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Consumer Behavior

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

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Latest on Consumer Behavior

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Consumer Behavior Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Consumer Behavior

Mistaken Inferences from Advertising Conversations: A Modest Research Agenda

Authors
Gita Johar
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Advertising

I review the changing advertising landscape and suggest that the definition of advertising has inherently changed. Using the current advertising context, I develop research questions that consumer behavior scholars are well poised to address. This research agenda is rooted in real-world observations about advertising and can help us develop new theories about when, how, and why advertising influences and persuades consumers. A recurring theme in this article is that consumers may be misled due to information overload from multiple channels and sources.

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Consumer Desire for Control as a Barrier to New Product Adoption

Authors
Ali Faraji-Rad, Shiri Melumad, and Gita Johar
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Psychology

This research examines the relationship between desire for control and acceptance of new products. We hypothesize that desire for control — the need to personally control outcomes in one's life — acts as a barrier to new product acceptance. Three experiments provide support for this hypothesis. This effect holds when desire for control is high as a dispositional trait (Studies 1 and 3) and when it is situationally induced (Study 2). We also identify an intervention to increase new product acceptance based on the idea that new products threaten one's sense of control.

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Products as Self-Evaluation Standards: When Owned and Unowned Products Have Opposite Effects on Self-Judgment

Authors
Liad Weiss and Gita Johar
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

Consumers frequently evaluate their own traits before making consumption decisions (e.g., am I thin enough for skinny jeans?). The outcome of these self-evaluations depends on the standard consumers use and on whether they evaluate self in assimilation or contrast to that standard. Previous self-judgment research has focused on self-standards that arise from social aspects of the environment, including people and groups.

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Customer-Base Analysis Using Repeated Cross-Sectional Summary (RCSS) Data

Authors
Kinshuk Jerath, Peter Fader, and Bruce G. S. Hardie
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
European Journal of Operational Research

We address a critical question that many firms are facing today: Can customer data be stored and analyzed in an easy-to-manage and scalable manner without significantly compromising the inferences that can be made about the customers' transaction activity? We address this question in the context of customer-base analysis. A number of researchers have developed customer-base analysis models that perform very well given detailed individual-level data.

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The Price Does Not Include Additional Taxes, Fees, and Surcharges: A Review of Research on Partitioned Pricing

Authors
Eric Greenleaf, Eric Johnson, Vicki Morwitz, and Edith Shalev
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Psychology

In the past two decades, pricing research has paid increasing attention to instances where a product's price is divided into a base price and one or more mandatory surcharges, a practice termed partitioned pricing. Recently, partitioned pricing strategies in the marketplace have become more pervasive and complex, raising concerns that consumers do not always fully attend to or process all price information, and underestimate total prices, which in turn influences their purchasing behavior.

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A Model of Unorganized and Organized Retailing in Emerging Economies

Authors
Kinshuk Jerath, S Sajeesh, and Z. John Zhang
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Marketing Science

In the last two decades, organized retailing has transformed the retailing landscape in emerging economies, where unorganized retailing has traditionally been dominant. In this paper, we build a theoretical model of unorganized and organized retailing in emerging economies by carefully modeling key characteristics of the retailing environment, the retailers, the consumers, and product categories.

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Agency Selling or Reselling? Channel Structures in Electronic Retailing

Authors
Kinshuk Jerath, Vibhanshu Abhishek, and Z. John Zhang
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

In recent years, online retailers (also called e-tailers) have started allowing manufacturers direct access to their customers while charging a fee for providing this access, a format commonly referred to as agency selling. In this paper, we use a stylized theoretical model to answer a key question that e-tailers are facing: When should they use an agency selling format instead of using the more conventional reselling format?

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Money Buys Happiness When Spending Fits Our Personality

Authors
Sandra Matz, J.J. Gladstone, and D. Stillwell
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Psychological Science

In contrast to decades of research reporting surprisingly weak relationships between consumption and happiness, recent findings suggest that money can indeed increase happiness if it is spent the "right way" (e.g., on experiences or on other people). Drawing on the concept of psychological fit, we extend this research by arguing that individual differences play a central role in determining the "right" type of spending to increase well-being.

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Improving Online Idea Generation Platforms and Customizing the Task Structure Based on Consumers' Domain-Specific Knowledge

Authors
Lan Luo and Olivier Toubia
Date
September 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing

The authors explore how firms can enhance consumer performance in online idea generation platforms. Most, if not all, online idea generation platforms offer all consumers identical tasks in which (1) participants are granted access to ideas from other participants and (2) ideas are classified into categories, but consumers can navigate freely across idea categories. The former is linked to stimulus ideas, and the latter may be viewed as a first step toward problem decomposition.

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