Department of Marketing

Related Entities
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
An estimated 90% of U.S. companies including Tesla, 3M, McDonald’s, and UnitedHealth Group use social media such as Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat to connect with consumers and form community around their brands; yet little is known about the effects of different social media structures on consumer-brand relationships. The purpose of this research is to understand the unique nature of firm-hosted online brand communities on social networking sites and how they can be used to retain customers.
We review the literature on online brand communities as a tool for building relationships and apply network theory to understanding firm-hosted online brand communities on social networking sites. Relationship marketing provides a framework for how consumer-brand relationships are developed, built, and maintained. Network theory explains how different network structures interact with network processes to produce specific outcomes for individuals and groups.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
The music industry in 1962 reflected the political turmoil of the times. Dinner and
dancing was a popular pastime. The music Americans heard and enjoyed over the
airways was limited, however, by payola.
Program directors adhered to criteria that supported the corporate fiscal model of
their radio stations. Songs needed to attract listeners and major advertisers. Payola
typically involved direct payments from major record labels to disc jockeys and the
rewards were lucrative. Record labels fed them songs to play and disc jockeys became
loyal to the payments. Thus, payola became a bottleneck to broader distribution of other
artists, which hurt musicians, small record labels, and the public, and increased the price
of music.
Entertainment managers were ambitious band managers who took on additional
roles due to the high costs of producing and promoting songs. The case of Robby and the
Troubadours is shared through a historical simulated marketing plan.
Model
Digital Document
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Description
The purpose of this research was to construct and empirically test a theoretical
model of surprise and its impact on consumer affect and behavior. First the literature
on the emotion of surprise was reviewed with particular emphasis on
classification and process models of surprise. A theoretical model of surprise was
constructed. A new concept called motivated meaning integration (MMI) was proposed.
MMI takes place in a setting that includes the interaction of the appraisal process with
factors such as environmental uncertainty and consumers’ individual differences. These
interactions impact outcomes such as consumer affect and buying behavior.
Ten hypotheses were derived from the theoretical model and empirically tested
using several pretests and two main studies. The present research designed and evaluated
several surprise manipulations and MMI manipulation checks to effectively test the
proposed relationships. Participants were recruited from Amazon Mechanical Turk
(Mturk). Although many of the hypotheses were not supported, some important ones were.
The results provide some support that a consumer’s sense of personal control interacts
with MMI to impact a consumer’s likelihood of choosing unknown or mystery products (
e.g. products in a known category such as beauty products but the actual products are
selected by the company). Specifically, consumers who experienced a low sense of
personal control (compared to a high sense personal control) were more likely to
choose mystery products (vs. objectively similar known products) after they encountered
surprise with mystery (vs. with known) elements. The results also provided some
support that productivity orientation interacts with surprise appraisal to impact consumer
affect. Particularly, consumers with high productivity orientation (vs. low) were more
likely to experience higher positive affect after encountering surprise with mystery (vs.
with known) elements.
The primary implication for theory involves refining the conceptualization of
surprise appraisal, especially fast MMI, and adopting adequate measure for testing it.
The most relevant implication for marketing management is to offer products
with mystery elements because consumers are more likely to choose additional
mystery products. If this dissertation stimulates others to pursue research on surprise
theory in marketing, my efforts to continue developing scientific theory will be worth it.