Latest on Marketing
New Study Proposes Optimal Product Ranking Strategy for Online Platforms
Elon Musk and Twitter: How He's Turned X into a Free-for-All — and Here's the Proof
- Date
Super Bowl’s Best Ads: Google Pixel and Verizon Ranked Best of the Night
- Type
-
Finance & Economics
- Date
Dark Defaults: How Choice Architecture Fueled Millions in Inadvertent Political Donations
- Type
-
Entrepreneurship
- Date
The Future of Entertainment: Rewriting the Playbook
- Date
Holiday Shopping Season: Columbia Business School's Research Delivers Best Practices for Targeting Consumers
New Research Offers Advertisers Model to Better Predict Online Shopper Preferences
Marketing Faculty
CBS Faculty Research on Marketing
Frontiers: Polarized America: From Political Polarization to Preference Polarization
- Authors
- Date
- January 31, 2023
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Marketing Science: Frontiers
In light of the widely discussed political divide and increasing societal polarization, we investigate in this paper whether the polarization of political ideology extends to consumers’ preferences, intentions, and purchases. Using three different data sets—the publicly available social media data of over three million brand followerships of Twitter users, a YouGov brand-preference survey data set, and Nielsen scanner panel data—we assess the evolution of brand-preference polarization.
Decisions Over Decimal: Balancing Intuition and Information
- Authors
- Date
- October 1, 2022
- Format
-
Book
- Publisher
- Wiley
Agile decision making is imperative as you lead in a data-driven world. Uniquely bridging theory and practice, Decisions over Decimals unites data intelligence with human judgment to get to action – a sharp approach the authors refer to as Quantitative Intuition (QI). QI raises the power of thinking beyond big data without neglecting it and chasing the perfect decision while appreciating that such a thing can never really exist.
The More You Ask, the Less You Get: When Additional Questions Hurt External Validity
- Authors
- Date
- October 1, 2022
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Marketing Research
Researchers and practitioners in marketing, economics, and public policy often use preference elicitation tasks to forecast realworld behaviors. These tasks typically ask a series of similarly structured questions.
Toward a Pedagogy for Consumer Anthropology: Method, Theory, Marketing
This paper focuses on teaching the application of anthropology in business to marketing students. It begins with the premise that consumer marketers have long used ethnography as a component of their qualitative market research toolkit to inform their knowledge about and empathy for consumers. A question for market research educators who include ethnography in their curricula is if and how to teach the richness of anthropologically based approaches, especially given a decoupling of ethnographic method from anthropological theory in much consumer research practice.
Using Social Network Activity Data to Identify and Target Job Seekers
- Authors
-
Peter Ebbes and Oded Netzer
- Date
- April 1, 2022
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Management Science
An important challenge for many firms is to identify the life transitions of its customers, such as job searching, expecting a child, or purchasing a home. Inferring such transitions, which are generally unobserved to the firm, can offer the firms opportunities to be more relevant to their customers. In this paper, we demonstrate how a social network platform can leverage its longitudinal user data to identify which of its users are likely to be job seekers. Identifying job seekers is at the heart of the business model of professional social network platforms.
Consumer Minimalism
- Authors
-
Silvia Bellezza and Anne Wilson (equal authorship)
- Date
- February 1, 2022
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Consumer Research
Minimalism in consumption can be expressed in various forms, such as monochromatic home design, wardrobe capsules, tiny home living, and decluttering. This research offers a unified understanding of the variegated displays of minimalism by establishing a conceptual definition of consumer minimalism and developing the twelve-item Minimalist Consumer Scale to measure the construct.
Mining Consumer Minds: Downstream Consequences of Host Motivations for Home Sharing Platforms
- Authors
- Date
- February 1, 2022
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Consumer Research
This research sheds light on consumer motivations for participating in the sharing economy and examines downstream consequences of the uncovered motivations.
Embarrassed by Calories: Joint Effect of Calorie Posting and Social Context
- Authors
- Date
- January 1, 2022
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of the Association for Consumer Research
This research investigates the joint effect of calorie posting and social context on consumers’ food choices and embarrassment. We hypothesize and demonstrate that posting calorie information on a menu becomes more effective in reducing the total calorie of meal orders when the food is ordered in public (vs. in private).
Helping Me See the Whole Picture: How Using a Paper versus Mobile Calendar Influences Consumer Planning and Plan Fulfillment
- Authors
- Date
- Forthcoming
- Format
-
Newspaper/Magazine Article
- Publication
- Journal of Consumer Psychology