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Marketing

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

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Latest on Marketing

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Marketing Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Marketing

French News Start-up L'Opinion: Swimming Upstream in Uncertain Times

Authors
Ava Seave
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Case Study
Publisher
Columbia Business School

In May 2013 Nicolas Beytout launched L’Opinion, a news organization that published a daily newspaper, with a robust digital presence. L’Opinion was opinion-focused, with Libéral economic thought pieces and analysis at the heart of its content. The media industry had changed drastically in the decade preceding, with brutal competition among the traditional media and new entrants like the platforms Google and Facebook. The political environment was also a moving target, with anti-European nationalism on the rise.

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Affect Regulation and Consumer Behavior

Authors
Charlene Chen and Michel Tuan Pham
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Consumer Psychology Review

This article provides a critical review of what is known about affect regulation in relation to consumption behavior. Based on numerous findings from psychology, communication research, and consumer research, we identify a core set of general principles of affect regulation in consumer behavior. First, we define affect regulation, clarify its relations to the concepts of coping and compensatory consumption, and refine the emerging concept of “displaced coping.” We then review the generic strategies used in the regulation of general negative affective states.

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When Words Sweat: Identifying Signals for Loan Default in the Text of Loan Applications

Authors
Oded Netzer, Alain Lemaire, and Michal Herzenstein
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

The authors present empirical evidence that borrowers, consciously or not, leave traces of their intentions, circumstances, and personality traits in the text they write when applying for a loan. This textual information has a substantial and significant ability to predict whether borrowers will pay back the loan above and beyond the financial and demographic variables commonly used in models predicting default.

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What's the Catch? Suspicion in Bank Motives and Sluggish Refinancing

Authors
Eric Johnson, Stephan Meier, and Olivier Toubia
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Review of Financial Studies

Failing to refinance a mortgage can cost a borrower thousands of dollars. Based on administrative data from a large financial institution, we show that around 50% of borrowers leave thousands of dollars on the table by not refinancing. Survey data indicate that, among all the behavioral factors examined, only suspicion of banks motives is consistently related to the probability of accepting a refinancing offer. Finally, we report the results of three field experiments showing that enticing offers made by banks fail to increase participation and may even deepen suspicion.

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Sensory Variety in Shape and Color Influences Fruit and Vegetable Intake, Liking, and Purchase Intentions in Some Subsets of Adults: A Randomized Pilot Experiment

Authors
Maya Vadiveloo, Ludovica Principato, Christina Roberto, Vicki Morwitz, and Josiemer Mattei
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Food Quality and Preference

Dietary variety increases food intake, but it is unclear if sensory differences elicit increases in eating-related behaviors. Using a 4×3 between-subject pilot experiment, we examined if increasing sensory variety (control, color, shape, both color and shape) and priming individuals to notice differences or similarities in the foods (positive, neutral, negative) influenced ad libitum proximal intake, liking, and willingness to purchase pears and peppers among 164 Greater Boston adults >18y/o.

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The Joint Impact of Revenue-Based Loyalty Program and Promotions on Consumer Purchase Behaviors

Authors
Jia Liu, Asim Ansari, and Leonard Lee
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Working Paper
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Firms' Reactions to Public Information on Business Practices: The Case of Search Advertising

Authors
Andrey Simonov and Justin Rao
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Quantitative Marketing and Economics

We use five years of bidding data to examine the reaction of advertisers to widely disseminated press on the lack of effectiveness of brand search advertising (queries that contain the firm's name) found in a large experiment run by eBay (Blake, Nosko and Tadelis, 2015). We estimate that 11% of firms that did not face competing ads on their brand keywords, matching the case of eBay, discontinued the practice of brand search advertising.

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From Atoms to Bits and Back: A Research Curation on Digital Technology and Agenda for Future Research

Authors
Bernd Schmitt
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

As a result of the digital revolution, new topics and themes have entered consumer research, and, as the digital revolution enters a new phase, additional new concepts and research questions will emerge. To illustrate the variety of themes on digital technology that consumer researchers have studied, I am presenting a collection of five articles that represent this active new research area. Moreover, I will look into the future and propose a research agenda to address key consumer behavior issues occurring during the next phase of the digital transformation.

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Personalizing the Customization Experience: A Matching Theory of Mass Customization Interfaces and Cultural Information Processing

Authors
Emanuel de Bellis, Claudius Hildebrand, K. Ito, A. Herrmann, and Bernd Schmitt
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

Mass customization interfaces typically guide consumers through the configuration process in a sequential manner, focusing on one product attribute after the other. What if this standardized customization experience were personalized for consumers on the basis of how they process information? A series of large-scale field and experimental studies, conducted with Western and Eastern consumers, shows that matching the interface to consumers’ culture-specific processing style enhances the effectiveness of mass customization.

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