deciding which elements have similar effects and which are significantly different conceptually requires meta-analysis of each of the elements. Reviews some applications of marketing meta-analysis with a focus on international research.

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The Impact of Research Design on Consumer Price-Recall Accuracy: An Integrative Review

Authors
Donald Lehmann
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science

For almost half a century, researchers have examined consumer knowledge of prices, often with disturbing and conflicting results. Although the general findings suggest that consumer knowledge of prices is poorer than assumed in neoclassical economic theory, significant variations among results exist. The authors synthesize findings from prior studies to determine the impact of research design choices on price recall accuracy measures.

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When Arousal Influences Ad Evaluation and Valence Does Not (and Vice Versa)

Authors
Gerald Gorn, Michel Tuan Pham, and Leo Sin
Date
January 1, 2001
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Psychology

This research examines, across 2 studies, the interplay between the valence and arousal components of affective states and the affective tone of a target ad. In the first study, music was used to induce a pleasant or unpleasant mood, while controlling for arousal. Participants were subsequently exposed to an ad that either had a positive-affective tone or was ambiguous in its affective tone. As predicted, the valence of the affective state colored the evaluation of the ad in a mood-congruent direction, but this coloring effect occurred only when the ad had an ambiguous-affective tone.

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