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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Factors influencing consumer behavior
- Social influence
- Informal social influence
- The power of C-to-C influence
- Social influence and marketing example (1)
- The Hush Puppies story (1)
- The Hush Puppies story (2)
- The Hush Puppies story: keys to success
- Social influence and marketing example (2)
- The Hunger Games: keys to success (1)
- The Hunger Games: keys to success (2)
- Role of word of mouth
- Word of mouth: a long history
- WOM: an early observation
- How WOM is transmitted: an early observation
- The WOM process
- Defining Word of Mouth (WOM)
- From WOM to WOM Marketing (WOMM)
- Online vs. offline WOM – key differences
- Online WOM: customer reviews
- Deepening relationship with customer reviews
- People talk about products and brands (1)
- People talk about products and brands (2)
- What consumers are talking about
- Teens more likely to talk about all categories
- Most discussed brands by teens
- Most discussed products by US adult females
- The Social Steroids idea
- Online vs. offline WOM, age difference
- Offline source is more credible
- The conversational nature of WOM (1)
- The conversational nature of WOM (2)
- Close relationships influence the most
- Consumers trust each other
- The strength of ‘weak ties’
- Positive vs. negative WOM prevalence
- Positive vs. negative WOM: online book reviews
- Positive WOM: reason for higher prevalence
- From opinion leaders to influencers
- Consumer influencers
- Consumer influencers: who are they?
- Jason Zucker
- Opinion leaders: an early profile
- New product adopter categories
- Influentials: key traits
- Opinion leadership overlap: categories
- Opinion leadership overlap: people (1)
- Opinion leadership overlap: people (2)
- Identifying influencers: 3 basic considerations
- Identifying opinion leaders and receivers
- Susceptibility to interpersonal influence
- Identifying market mavens
- Key informant method
- The brand advocacy pyramid
- Converting consumers into advocates
- Motivations for transmitting WOM (1)
- Motivations for transmitting WOM (2)
- Model explaining the production of WOM
- Resources
This material is restricted to subscribers.
Topics Covered
- The power of consumer-to-consumer influence
- Case examples: Hush Puppies; The Hunger Games
- Defining word of mouth (WOM)
- Online vs. offline WOM
- Customer reviews
- What consumers are talking about and to whom
- Consumer influencers
- Opinion leadership process
- Means to identify influencers
- Converting consumers into advocates
- WOM motivations
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Talk Citation
Kimmel, A.J. (2018, September 27). Word-of-mouth communication and opinion leadership [Video file]. In The Business & Management Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/CQBH6464.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello. My name is Allan Kimmel,
I'm a Professor of Marketing at ESCP Europe a Business School in Paris, France.
I spent many years researching and writing about the
power and potential influence in the marketplace,
so communications emanating from consumers.
I began my work with the study of rumors,
and more recently I've moved to the topics that serve as the focus of this installment,
"Word-of-Mouth Communication and Opinion Leadership".
I hope you'll find this presentation interesting and informative.
0:33
At this point in the "Why We Buy" series,
you no doubt are aware that there are a variety of
factors that influenced buying behavior.
My focus in this presentation on "Word-of-Mouth Communication and Opinion Leadership",
brings us within the realm of social influences on behavior.
0:50
Within psychology, the role of social factors in
human behavior falls under the general heading of social influence,
sometimes referred to as personal influence.
Within the context of marketing,
social influence refers to the effect or change in the consumers' attitudes or
behavior that largely come about as a result of
informal or formal communication with other people.
An example of a formal communication, say,
would be a persuasive argument from a salesperson in a store.
Or, if you want,
the presentation that you are now following.
By contrast, when our interests turns to
"Word-of-mouth Communication and Opinion Leadership",
we are primarily concerning ourselves with informal communications.
Now, these are the kinds of communications that come about as a result of
our everyday interactions with a variety of
people that we are likely to spend any significant amount of time with.
Ranging from our friends, and family members,
to our coworkers, to trendsetters that we know or follow.
Now, such communications are technically referred to as consumer-to-consumer,
or more simply C-to-C influence.