44 research outputs found

    Empirical Models of Manufacturer-Retailer Interaction: A Review and Agenda for Future Research

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    The nature of the interaction between manufacturers and retailers has received a great deal of empirical attention in the last 15 years. One major line of empirical research examines the balance of power between them and ranges from reduced form models quantifying aggregate profit and other related trends for manufacturers and retailers to structural models that test alternative forms of manufacturer-retailer pricing interaction. A second line of research addresses the sources of leverage for each party, e.g., trade promotions and their pass-through, customer information from loyalty programs, manufacturer advertising, productassortment in general, and private label assortment in particular. The purpose of this article is to synthesize what has been learnt about the nature of the interaction between manufacturers and retailers and the effectiveness of each party’s sources of leverage and to highlight gaps in our knowledge that future research should attempt to fill

    “Sharing without Reading” on Social Media Leads to Inflated Subjective Knowledge

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    Extant research on social contagion assumes that information spreads as sharers deliberately process external information, then decide whether or not to share it; that is, as each sharer processes this information, s/he is “infected” with new knowledge. We propose that “sharing without reading” represents a distinct phenomenon in which information “carriers” spread content without being infected by it. Evidence from lab experimental studies suggest that sharing without reading leads to increases in subjective, but not objective, knowledge

    The Role of Consumers' Intuitions in Inference Making

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    It’s Not Me, It’s You: How Gift Giving Creates Giver Identity Threat as a Function of Social Closeness

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    Prior research has established that consumers are motivated to purchase identity-consistent products. We extend consumer identity research into an important consumer context, gift giving, in which individuals may make product choices that run counter to their own identities in order to fulfill the desires of the intended recipient. We find that purchasing an identity-contrary gift for a close (vs. distant) friend who is an integral part of the self can itself cause an identity threat to the giver. Four experiments in a gift registry context show that after making an identity-contrary gift choice for a close (vs. distant) friend, givers subsequently engage in behaviors that reestablish their identity such as indicating greater identity affiliation with the threatened identity and greater likelihood to purchase identity-expressive products. This research highlights the opposing forces that product purchase may exert on consumer identity as both a potential threat and means of self-verification.

    Choice under Restrictions

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    Abstract Nearly every decision a person makes is restricted in some way. While we are painfully aware of some of these restrictions, others go largely undetected. This paper presents a conceptual framework for understanding how restrictions interact with situational and individual characteristics, as well as goals to influence behavior. Implications for overlooked research opportunities in choice modeling are presented and discussed
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