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      Uniting the Tribes: Using Text for Marketing Insight

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          Abstract

          Words are part of almost every marketplace interaction. Online reviews, customer service calls, press releases, marketing communications, and other interactions create a wealth of textual data. But how can marketers best use such data? This article provides an overview of automated textual analysis and details how it can be used to generate marketing insights. The authors discuss how text reflects qualities of the text producer (and the context in which the text was produced) and impacts the audience or text recipient. Next, they discuss how text can be a powerful tool both for prediction and for understanding (i.e., insights). Then, the authors overview methodologies and metrics used in text analysis, providing a set of guidelines and procedures. Finally, they further highlight some common metrics and challenges and discuss how researchers can address issues of internal and external validity. They conclude with a discussion of potential areas for future work. Along the way, the authors note how textual analysis can unite the tribes of marketing. While most marketing problems are interdisciplinary, the field is often fragmented. By involving skills and ideas from each of the subareas of marketing, text analysis has the potential to help unite the field with a common set of tools and approaches.

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          Brand Community

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            A New Product Growth for Model Consumer Durables

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              Experimental study of inequality and unpredictability in an artificial cultural market.

              Hit songs, books, and movies are many times more successful than average, suggesting that "the best" alternatives are qualitatively different from "the rest"; yet experts routinely fail to predict which products will succeed. We investigated this paradox experimentally, by creating an artificial "music market" in which 14,341 participants downloaded previously unknown songs either with or without knowledge of previous participants' choices. Increasing the strength of social influence increased both inequality and unpredictability of success. Success was also only partly determined by quality: The best songs rarely did poorly, and the worst rarely did well, but any other result was possible.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Marketing
                Journal of Marketing
                SAGE Publications
                0022-2429
                1547-7185
                January 2020
                August 29 2019
                January 2020
                : 84
                : 1
                : 1-25
                Article
                10.1177/0022242919873106
                2ca05683-d2f5-476c-b210-7b3d4d83caf1
                © 2020

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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