2018-2019 BBA Marketing Seminar
| Date | Time | Room | Speaker | Affiliation | Synopsis | Paper |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
11/28/2018 | 6:00PM to 7:00PM | Grainger 1310: Plenary Room | See Synopsis | Pending | ||
| 04/23/2019 | 6:00PM to 7:00PM | Grainger 1310: Plenary Room | Evan Polman | Wisconsin School of Business, University of Wisconsin-Madison | See Synopsis | Pending |
Anchor isisag-anil isisag-anil
Mobile Dating Apps and the Gamification of Entrepreneurialized Romance
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Anil Isisag, Doctoral Student, Wisconsin School of Business, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Synopsis
How does a domain of social life that was once deemed outside the realm of the marketplace become marketized? In this study, I address this question by focusing on the marketization of romantic-sexual relationships in the context of mobile dating apps. My historical analysis demonstrates that rather than a one-off transition, marketization of romance transpires in stages and mobile dating apps facilitate the transition from the earlier model of entrepreneurialized romance (as exemplified by online dating) to the contemporary model of gamified romance. Based on semi-structured interviews with 25 mobile dating app users, I examine the implications of this transition for app users' romantic-sexual relationships.
As a second project based on the same data set, I investigate the positioning wars in the mobile dating apps market by focusing on how Bumble and Hinge utilize Tinder's bad reputation in their own branding efforts. Capitalizing on Tinder's image as a platform that fosters a sexist hook-up culture, Bumble ("the feminist app") and Hinge ("the relationship app") carved out unique market positions by presenting their brand as a remedy to Tinder's shortcomings. By explicating the process through which they make use of defamatory messages about Tinder to create their own branding story, I offer a step-by-step framework that marketing professionals can utilize in similar markets where emotional branding prevails.
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Evan Polman, Professor, Wisconsin School of Business, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Synopsis
How people choose gifts is a widely-studied topic. However, what happens after people choose gifts is largely understudied. In three experiments, we show that giving a gift has unintended consequences, by altering how givers behave with recipients. Consistent with moral licensing, we find that gift-giving negatively affects givers’ subsequent, interpersonal behavior with the recipients of their gifts. In Study 1, we find that giving a gift to one’s romantic partner changes givers’ interpretation of which behaviors constitute as infidelity. We find that after giving their partner a gift, givers classify behaviors (e.g., dancing with someone other than their partner) less as cheating on their partner. In Study 2, we examined how friendly participants behave when they deliver a bad-news message to a friend. Using LIWC content analysis, we find that after giving their friend a gift, givers wrote a significantly less warm/friendly message to their friend. In Study 3, we tested real gifts that people give others, and found givers subsequently made more selfish decisions at their gift-recipients’ expense. In all, our research challenges the oft-cited axiomatic assumption that gift-giving strengthens relationships; and illuminates the potential for future research to examine the effects of consumer behavior on altering interpersonal/romantic relationships.
2018-2019 Marketing Seminar
Date | Time | Room | Speaker | Affiliation | Synopsis | Paper |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
11/09/2018 | 9:00AM to 10:30AM | Grainger 4151 | Melanie Wallendorf | See Synopsis | ||
| 02/08/2019 | 9:00AM to 10:30AM | Grainger 4151 | Avi Goldfarb | Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto | See Synopsis | Understanding the Impact of Artificial Intelligence |
| 02/22/2019 | 9:00AM to 10:30AM | Grainger 4151 | Robert Zeithammer | Anderson School of Management, University of California - Los Angeles | See Synopsis | Paying for a Chance to Save Money: Two-Part Tariffs in Name-Your-Own-Price Markets |
| 05/03/2019 | 9:00AM to 10:30AM | Grainger 4151 | Paul Piff | School of Social Ecology, University of California - Irvine | See Synopsis | What is Social About Social Class? |
Anchor #wallendorf #wallendorf
Consumer Claims to Space in the Politics of Consumer Identity
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Melanie Wallendorf, Professor, Eller College of Management, University of Arizona
Synopsis
Physical space is an integral element of social life that impacts a wide range of consumption experiences, including shopping, eating, and exercising. However, not every consumer has access to the same kinds or amounts of spaces. Just like with the resources of money and knowledge, access to the resource of space is socially structured, being unevenly available to different consumer categories. This substantial issue, consumer differential access to space, has been underexplored in consumer research; in this literature, the predominant approach to study space has been to focus on how social actors work to make specific sites more meaningful, through practices that are mostly detached from the influence of social structure. In response to this oversight, the present research employs a mixed-method ethnography to study a contemporary ethos of consumption that questions the differential access to space that women encounter with some of their self-expressive consumption activities as a result of pervasive power hierarchies. This research develops a geosocial framework that sheds light on how consumers act on space as a way of interrogating the cultural subordination of their consumer identities. This framework helps unravel the interlinkage between space and power relations in the realm of consumption.
Anchor goldfarb-avi goldfarb-avi
Understanding the Impact of Artificial Intelligence
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Avi Goldfarb, Professor, Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto
Synopsis
Perhaps the most popular topic with respect to the potential impact of artificial intelligence (AI) concerns what this technology means for jobs. As AI develops and mimics increasing levels of cognitive functions, the scope of jobs that might be impacted is great. This has motivated investigations into the nature of cognitive skills required for a wide array of occupations in order to identify those most likely to be impacted. Estimating the impact of AI on labor market outcomes requires an understanding of the particular tasks that AI will directly effect. Our goal in this article is to specify the characteristics of the technological change brought about by AI, and then to demonstrate how understanding these details provides useful insight into the labor market consequences.
Anchor zeithammer-robert zeithammer-robert
Paying for a Chance to Save Money: Two-Part Tariffs in Name-Your-Own-Price Markets
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Robert Zeithammer, Professor, Anderson School of Management, University of California - Los Angeles
Synopsis
Prior theoretical research has shown that a Name-Your-Own-Price (NYOP) seller can profit from charging each prospective buyer a non-refundable fee for the opportunity to place a bid, akin to an entry fee to the seller’s store. We examine the profitability of such two-part tariffs in NYOP markets using incentive-compatible laboratory experiments. Overall, our results suggest two-part tariffs increase NYOP profit in a standard information-poor setting in the short run, but they are not as profitable as theory would suggest when the bidders get more information or experience. We also propose an individual-level non parametric test of the risk-averse expected utility model, and the test results suggest that this canonical model for decision making under uncertainty is not a good fit to the behavior of a substantial proportion of our subjects.
Anchor piff-paul piff-paul
What is Social About Social Class?
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Paul Piff, Professor, Department of Psychological Science, University of California Irvine
Synopsis
What is social about social class? How does money shape the mind, how people think about themselves and behave toward others? This talk will highlight the emerging psychological science of social class. I will describe studies showing that social class exerts a pervasive influence on the social realm, critically shaping emotions, morality, social relationships, materialism, and consumption.
2018 Marketing Camp
The Wisconsin School of Business’ Marketing Department hosts an annual Marketing Camp that invites guest speakers from all around the globe to present their research. The objective of the Camp is to network, share research, studies, and findings regarding the ever-changing marketing landscape. The marketing landscape is continuously evolving due to technological advancements and the multifaceted human population. We believe that in this day and age marketing research has never been more imperative. The focus of our marketing research is to help us gain key insights on marketing analytics and big data, consumer culture theory, and consumer behavior. A big part of this research involves bringing in new ideas from our fellow peers in the world of academia. As such, we have invited these four guest speakers below to share with us some of the research that they have been working on.
| Date | Time | Room | Speaker | Affiliation | Synopsis | Paper |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
09/08/2018 | 11:00AM to 12:30PM | Memorial Union-Trip Commons | Zeynep Arsel | See Synopsis | Pending | |
| 09/08/2018 | 9:00AM to 10:30AM | Memorial Union-Trip Commons | Kusum Ailawadi | See Synopsis | Pending | |
| 09/07/2018 | 1:30PM to 3:00PM | Union South | Stijn Van Osselaer | Cornell SC Johnson College of Business, Cornell University | See Synopsis | Pending |
| 09/07/2018 | 10:30AM to 12:00PM | Union South | Fuqua School of Business, Duke University | See Synopsis | Pending |
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Zeynep Arsel, Professor, John Molson School of Business, Concordia University
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SynopsesSynopsis
Professor Zeynep Arsel is the Concordia University Research Chair in Consumption and Markets at John Molson School of Business. She is a recipient of the Petro Canada Young Innovator Award and the Sidney J. Levy Award. Her research focuses on consumption with a sociological, anthropological and historical focus. She has published high impact articles in the Journal of Consumer Research and Journal of Marketing, is Associate Editor for Journal of Consumer Research and Consumption Markets and Culture, and is the co-editor of Taste, Consumption and Markets (Routledge). Arsel’s work has been funded by SSHRC, FQRSC, Association for Consumer Research, Marketing Science Institute, and has been featured in mass media outlets including the Wall Street Journal, Harper’s Magazine, Globe and Mail, WIRED, Psychology Today, Montreal Gazette, Vancouver Sun, Ottawa Citizen, Le Devoir, L’Actualite, La Presse, and numerous blogs.
Anchor ailawadi ailawadi
Kusum Ailawadi, Professor, Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth College
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Synopsis
Kusum received her PhD from the University of Virginia and taught at the Darden School at the University of Virginia and the Wallace E. Carroll School of Management at Boston College before joining Tuck in 1993. Before entering the PhD program, she worked in marketing management for Computer Maintenance Corporation (CMC) Ltd. in India. Her work has been honored for excellence in collaborative research between academics and practitioners, and for outstanding application of marketing science methods to practice. She has examined the effectiveness of policy changes by packaged goods manufacturers like Procter & Gamble, assessed the profit impact of the strategies of retailers like Hannaford and CVS, and studied the reaction of incumbent retailers to a major entrant like Wal-Mart. She is a recipient of best paper awards from top marketing journals like Journal of Marketing, Marketing Science, and Journal of Retailing; the winner of the Marketing Science Institute/Journal of Marketing Research competition for academic-practitioner collaborative research; and a finalist for multiple awards from the Journal of Marketing Research as well as the ISMS Practice Prize. Recently, her Journal of Marketing paper on store brands and store loyalty was selected as one of the 50 best papers of 2008 published in all management journals. Besides publishing extensively in the top academic journals, she has written for the Wall Street Journal, US News and World Report, the CMO Strategy Forum at Advertising Age, and the Harvard Business Reviewamong others.
Kusum is an associate editor for two major marketing journals – Journal of Marketing and International Journal of Research in Marketing – and on the editorial boards of several others, including the Journal of Marketing Research, Journal of Retailing, and Marketing Science. She serves on the board of trustees of Southern New Hampshire University and as an academic trustee of the Marketing Science Institute and AiMark, organizations in the US and Europe respectively that brings together academics, senior practitioners, and data providers to facilitate research and idea exchange.
Anchor vanosselaer vanosselaer
Stijn Van Osselaer, Professor, Cornell SC Johnson College of Business, Cornell University
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SynopsesSynopsis
Professor Stijn van Osselaer is S.C. Johnson Professor of Marketing at the Johnson Graduate School of Management. His research focuses on branding, customer loyalty, connecting customers with service providers, and the influences of learning, memory, and cognition in consumers' decisions. His work has appeared in the Journal of Marketing Research, Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Marketing, and many other scientific journals. Professor van Osselaer serves on the editorial review boards of the Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Marketing, Journal of Consumer Psychology, and International Journal of Research in Marketing, and he has twice served as an associate editor at the Journal of Consumer Research ((2008-2011, 2012-2018).
At Johnson, Professor van Osselaer teaches the core marketing course. He previously taught at the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business, London Business School, and Rotterdam School of Management. In 2012-2013, he was a visiting research scholar at the University of Colorado's Leeds School of Business. In 2015, Professor van Osselaer served as the president of the Society for Consumer Psychology. He has also co-chaired the 2010 annual conference of the Association for Consumer Research (ACR) and served as a member of this organization's board of directors.
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Chris Moorman, Professor, Fuqua School of Business, Duke University
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SynopsesSynopsis
Christine Moorman is the T. Austin Finch, Sr. Professor of Business Administration at The Fuqua School of Business, Duke University where she is a member of the marketing area. Professor Moorman’s expertise lies in examining the nature and effects of learning and knowledge utilization by consumers, managers, organizations, and financial markets. She has studied these effects in the context of innovation, marketing alliances and networks, and public policy. Professor Moorman’s research has been published in a range of top journals, including the Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Marketing, Journal of Marketing Research, Marketing Science, Academy of Management Review, Administrative Science Quarterly, and Harvard Business Review. She is an Associate Editor for the Journal of Marketing Research and the Journal of Marketing and will serve as Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Marketingbeginning July 1. Her research has been supported by grants from the Marketing Science Institute, the Institute for the Study of Business Markets, and the National Science Foundation.
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