Promotional chat on the Internet

被引:342
作者
Mayzlin, D [1 ]
机构
[1] Yale Univ, Sch Management, New Haven, CT 06520 USA
关键词
advertising; word-of-mouth; source credibility; Internet marketing;
D O I
10.1287/mksc.1050.0137
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Chat rooms, recommendation sites, and customer review sections allow consumers to overcome geographic boundaries and to communicate based on mutual interests. However, marketers also have incentives to supply promotional chat or reviews in order to influence the consumers' evaluation of their products. Moreover, firms can disguise their promotion as consumer recommendations due to the anonymity afforded by online communities. We explore this new setting where advertising and word of mouth become perfect substitutes because they appear indistinguishable to the consumer. Specifically, we investigate here whether word of mouth remains credible and whether firms choose to devote more resources promoting their inferior or superior products. We develop a game theoretic model in which two products are differentiated in their value to the consumer. Unlike the firms, the consumers are uncertain about the products' quality. The consumers read messages online that help them decide on the identity of the superior product. We find a unique equilibrium where online word of mouth is persuasive despite the promotional chat activity by competing firms. In this equilibrium, firms spend more resources promoting inferior products, in striking contrast to existing advertising literature. In addition, we discuss consumer welfare implications and how other marketing strategies might interact with promotional chat.
引用
收藏
页码:155 / 163
页数:9
相关论文
共 23 条
[1]   Research note: Price discrimination as an adverse signal: Why an offer to spread payments may hurt demand [J].
Anderson, ET ;
Simester, DI .
MARKETING SCIENCE, 2001, 20 (03) :315-327
[2]   The market for evaluations [J].
Avery, C ;
Resnick, P ;
Zeckhauser, R .
AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 1999, 89 (03) :564-584
[3]   A SIMPLE-MODEL OF HERD BEHAVIOR [J].
BANERJEE, AV .
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 1992, 107 (03) :797-817
[4]   THE ECONOMICS OF RUMORS [J].
BANERJEE, AV .
REVIEW OF ECONOMIC STUDIES, 1993, 60 (02) :309-327
[5]   A THEORY OF FADS, FASHION, CUSTOM, AND CULTURAL-CHANGE AS INFORMATIONAL CASCADES [J].
BIKHCHANDANI, S ;
HIRSHLEIFER, D ;
WELCH, I .
JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY, 1992, 100 (05) :992-1026
[6]   Film critics: Influencers or predictors? [J].
Eliashberg, J ;
Shugan, SM .
JOURNAL OF MARKETING, 1997, 61 (02) :68-78
[7]   WORD-OF-MOUTH COMMUNICATION AND SOCIAL-LEARNING [J].
ELLISON, G ;
FUDENBERG, D .
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 1995, 110 (01) :93-125
[8]   Reactance to recommendations: When unsolicited advice yields contrary responses [J].
Fitzsimons, GJ ;
Lehmann, DR .
MARKETING SCIENCE, 2004, 23 (01) :82-94
[9]   The social cost of cheap pseudonyms [J].
Friedman, EJ ;
Resnick, P .
JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS & MANAGEMENT STRATEGY, 2001, 10 (02) :173-199
[10]  
HORRIGAN J, 2001, PEW INTERNET AM LIFE