42 results on '"Natalie Mizik"'
Search Results
2. Peer-Written Caring Letters for Veterans after a Suicidal Crisis
- Author
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Andrew T. Ton, Sarah P. Carter, Rebecca Leitner, Lori A. Zoellner, Natalie Mizik, and Mark A. Reger
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology - Published
- 2023
3. Compensation-Related Metrics and Marketing Myopia
- Author
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Martin Artz and Natalie Mizik
- Abstract
Compensation packages including incentives tied to a company’s stock price can be powerful motivators for corporate leaders. But the authors’ study also showed that these motivations can produce some serious unintended consequences. Equity incentives can tempt CMOs to engage in short-sighted marketing management such as cutting R&D and advertising spending in an effort to inflate current earnings and enhance the company’s stock price. This myopic management boosts their personal earnings at the expense of their company’s long-term performance. Our findings highlight the pitfalls and limitations of overreliance on equity in managerial compensation packages. Companies could continue to pay their C-level executives based on stock price performance but defer the payout to the future until the long-term consequences of their decisions become apparent. This would reduce the temptation to act on short-term impulses to boost equity compensation.
- Published
- 2023
4. Introducing Marketing Letters’ data policy
- Author
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Aparna A. Labroo, Natalie Mizik, and Russell Winer
- Subjects
Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Business and International Management - Published
- 2022
5. A peer veteran approach to the caring letters suicide prevention program: Preliminary data
- Author
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Whitney S. Livingston, Sarah P. Carter, Rebecca Leitner, Andrew T. Ton, Heather Gebhardt, Lori A. Zoellner, Natalie Mizik, Sasha M. Rojas, Jonathan R. Buchholz, and Mark A. Reger
- Subjects
Clinical Psychology ,Applied Psychology - Published
- 2023
6. Sparking conversations: Editors’ Pick with commentaries and thematic article compilations
- Author
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Aparna A. Labroo, Natalie Mizik, and Russell Winer
- Subjects
Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Business and International Management - Published
- 2022
7. Editorial: Relaunching Marketing Letters
- Author
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Aparna A. Labroo, Donald R. Lehmann, Eric T. Bradlow, Joel Huber, Russell S. Winer, Sandy D. Jap, Peter N. Golder, Natalie Mizik, and John G. Lynch
- Subjects
Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Business ,Business and International Management - Published
- 2020
8. Assessing the Financial Impact of Brand Equity with Short Time-Series Data
- Author
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Eugene Pavlov and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Equity risk ,Financial impact ,0502 economics and business ,05 social sciences ,050211 marketing ,Financial system ,Business ,Brand equity ,Time series ,050203 business & management ,Equity capital markets - Published
- 2021
9. Introduction to special issue on gender and ethnicity in the marketing professoriate
- Author
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Aparna A. Labroo, Russell S. Winer, and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Ethnic group ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Business and International Management - Published
- 2021
10. Brand Political Positioning: Implications of the 2016 US Presidential Election
- Author
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Eugene Pavlov and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Valuation effects ,Politics ,Corporate branding ,Presidential election ,Polarization (politics) ,Enterprise value ,Event study ,Advertising ,Business ,Valuation (finance) - Abstract
The heightened polarization in the US political landscape and the increased emphasis on personal values and identity in politics create important externalities affecting the functioning of commercial entities in the marketplace. We discuss the construct of a brand’s political positioning—the extent to which the perceptual profile (brand image) of a commercial entity aligns with the perceptual profile of a major political party—and show its effects on firm valuation and sales in the aftermath of the 2016 US presidential election. We propose a mechanism to explain the observed performance effects—consumers’ shifting preferences toward (away from) the brands perceptually associated with the winning (losing) political party. We present evidence supporting this mechanism: the documented valuation effects are stronger for consumer-facing firms, the sales react immediately after the election (fourth quarter of 2016), and the firm value is tied to the public sentiment toward the political entity to which the corporate brand is perceptually similar.
- Published
- 2020
11. Panel data methods in marketing research
- Author
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Eugene Pavlov and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Quantitative research ,Business ,Marketing ,Marketing research ,Panel data - Published
- 2018
12. Panel data models for evaluating the effectiveness of direct-to-physician pharmaceutical marketing activities
- Author
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Robert Jacobson and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Quantitative research ,Business ,Marketing ,Pharmaceutical marketing ,Panel data - Published
- 2018
13. Introduction
- Author
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Dominique M. Hanssens and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Marketing management ,Quantitative research ,Public policy ,Business ,Marketing - Published
- 2018
14. Handbook of Marketing Analytics
- Author
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Dominique M. Hanssens and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Marketing analytics ,Business ,Data science - Published
- 2018
15. Handbook of Marketing Analytics : Methods and Applications in Marketing Management, Public Policy, and Litigation Support
- Author
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Natalie Mizik, Dominique M. Hanssens, Natalie Mizik, and Dominique M. Hanssens
- Subjects
- Marketing--Data processing
- Abstract
The Handbook of Marketing Analytics showcases analytical marketing methods and their high-impact real-life applications in marketing management, public policy, and litigation support. Fourteen methods chapters present an overview of specific marketing analytic methods in technical detail while twenty-two case studies present thorough examples of the use of each method.The contributors featured are recognized authorities in their fields. Multidisciplinary in scope this Handbook covers experimental methods, non-experimental methods, and their digital-era extensions. It explores topics such as Classical and Bayesian econometrics, Causality, Machine learning, Optimization, and recent advancements in Conjoint Analysis.This standout collection of analytical methods and application will be useful and educational for all readers, whether they are academics or practitioners in marketing, public policy, or litigation.Contributors include: M. Akemann, S. Albers, P. Albuquerque, G.M. Allenby, V. Altuglu, A.N. Angulo, A. Ansari, L. Ash, M. Bakker, R. Befurt, T.C. Borek, D. Borrego, B.J. Bronnenberg, Z. Chance, P.K. Chintagunta, M.G. Dekimpe, R. Dhar, D. Dzyabura, R.K. Fair, D.G. Fiebig, M. Fischer, A. Goldfarb, N.J. Goldstein, R. Guha, D.M. Hanssens, M. Hatzis, J.R. Howell, K. Huskey, R. Jacobson, D. Iacobucci, I. Ionova, S. Iyer, V.K. Kanuri, A. Lambrecht, A.Y. Lee, D.R. Lehmann, Y. Li, L. Ma, M.K. Mantrala, N. Mizik, L. O'Laughlin, D. Onul, A. Oza, K. Pauwels, E. Pavlov, K.I. Powers, V.R. Rao, R. Reed-Arthurs, D.M. Ringel, J. Roberts, P.E. Rossi, R. Schwabe, J. Silva-Risso, B. Skiera, J.H. Steckel, O. Toubia, M. Trusov, C. Tucker, A.M. Tybout, K. Wertenbroch, A.G. White, S. Woodhouse, H. Yoganarasimhan, J.D. Zona
- Published
- 2018
16. Managing for the Moment: The Role of Earnings Management via Real Activities versus Accruals in SEO Valuation
- Author
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S.P. Kothari, Sugata Roychowdhury, and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,Actuarial science ,Accrual ,05 social sciences ,050201 accounting ,Seasoned equity offering ,Valuation (logic) ,Moment (mathematics) ,Earnings management ,Accounting ,0502 economics and business ,Business ,Finance - Abstract
We assess the role of both accruals manipulation (AM) and real activities manipulation (RAM) in inducing overvaluation at the time of a seasoned equity offering (SEO). Our results reveal that earnings management is most consistently and predictably linked with post-SEO stock market underperformance when it is driven by RAM; in particular, the opportunistic reduction of expenditures on R&D and selling, general, and administrative activities. Thus, overvaluation at the time of the SEO is more likely when managers actively engage in more opaque channels to overstate earnings. Our findings are particularly relevant because managers exhibit a greater propensity for RAM at the time of SEOs, even though RAM is more costly in the long run. JEL Classifications: G14; G31; M4; M41
- Published
- 2015
17. Assessing the Total Financial Performance Impact of Brand Equity with Limited Time-Series Data
- Author
-
Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Equity risk ,Return on marketing investment ,business.industry ,Equity ratio ,Microeconomics ,Brand management ,Customer equity ,Return on equity ,Business ,Brand equity ,Business and International Management ,Equity capital markets - Abstract
One of the key challenges in empirically modeling the total impact of marketing assets on financial performance is the limited availability of marketing metrics data over time. The author presents an approach for estimating the total financial impact of marketing assets with limited time-series data and demonstrates the approach with an application to brand equity research. Consistent with prior research, the aggregate analyses indicate that brand equity, as measured by customer mindset metrics, positively affects current financial performance. In addition, the author documents brand equity's significant and much greater impact on the firm's future financial performance: at the aggregate, only a small portion of the total financial impact of brand equity is reflected in current-year profits, whereas the bulk of the profitability impact is realized in the future. Most importantly, however, the analyses document significant heterogeneity of these effects: in some industries, the entire direct impact is contemporaneous, whereas in others, no contemporaneous effects are observed and all of the profitability impact occurs in the future.
- Published
- 2014
18. How Incentives Shape Strategy: The Role of CMO and CEO Compensation in Inducing Marketing Myopia
- Author
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Natalie Mizik and Martin Artz
- Subjects
Incentive ,Executive compensation ,Marketing management ,Public economics ,Stock valuation ,Equity (finance) ,Endogeneity ,Business ,Difference in differences ,Marketing myopia - Abstract
We examine the role personal compensation incentives of CMOs and CEOs play in inducing myopic marketing management. We find that CEO equity incentives are largely unrelated to the incidence and severity of myopic marketing management. CMO equity compensation, on the other hand, is highly predictive of the incidence and severity of myopic marketing management. Contrary to the arguments that the presence of a CMO in the organization can help maintain customer focus and support for marketing departments, we find that CMOs not only fail to prevent myopia, but further exacerbate the problem as the market-based (i.e., equity) portion of their personal compensation increases. Our analyses utilizing multiple methods allow for a causal interpretation of these findings. Consistent with the CMO’s personal enrichment motivation we also find that CMOs take advantage of artificially inflated stock valuation by exercising more stock options and selling more of their personal equity holdings in the years when myopic marketing management occurs. Our findings highlight the pitfalls and limitations of overreliance on equity in managerial compensation packages.
- Published
- 2017
19. Visual Listening In: Extracting Brand Image Portrayed on Social Media
- Author
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Natalie Mizik, Daria Dzyabura, and Liu Liu
- Subjects
Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Big data ,computer.software_genre ,Convolutional neural network ,Brand image ,Perception ,0502 economics and business ,Social media ,Active listening ,050207 economics ,Business and International Management ,media_common ,Marketing ,Multimedia ,Visual marketing ,business.industry ,Deep learning ,05 social sciences ,Advertising ,050211 marketing ,Artificial intelligence ,Psychology ,Transfer of learning ,business ,computer - Abstract
We propose a “visual listening in” approach (i.e., mining visual content posted by users) to measure how brands are portrayed on social media. Using a deep-learning framework, we develop BrandImageNet, a multi-label convolutional neural network model, to predict the presence of perceptual brand attributes in the images that consumers post online. We validate model performance using human judges, and we find a high degree of agreement between our model and human evaluations of images. We apply the BrandImageNet model to brand-related images posted on social media and compute a brand-portrayal metric based on model predictions for 56 national brands in the apparel and beverages categories. We find a strong link between brand portrayal in consumer-created images and consumer brand perceptions collected through survey tools. Images are close to surpassing text as the medium of choice for online conversations. They convey rich information about the consumption experience, attitudes, and feelings of the user. We show that valuable insights can be efficiently extracted from consumer-created images. Firms can use the BrandImageNet model to automatically monitor in real time their brand portrayal and better understand consumer brand perceptions and attitudes toward theirs and competitors’ brands.
- Published
- 2017
20. Modeling coexisting business scenarios with time-series panel data: A dynamics-based segmentation approach
- Author
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Natalie Mizik, Randolph E. Bucklin, and Catarina Sismeiro
- Subjects
Marketing ,Consumption (economics) ,Continuous testing ,Behavioral pattern ,computer.software_genre ,Market segmentation ,Scalability ,Segmentation ,Business ,Product (category theory) ,Data mining ,computer ,Panel data - Abstract
At a given point in time, individual consumers may be in different stages of the product adoption or consumption cycle. As a result, different types of behavioral patterns may coexist within a single product market. Existing segmentation approaches typically do not address long-term dynamics in customer response and do not adequately capture this phenomenon. We develop an approach for modeling the coexistence of multiple dynamic behavioral patterns (business scenarios) within a single product market. We apply this approach to physician panel data on drug prescriptions and direct-to-physician promotions. We find markedly different responses across physician segments. For firms that track customer-level marketing activity and sales over time, market segmentation based on dynamic scenarios can provide a new tool for efficient targeting. The proposed approach is straightforward to implement and is scalable to very large samples and continuous testing.
- Published
- 2012
21. The Theory and Practice of Myopic Management
- Author
-
Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Earnings ,Financial economics ,Accrual ,business.industry ,Enterprise value ,Accounting ,Shareholder ,Abnormal return ,Earnings management ,Stock market ,Business ,Business and International Management ,Empirical evidence - Abstract
This article reviews the theory and empirical evidence of myopic management as it pertains to marketing practice. It documents empirically the stock market's inability to properly value marketing and innovation activity in the face of the potential for myopic management. The author assesses the total financial consequences of myopic management (the practice of cutting marketing and research-and-development spending to inflate earnings) and finds that myopia has a long-term net negative impact on firm value. Myopic management is contrasted with accounting accruals-based earnings inflation, and the author shows that the real activities (i.e., myopic management), and not the accounting numbers manipulation, have the greater negative impact on future financial performance. These results are consistent across alternative abnormal return measures and alternative benchmarks. The author argues that shareholders, managers, and marketing researchers can play a role in limiting myopic management practices.
- Published
- 2010
22. Valuing Branded Businesses
- Author
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Robert Jacobson and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Marketing ,Relative valuation ,Valuation (logic) ,Enterprise value ,Economics ,Econometrics ,Mean absolute error ,Multiplier (economics) ,Asset (economics) ,Business and International Management ,Explanatory power - Abstract
The authors develop and validate a conditional multiplier approach for valuing branded businesses. The approach enhances traditional multiplier-based valuation by explicitly incorporating brand characteristics into the model. The authors present theoretical arguments why, develop a model to demonstrate how, and provide an empirical illustration to show that brand assets are not fully reflected in contemporaneous margins, and therefore valuation accuracy can be improved by incorporating information about the properties of the firm's brand asset directly into a valuation framework. The authors find that brand metrics have statistically significant associations with valuation multipliers and add incremental explanatory power to accounting variables in explaining valuation multipliers. Out-of-sample analysis shows a 16% improvement in the mean absolute error for predictions that take into account brand metrics compared with predictions based on accounting variables alone.
- Published
- 2009
23. Rejoinder—Customer Satisfaction-Based Mispricing: Issues and Misconceptions
- Author
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Natalie Mizik and Robert Jacobson
- Subjects
Marketing ,Efficient-market hypothesis ,Actuarial science ,Scrutiny ,Financial market ,Econometric methods ,Economics ,Stock market ,Customer satisfaction ,Business and International Management ,Stock (geology) ,Panel data - Abstract
We appreciate the opportunity to respond to the commentaries and additional analyses by Fornell et al. [Fornell, C., S. Mithas, F. V. Morgeson III. 2009a. The economic and statistical significance of stock returns on customer satisfaction. Marketing Sci. 28(5) 820–825] and Ittner et al. [Ittner, C., D. Larcker, D. Taylor. 2009. The stock market's pricing of customer satisfaction. Marketing Sci. 25(5) 826–835]. Both studies have multiple theoretical and econometric limitations that challenge the validity of their arguments and findings (e.g., neither study allows for time-varying risk factor loadings in their assessments of mispricing although the composition of firms in their analyzed portfolios changes over time, Fornell et al. mischaracterize the efficient markets hypothesis, and Ittner et al. do not use standard panel data econometric methods and models). Generalizations about customer satisfaction, like any other construct, should be assessed by appropriate econometric methods and should withstand rigorous scrutiny. We believe an open, frank dialogue can help clear up misconceptions, air central issues, and advance better understanding of methods and analyses for assessing the financial market implications of marketing metrics such as customer satisfaction.
- Published
- 2009
24. Commentaries and Rejoinder to 'Marketing and Firm Value: Metrics, Methods, Findings, and Future Directions': Linking Marketing Actions to Value Creation and Firm Value: Insights from Accounting Research
- Author
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Shuba Srinivasan, Leigh McAlister, Michael D. Kimbrough, Mark J . Garmaise, Natalie Mizik, Dominique M. Hanssens, and Robert Jacobson
- Subjects
Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Return on marketing investment ,business.industry ,Marketing effectiveness ,Accounting research ,Marketing strategy ,Marketing management ,Business marketing ,Business and International Management ,business ,Marketing research ,Relationship marketing - Abstract
Srinivasan and Hanssens (2009) offer an ambitious research agenda for establishing the links among marketing actions, value creation, and observed market values. They describe the research technologies available for exploring these links and summarize the current understanding of these links based primarily on evidence from the marketing literature. We complement Srinivasan and Hanssens's work by highlighting the insights, opportunities, and challenges that accounting researchers have encountered in addressing highly related questions. This commentary proceeds as follows: We summarize accounting researchers' broad interest in intangible invest ments and its potential applicability to the research agenda that Srinivasan and Hanssens propose. Next, we discuss accounting research that links marketing actions to interme diate measures of value creation. We follow this with a dis cussion of the theoretical foundations for and what can be learned from value-relevance research designs. Then, we discuss short-window studies. Finally, we suggest potential tests of the appropriateness and completeness of the mar ket's reaction to marketing actions and present evidence from the accounting literature that is relevant to the ques tion whether managers can influence investors' understand ing of marketing actions.
- Published
- 2009
25. The Financial Markets and Customer Satisfaction: Reexamining Possible Financial Market Mispricing of Customer Satisfaction
- Author
-
Natalie Mizik and Robert Jacobson
- Subjects
Marketing ,Financial economics ,Customer profitability ,business.industry ,Financial market ,Customer equity ,Economics ,marketing metrics, valuation, mispricing, customer satisfaction, financial performance, efficient markets ,Stock market ,Customer satisfaction ,The Internet ,Business and International Management ,business ,Stock (geology) ,health care economics and organizations ,Valuation (finance) - Abstract
We investigate the association between information contained in the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) metric and future stock market performance. Some past research has provided results suggesting that the financial markets misprice customer satisfaction; i.e., firms advantaged in customer satisfaction are posited to earn positive future-period abnormal stock returns. We reexamine this relationship and find that statistically significant evidence of financial market mispricing of customer satisfaction is limited to firms in the computer and Internet sector. The results suggest that the mispricing anomaly reported in past research appears not to stem from a systemic failure of the financial markets to impound the financial implications of customer satisfaction into current stock price, but rather from abnormal returns achieved by a small group of satisfaction leaders in the computer and Internet sector over the period of study. Analyses based on unconditional risk covariates and analyses using conditional risk covariates estimated from short-window, high-frequency data support this finding.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. —Customer Satisfaction-Based Mispricing: Issues and Misconceptions
- Author
-
Robert Jacobson and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
customer satisfaction, mispricing, value relevance - Abstract
We appreciate the opportunity to respond to the commentaries and additional analyses by Fornell et al. [Fornell, C., S. Mithas, F. V. Morgeson III. 2009a. The economic and statistical significance of stock returns on customer satisfaction. . (5) 820–825] and Ittner et al. [Ittner, C., D. Larcker, D. Taylor. 2009. The stock market's pricing of customer satisfaction. (5) 826–835]. Both studies have multiple theoretical and econometric limitations that challenge the validity of their arguments and findings (e.g., neither study allows for time-varying risk factor loadings in their assessments of mispricing although the composition of firms in their analyzed portfolios changes over time, Fornell et al. mischaracterize the efficient markets hypothesis, and Ittner et al. do not use standard panel data econometric methods and models). Generalizations about customer satisfaction, like any other construct, should be assessed by appropriate econometric methods and should withstand rigorous scrutiny. We believe an open, frank dialogue can help clear up misconceptions, air central issues, and advance better understanding of methods and analyses for assessing the financial market implications of marketing metrics such as customer satisfaction.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The Financial Value Impact of Perceptual Brand Attributes
- Author
-
Natalie Mizik and Robert Jacobson
- Subjects
Marketing ,Value (ethics) ,Economics and Econometrics ,Energy (esotericism) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Financial market ,Microeconomics ,Perception ,Relevance (information retrieval) ,Business ,Asset (economics) ,Brand equity ,Business and International Management ,Stock (geology) ,media_common - Abstract
The authors assess which brand asset metrics provide incremental information content to accounting performance measures in explaining stock return. The analysis focuses on the five “pillars” (i.e., central brand attributes) that form the basis for the newly updated Young & Rubicam Brand Asset Valuator model: differentiation, relevance, esteem, knowledge, and energy. Analysis shows that perceived brand relevance and energy provide incremental information to accounting measures in explaining stock returns. However, esteem and knowledge do not; that is, their effects are reflected in current-term accounting measures and in brand relevance and energy. The financial markets do not view brand differentiation as having incremental information content, but they should. Changes in differentiation are indicative of future-term accounting performance, which in turn affects stock return. These conclusions are invariant to the use of alternative accounting performance measures, risk adjustments, and the inclu...
- Published
- 2008
28. Myopic Marketing Management: Evidence of the Phenomenon and Its Long-Term Performance Consequences in the SEO Context
- Author
-
Robert Jacobson and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Marketing ,Earnings ,Financial economics ,business.industry ,myopic marketing management, marketing strategy, marketing resource allocation, signal jamming, long-term financial performance, abnormal stock returns ,Financial market ,Context (language use) ,Seasoned equity offering ,Marketing strategy ,Marketing management ,Incentive ,Economics ,Stock market ,Business and International Management ,business - Abstract
Managers often have incentives to artificially inflate current-term earnings by cutting marketing expenditures, even if it comes at the expense of long-term profits. Because investors rely on current-term accounting measures to form expectations of future-term profits, inflating current-term results can lead to enhanced current-term stock price. We present evidence that some firms engage in this type of “myopic marketing management” at the time of a seasoned equity offering (SEO). In particular, a greater proportion of firms than is typical report earnings higher than normal and marketing expenditures lower than normal at the time of their SEO. Although they realize that firms might be undertaking strategies to artificially inflate current-term earnings, the financial markets are not adequately identifying and properly valuing the firms doing so. Our results indicate that myopic firms are able to temporarily inflate their stock market valuation, but in the long run, as the consequences of cutting marketing spending become manifest, they have inferior stock market performance. We propose some actions that might reduce the incentives for myopic behavior.
- Published
- 2007
29. Understanding Firm, Physician and Consumer Choice Behavior in the Pharmaceutical Industry
- Author
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Marta Wosinska, Ying Xie, Paris Cleanthous, Jaap E. Wieringa, Andrew T. Ching, Sridhar Narayanan, Xiaojing Dong, Thomas J. Steenburgh, Sanjog Misra, Peter S.H. Leeflang, Dick R. Wittink, Natalie Mizik, Min Ding, Puneet Manchanda, University of Groningen, and Research Programme Marketing
- Subjects
SOCIAL CONTAGION ,Marketing ,pharmaceutical marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Knowledge management ,physician networks ,INNOVATION ,business.industry ,Consumer choice ,patient compliance ,Data type ,pharmaceutical pricing ,DIFFUSION ,Pharmaceutical marketing ,MODEL ,Important research ,new products ,DRUGS ,response models ,Business and International Management ,business ,Patient compliance ,Pharmaceutical industry - Abstract
This paper argues that the pharmaceutical industry represents an exciting opportunity to carry out academic research. The nature of the industry allows researchers to answer new questions, develop new methodologies for answering these questions as well as to apply existing methodology to new data. The paper opens with some industry background, then provides a brief overview of some important research areas and discusses the open questions in each area. Issues of data type and availability are also discussed.
- Published
- 2005
30. Are Physicians 'Easy Marks'? Quantifying the Effects of Detailing and Sampling on New Prescriptions
- Author
-
Robert Jacobson and Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Distributed lag ,Strategy and Management ,Control (management) ,pharmaceutical marketing, salesforce effectiveness ,Econometrics ,Sampling (statistics) ,Regression analysis ,Management Science and Operations Research ,Medical prescription ,Psychology ,Pharmaceutical marketing ,Public attention ,Anecdotal evidence - Abstract
Much public attention and considerable controversy surround pharmaceutical marketing practices and their impact on physicians. However, views on the matter have largely been shaped by anecdotal evidence or results from analyses with insufficient controls. Making use of a dynamic fixed-effects distributed lag regression model, we empirically assess the role that two central components of pharmaceutical marketing practices (namely, detailing and sampling) have on physician prescribing behavior. Key differentiating features of our model include its ability to (i) capture persistence in the prescribing process and decompose it into own-growth and competitive-stealing effects, (ii) estimate an unrestricted decay structure of the promotional effects over time, and (iii) control for physician-specific effects that, if not taken into account, induce biased coefficient estimates of detailing and sampling effects. Based on pooled time series cross-sectional data involving three drugs, 24 monthly observations, and 74,075 individual physicians (more than 2 million observations in total), we find that detailing and free drug samples have positive and statistically significant effects on the number of new prescriptions issued by a physician. However, we find that the magnitudes of the effects are modest.
- Published
- 2004
31. Trading off between Value Creation and Value Appropriation: The Financial Implications of Shifts in Strategic Emphasis
- Author
-
Natalie Mizik and Robert Jacobson
- Subjects
Marketing ,050208 finance ,Value creation ,05 social sciences ,Enterprise value ,Economic Value Added ,Business value ,Competitive advantage ,0502 economics and business ,Value (economics) ,050211 marketing ,Stock market ,Business ,Business and International Management ,Emphasis (typography) ,Industrial organization - Abstract
Firms allocate their limited resources between two fundamental processes of creating value (i.e., innovating, producing, and delivering products to the market) and appropriating value (i.e., extracting profits in the marketplace). Although both value creation and value appropriation are required for achieving sustained competitive advantage, a firm has significant latitude in deciding the extent to which it emphasizes one over the other. What effect does strategic emphasis (i.e., emphasis on value creation versus value appropriation) have on firm's financial performance? The authors address this issue by examining the effect that shifts in strategic emphasis have on stock return. They find that the stock market reacts favorably when a firm increases its emphasis on value appropriation relative to value creation. This effect, however, is moderated by firm and industry characteristics, in particular, financial performance, the past level of strategic emphasis of the firm, and the technological environment in which the firm operates. These results do not negate the importance of value creation capabilities, but rather highlight the importance of isolating mechanisms that enable the firm to appropriate some of the value it has created.
- Published
- 2003
32. How to Better Value Branded Businesses: A Conditional Multiplier Approach
- Author
-
Natalie Mizik
- Subjects
Econometrics ,Multiplier (economics) ,Business - Published
- 2013
33. Managing for the Moment: The Role of Real Activity Versus Accruals Earnings Management in SEO Valuation
- Author
-
Sugata Roychowdhury, Natalie Mizik, and S.P. Kothari
- Subjects
Earnings management ,Earnings ,Accrual ,business.industry ,Stock market ,Accounting ,Business ,Seasoned equity offering ,Valuation (finance) - Abstract
We assess the role of both accruals manipulation (AM) and real activities manipulation (RAM) in inducing overvaluation at the time of a seasoned equity offering (SEO). Our results reveal that earnings management is most consistently and predictably linked with post-SEO stock market under-performance when it is driven by RAM, in particular, the opportunistic reduction of expenditures on R&D and selling, general and administrative activities. Thus, overvaluation at the time of the SEO is more likely when managers actively engage in more opaque channels to overstate earnings. Our findings are particularly relevant because managers exhibit a greater propensity for RAM at the time of SEOs, even though RAM is more costly in the long run.
- Published
- 2012
34. Firm innovation and the ratchet effect among consumer-packaged goods firms
- Author
-
Christine Moorman, Natalie Mizik, Simone Wies, Fredrika J. Spencer, Externe publicaties SBE, Finance, and RS: GSBE MSCM
- Subjects
Product market ,Ratchet ,Ratchet effect ,stock market ,EXPENDITURES ,PRODUCT INTRODUCTIONS ,revenue ,Order (exchange) ,STOCK RETURNS ,Economics ,timing ,Revenue ,Business and International Management ,Industrial organization ,Marketing ,Sales growth ,CONSEQUENCES ,RESEARCH-AND-DEVELOPMENT ,PERFORMANCE ,innovation, timing, stock market, ratchet, revenue ,innovation ,INCENTIVES ,Product (business) ,MARKET ,SHAREHOLDER VALUE ,Stock market ,FUTURE-DIRECTIONS ,ratchet - Abstract
We consider how public firms influence their stock market valuations by timing the introduction of innovative new products. Our focus is on innovation ratchet strategy—firms timing the introduction of innovations in order to demonstrate an improvement in the number of introductions over time. We document that public firms use an innovation ratchet strategy more often than do private firms and that the stock market rewards public firms for doing so. These rewards from the stock market, however, come at the expense of performance in product markets. Specifically, because firms using an innovation ratchet strategy delay some product introductions, they have significantly lower sales growth in the year they ratchet. Finally, we identify firm and market characteristics that influence the likelihood that a public firm will engage in an innovation ratchet strategy.
- Published
- 2012
35. Value Implications of Corporate Branding in Mergers
- Author
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Isaac M. Dinner, Natalie Mizik, and Jonathan C. Knowles
- Subjects
Corporate branding ,Corporate group ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Rebranding ,Loyalty ,Event study ,Portfolio ,Asset management ,Business ,Marketing ,media_common - Abstract
Mergers are central to corporate growth strategies but they are disruptive events that cause customers, employees, and investors to reassess their relationships with the new merged entity. The choice of corporate branding is an important strategic decision in mergers as it provides a means to communicate context-appropriate positioning and messaging for the merged entity and can assist in securing the ongoing loyalty of customers, employees, and investors. We investigate the value implications of corporate branding in mergers. Using a sample of 216 large mergers undertaken during 1997–2006, we classify merger transactions into three groupings according to the post-merger corporate branding: acquisition (the identity of one of the merging companies is discarded and it is rebranded with the other firm’s name and symbol), business-as-usual (both firms continue to operate under their own corporate names and symbols), and amalgamation (elements of both corporate brands are maintained in the new brand). We undertake event study and time-varying calendar-time portfolio analyses to assess potential differences in the value implications of corporate branding in mergers. We find significant differences in the immediate market reaction to the merger announcements and significant differences in the post-merger performance across the three corporate branding types. Firms using the more expedient acquisition and business-as-usual branding strategies underperform firms that choose the more sophisticated amalgamation branding. Our findings provide insight into a signaling versus a market-based asset management role of corporate brands in mergers.
- Published
- 2011
36. Accounting for Marketing Activities: Implications for Marketing Research and Practice
- Author
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Natalie Mizik and Doron Nissim
- Subjects
Return on marketing investment ,Business-to-government ,Marketing management ,business.industry ,Marketing effectiveness ,Accounting ,Business ,Marketing ,Marketing research ,Relationship marketing ,Marketing mix ,Marketing strategy - Abstract
We review accounting principles related to the reporting of marketing activities and evaluate their implications for marketing research and practice. Based on our review, we argue that current accounting practices contribute significantly to the declining influence of marketing within organizations and the rise of myopic management. Financial reports misrepresent marketing contribution and impede its fair assessment. Changes to current marketing accounting practices are needed. Balance sheet recognition of all marketing-related intangibles emerged as the prevailing proposed solution. We, however, argue that balance sheet recognition of marketing intangibles will not remedy the situation. Instead, we advocate expanded mandatory disclosure of marketing-related activities and performance drivers. We advance specific propositions intended to enhance the quality of financial reporting and improve marketing management practice. We further call for specific research to help facilitate improvements in the financial reporting model as it pertains to marketing-related activities.
- Published
- 2011
37. The Unappreciated Value of Marketing: The Moderating Role of Changes in Marketing and R&D Spending on Valuation of Earnings Reports
- Author
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Natalie Mizik, Isaac M. Dinner, and Donald R. Lehmann
- Subjects
Return on marketing investment ,Earnings per share ,business.industry ,Price–earnings ratio ,Marketing effectiveness ,Stock valuation ,Stock market ,Business ,Marketing ,Marketing strategy ,health care economics and organizations ,Post-earnings-announcement drift - Abstract
Because current earnings predict future financial performance, the stock market reacts strongly to earnings announcements. How rapidly and in what manner information about marketing actions and strategies is accounted for in the stock valuation is less clear. We examine the financial market's ability to fully and timely value marketing-related information released along with quarterly earnings announcements. We find evidence consistent with the market initially under-appreciating marketing and R&D effort. Specifically, we find differences in the immediate market response to earnings announcements for firms expanding versus reducing their marketing and R&D effort. However, we also observe a significantly greater positive stock price drift (i.e., systematic stock price adjustment) in the months following an earnings announcement for firms increasing marketing and/or R&D expenditures. We examine the dynamics and the mechanism underlying this differential drift. Firms increasing their marketing and/or R&D spending report significantly greater future operating performance than firms decreasing their marketing and R&D spending and the stock price adjustment (drift) accelerates around the time of the subsequent earnings announcement. Our findings suggest that the stock market takes time to fully incorporate implications of strategic marketing decisions. They also suggest the stock market tends to update firm valuation when the outcomes of marketing strategies are realized in future financial performance and new performance signals are sent to the market.
- Published
- 2009
38. Assessing the Value-Relevance of Customer Satisfaction
- Author
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Natalie Mizik and Robert Jacobson
- Subjects
Efficient-market hypothesis ,Actuarial science ,Financial performance ,business.industry ,Financial market ,The Internet ,Stock market ,Customer satisfaction ,Business ,Risk adjustment ,Stock (geology) - Abstract
Making use of the efficient markets hypothesis as a starting point for analysis, we outline an approach for assessing financial value-relevance of marketing metrics. We illustrate the approach by investigating the association between information contained in the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) customer satisfaction metric and stock market performance. Our findings differ from previous research in that the methodological approach we use, while nesting other models, incorporates a number of efficient market considerations that previous research has not taken into account, e.g., issues ranging from unmodeled autocorrelation, to risk adjustments, to using the unanticipated component of a series in financial market analysis. We find evidence supportive of satisfaction having value-relevance. However, the ACSI metric provides statistically significant incremental value-relevance to accounting measures only for firms in the computer/Internet sector. For other sectors, i.e., the majority of firms in the sample, unanticipated changes in satisfaction do not provide statistically significant incremental information to accounting measures in explaining stock returns.
- Published
- 2009
39. A Further Examination of Customer Satisfaction-Based Financial Market Mis-Pricing
- Author
-
Natalie Mizik and Robert Jacobson
- Subjects
Conditional risk ,Financial economics ,business.industry ,Financial market ,Frequency data ,Customer satisfaction ,The Internet ,Business ,Stock return ,Stock (geology) - Abstract
Some past research has provided results suggesting that the financial markets mis-price customer satisfaction, i.e., firms advantaged in customer satisfaction are posited to earn positive future-period abnormal stock returns. By allowing for differences across sectors in the economy, we provide evidence that any mis-pricing, if it exists, is not widespread but rather is limited to firms in the computer and internet sector. Analyses based on unconditional risk covariates and analyses using conditional risk covariates estimated from short-window, high frequency data support this finding.
- Published
- 2008
40. Modeling Co-Existing Business Scenarios with Time Series Panel Data
- Author
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Natalie Mizik, Randolph E. Bucklin, and Catarina Sismeiro
- Subjects
business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Marketing strategy ,Promotion (rank) ,Market segmentation ,Autoregressive model ,Econometrics ,Resource allocation ,Business ,Marketing ,Time series ,Impulse response ,Panel data ,media_common - Abstract
Due to customer segmentation, multiple types of dynamic business scenarios (business-as-usual, escalation, hysteresis, and evolving business practice; Dekimpe and Hanssens 1999) may co-exist within a single product market. The authors develop an approach to model this phenomenon with time series panel data. Unit-root tests are used to group panelists by whether or not outcome (e.g., sales) and marketing activity (e.g., advertising, promotion) variables are stationary or evolving. This produces four clusters corresponding to each business scenario. Next, panel-data vector autoregressive models appropriate for each panelist cluster are estimated to assess the dynamics and the magnitude of the response to marketing effort. The approach is applied to physician panel data on drug prescriptions and direct-to-physician promotions. Estimation results show markedly different response dynamics (as captured by impulse response functions) and elasticities across the physician groups. The approach also produces better in-sample and holdout fits than pooled data models. For firms that track customer-level marketing activity and response over time, a segmentation based on dynamic business scenarios provides a new tool for targeting and efficient marketing resource allocation.
- Published
- 2006
41. The Information Content of Brand Attributes
- Author
-
Natalie Mizik and Robert Jacobson
- Subjects
Brand awareness ,Financial market ,Econometrics ,Business ,Brand equity ,Marketing ,Risk adjustment ,Stock return ,Valuation (finance) - Abstract
We assess which brand asset metrics provide incremental information content to accounting performance measures in explaining stock return. Our analysis focuses on the five "pillars," i.e., central brand attributes, that form the basis for the newly updated Young and Rubicam Brand Asset Valuator (Y&R BAV) model. Analysis shows that perceived brand Relevance and Energy provide incremental information to accounting measures in explaining stock return. Esteem and Knowledge do not, i.e., their effects are reflected in current-term accounting measures and in brand Relevance and Energy. We find that the financial markets do not view Differentiation as having incremental information content, when, in fact, they should. Changes in Differentiation are indicative of future-term accounting performance, which, in turn, affects stock return. These conclusions are invariant to the use of alternative accounting performance measures, risk adjustments, and to the inclusion of additional brand attributes into the analysis.
- Published
- 2006
42. Modeling marketing dynamics by time series econometrics
- Author
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Imran S. Currim, Prasad A. Naik, Natalie Mizik, Eric Ghysels, Koen Pauwels, Dominique M. Hanssens, Marnik G. Dekimpe, and Department of Marketing Management
- Subjects
School ,Economics and Econometrics ,Time-series econometrics ,Time series ,Open ,Area ,Impulse response functions ,Researchers ,Time-series models ,Data richness ,Time ,Opportunities ,Advertising ,Econometrics ,Economics ,Business and International Management ,Marketing ,Lucas critique ,Research ,Research opportunities ,Dynamics ,Processes ,Important research ,Marketing dynamics ,Dynamics (music) ,Applications ,Tool - Abstract
This paper argues that time-series econometrics provides valuable tools and opens exciting research opportunities to marketing researchers. It allows marketing researchers to advance traditional modeling and estimation approaches by incorporating dynamic processes to answer new important research questions. The authors discuss the challenges facing time-series modelers in marketing, provide an overview of recent methodological developments and several applications, and highlight fruitful areas for future research. This discussion is based on the First Annual Conference on 'Modeling Marketing Dynamics by Time Series Econometrics' at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA on September 16-17, 2004. ispartof: Marketing Letters vol:15 issue:4 pages:167-183 status: published
- Published
- 2005
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