Skip to main content
Official Logo of Columbia Business School
Academics
  • Visit Academics
  • Degree Programs
  • Admissions
  • Tuition & Financial Aid
  • Campus Life
  • Career Management
Faculty & Research
  • Visit Faculty & Research
  • Academic Divisions
  • Search the Directory
  • Research
  • Faculty Resources
  • Teaching Excellence
Executive Education
  • Visit Executive Education
  • For Organizations
  • For Individuals
  • Program Finder
  • Online Programs
  • Certificates
About Us
  • Visit About Us
  • CBS Directory
  • Events Calendar
  • Leadership
  • Our History
  • The CBS Experience
  • Newsroom
Alumni
  • Visit Alumni
  • Update Your Information
  • Lifetime Network
  • Alumni Benefits
  • Alumni Career Management
  • Women's Circle
  • Alumni Clubs
Insights
  • Visit Insights
  • Digital Future
  • Climate
  • Business & Society
  • Entrepreneurship
  • 21st Century Finance
  • Magazine
CBS Landing Image
Faculty & Research
  • Academic Divisions
  • Search the Faculty
  • Research
  • Faculty Resources
  • News
  • More 

Marketing

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

Jump to main content

Latest on Marketing

No articles have been found by those filters.

Pagination

  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Current page 5

Marketing Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Marketing

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.

Read More about Money Buys Happiness When Spending Fits Our Personality

Personality-customised Advertising in the Digital Environment

Authors
Sandra Matz
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Chapter
Book
Routledge International Handbook of Consumer Psychology
Read More about Personality-customised Advertising in the Digital Environment

Models of Personality

Authors
Sandra Matz, Y. Chan, and M. Kosinski
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Chapter
Book
Emotions and Personality in Personalized Services

Sandra Matz, Yin Wah Fiona Chan, and Michael Kosinsky survey models of personality. They cover a wide range of personality models including the most popular Five Factor Model (FFM). The authors stress the importance of the underlying assumptions, which lead to each model. The discussion includes also the relationships between the models and the suitability of the models for automatic detection of personality through digital footprints.

Read More about Models of Personality

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.

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

Complicating Decisions: The Work Ethic Heuristic and the Construction of Effortful Decisions

Authors
Rom Schrift, Ran Kivetz, and Oded Netzer
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General

The notion that effort and hard work yield desired outcomes is ingrained in many cultures and affects our thinking and behavior. However, could valuing effort complicate our lives? In the present article, the authors demonstrate that individuals with a stronger tendency to link effort with positive outcomes end up complicating what should be easy decisions. People distort their preferences and the information they search and recall in a manner that intensifies the choice conflict and decisional effort they experience before finalizing their choice.

Read More about Complicating Decisions: The Work Ethic Heuristic and the Construction of Effortful Decisions

Dynamic Allocation of Pharmaceutical Detailing and Sampling for Long-Term Profitability

Authors
Ricardo Montoya, Oded Netzer, and Kamel Jedidi
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Chapter
Book
From Little's Law to Marketing Science: Essays in Honor of John D.C. Little

The U.S. pharmaceutical industry spent upwards of $18 billion on marketing drugs in 2007. Detailing and drug sampling activities account for the bulk of this spending. To stay competitive, pharmaceutical managers need to maximize the return on these marketing investments by determining which physicians to target, when, and how to target them. In this paper, we present a two-stage approach for dynamically allocating detailing and sampling activities across physicians to maximize long-run profitability.

Read More about Dynamic Allocation of Pharmaceutical Detailing and Sampling for Long-Term Profitability

Keyword Management Costs and "Broad Match" in Sponsored Search Advertising

Authors
Wilfred Amaldoss, Kinshuk Jerath, and Amin Sayedi
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Marketing Science

In sponsored search advertising, advertisers bid to be displayed in response to a keyword search. The operational activities associated with participating in an auction, i.e., submitting the bid and the ad copy, customizing bids and ad copies based on various factors (such as the geographical region from which the query originated, the time of day and the season, the characteristics of the searcher), and continuously measuring outcomes, involve considerable effort. We call the costs that arise from such activities keyword management costs.

Read More about Keyword Management Costs and "Broad Match" in Sponsored Search Advertising

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.

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

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.

Read More about Mistaken Inferences from Advertising Conversations: A Modest Research Agenda

Pagination

  • First page 1
  • Ellipsis …
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Page 13
  • Current page 14
  • Page 15
  • Page 16
  • Page 17
  • Page 18
  • Ellipsis …
  • Last page 61

External CSS

Homepage Breadcrumb Block

Official Logo of Columbia Business School

Columbia University in the City of New York
665 West 130th Street, New York, NY 10027
Tel. 212-854-1100

Maps and Directions
    • Centers & Programs
    • Current Students
    • Corporate
    • Directory
    • Support Us
    • Recruiters & Partners
    • Faculty & Staff
    • Newsroom
    • Careers
    • Contact Us
    • Accessibility
    • Privacy & Policy Statements
Back to Top Upward arrow
TOP

© Columbia University

  • X
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
Back to top

Accessibility Tools

English French German Italian Spanish Japanese Russian Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Arabic Bengali