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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

Selecting a portfolio of suppliers under demand and supply risks

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Nan Yang
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Operations Research

We analyze a planning model for a firm or public organization that needs to cover uncertain demand for a given item by procuring supplies from multiple sources. Each source faces a random yield factor with a general probability distribution. The model considers a single demand season. All supplies need to be ordered before the start of the season. The planning problem amounts to selecting which of the given set of suppliers to retain, and how much to order from each, so as to minimize total procurement costs while ensuring that the uncertain demand is met with a given probability.

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Designing Effective Health Communications: A Meta-Analysis

Authors
Punam Keller and Donald Lehmann
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Public Policy and Marketing

The massive costs of health care ($1.7 trillion and counting) and the problems posed by various diseases (e.g., AIDS, obesity, diabetes, cancer, heart disease, mental illness) are well known and documented. People worry more about their personal health care costs than losing their jobs, being a victim of a violent crime, or terrorist attacks. As a consequence, massive efforts to improve knowledge about detection, prevention, and treatment have been undertaken. In addition, there is growing realization that health communication strategies need to be tailored to specific segments.

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The Structure of Survey-Based Brand Metrics

Authors
Donald Lehmann, Kevin Lane Keller, and John Farley
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of International Marketing

Perhaps because of its importance, brand performance has been approached in several different ways by several different researchers employing several different measures. Lehmann, Keller, and Farley examine a broad range of these measures to explore their overlap and to uncover core underlying dimensions and the structure of brand performance metrics that balance parsimony and completeness. They also examine how different dimensions of brand performance and profiles of leading brands vary by country (i.e., the United States and China).

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Using Text Mining to Analyze User Forums

Authors
Ronen Feldman, Moshe Fresko, Jacob Goldenberg, Oded Netzer, and Lyle Ungar
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Proceedings of the International Conference on Service Systems and Service Management

Product discussion boards are a rich source of information about consumer sentiment about products, which is being increasingly exploited. Most sentiment analysis has looked at single products in isolation, but users often compare different products, stating which they like better and why. We present a set of techniques for analyzing how consumers view product markets. Specifically, we extracted relative sentiment analysis and comparisons between products, to understand what attributes users compare products on, and which products they prefer on each dimension.

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Consumers' Price Sensitivities Across Complementary Categories

Authors
Sri Devi Duvvuri, Asim Ansari, and Sunil Gupta
Date
December 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

In this paper, we examine the pattern of correlation among consumer price sensitivities for customer purchase incidence decisions across complementary product categories. We use a hierarchical Bayesian multivariate probit model to uncover this pattern. We estimated this model using purchase incidence data for six categories involving three pairs of complementary products.

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A Model of Consumer Learning for Service Quality and Usage

Authors
Raghuram Iyengar, Asim Ansari, and Sunil Gupta
Date
November 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

In many services (e.g., the wireless service industry), consumers choose a service plan according to their expected consumption. In such situations, consumers experience two forms of uncertainty. First, they may be uncertain about the quality of their service provider and can learn about it after repeated use of the service. Second, they may be uncertain about their own usage of minutes and learn about it after observing their actual consumption.

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Taste versus the Market: An Extension of Research on the Consumption of Popular Culture

Authors
Morris Holbrook and Michela Addis
Date
October 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

Previous studies of cultural consumption have found a significant but weak relationship between expert judgment (EJ) and popular appeal (PA) and have suggested that this little taste phenomenon reflects a mediating role played by ordinary evaluation (OE) in diluting the association between EJ and PA. However, various weaknesses in this work have involved problems with sequential timing, nonindependence of measurements, and contamination by market(ing)-related influences.

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Extracting Product Comparisons from Discussion Boards

Authors
Ronen Feldman, Moshe Fresko, Jacob Goldenberg, Oded Netzer, and Lyle Ungar
Date
October 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Proceedings of the 2007 IEEE International Conference on Data Mining

In recent years, product discussion forums have become a rich environment in which consumers and potential adopters exchange views and information. Researchers and practitioners are starting to extract user sentiment about products from user product reviews. Users often compare different products, stating which they like better and why.

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Spontaneous Visualization and Concept Evaluation

Authors
Donald Lehmann, Jennifer Stuart, Gita Johar, and Anil Thozhur
Date
September 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science

This paper proposes that customers often respond to brand extension concepts by visualizing the product. We call this process spontaneous visualization and suggest that it precedes concept evaluations. In two studies, we show that spontaneous visualization is enhanced by the fit between the parent brand and the extension category and by the ease with which the product category can be imagined. The appeal of the visualized image in turn determines whether visualization enhances or decreases concept evaluations.

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