口头传述的
营销
观察研究
产品(数学)
纵向磁场
心理学
广告
业务
社会影响力
观察学习
自然实验
自然(考古学)
领域(数学)
微分效应
产品类型
社会心理学
体验式学习
计算机科学
统计
数学教育
考古
量子力学
磁场
纯数学
历史
数学
几何学
物理
内科学
程序设计语言
医学
作者
Yubo Chen,Qi Wang,Jinhong Xie
标识
DOI:10.1509/jmkr.48.2.238
摘要
Consumers’ purchase decisions can be influenced by others’ opinions, or word of mouth (WOM), and/or others’ actions, or observational learning (OL). Although information technologies are creating increasing opportunities for firms to facilitate and manage these two types of social interaction, to date, researchers have encountered difficulty in disentangling their competing effects and have provided limited insights into how these two social influences might differ from and interact with each other. Using a unique natural experimental setting resulting from information policy shifts at the online seller Amazon.com , the authors design three longitudinal, quasi-experimental field studies to examine three issues regarding the two types of social interaction: (1) their differential impact on product sales, (2) their lifetime effects, and (3) their interaction effects. An intriguing finding is that while negative WOM is more influential than positive WOM, positive OL information significantly increases sales, but negative OL information has no effect. This suggests that reporting consumer purchase statistics can help mass-market products without hurting niche products. The results also reveal that the sales impact of OL increases with WOM volume.
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