PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study: Customers who participate in eBay's 'community' become better buyers and sellers

E-mail marketing of community sites effective in luring customers

2010-12-18
(Press-News.org) A new study from Rice University's Jones Graduate School of Business finds that customers of eBay who participate in the company's online communities become more conservative buyers and more selective and efficient sellers.

The study, "The Impact of Customer Community Participation on Customer Behaviors: An Empirical Investigation," appeared recently in the journal Marketing Science and was co-authored by Rice's Sharad Borle, associate professor of marketing; Siddharth Singh, assistant professor of marketing; and Utpal Dholakia associate professor of management, along with Rene Algesheimer from the University of Zurich.

"We know that companies like eBay create online communities with chat rooms and forums to increase customer participation on the site, with the conventional wisdom being that customers will become more loyal to the company and thus spend more money," Singh said. "However, we wanted to take an in-depth look at this practice and learn if these communities cause more buying and selling, thus increasing profits for eBay."

To do this, the researchers started with data from a yearlong study of 13,735 new eBay Germany customers. (The authors noted that eBay Germany is set up almost exactly as eBay in the United States.) The eBay study found that the company's e-mail marketing campaign inviting people into its community pages was a success; however, after analyzing the eBay data, Rice researchers found that customers who went to the eBay community site became more conservative buyers and more selective and effective sellers by virtue of becoming educated on the eBay process and hearing from others in the community.

The study found that customers invited via e-mail to participate in the community were about 23 percent more likely to participate as compared with a control group of customers not invited to participate.

"The fact is that people became more educated about buying and selling," Borle said. "While some of the community pages on eBay have nothing to do with buying or selling and more to do with social interaction, people still became smarter about the process of online merchandising."

That's good news for customers who utilize eBay's community pages, but it's not especially great news for eBay, Borle said. "Online companies that believe that community pages will increase use of their business side of the operation need to rethink how to use their social pages moving forward. After all, it's about making money for eBay, not necessarily creating new friends."

INFORMATION: To read the complete study, visit www.rice.edu/nationalmedia/multimedia/eBay.

To interview Singh or Borle, contact them directly at sssingh@rice.edu or sborle@rice.edu.

For more information about the study or Rice University's Jones Graduate School of Business, contact David Ruth, director of national media relations, at druth@rice.edu or 713-348-6327.

Located in Houston, Rice University is consistently ranked one of America's best teaching and research universities. Known for its "unconventional wisdom," Rice is distinguished by its: size -- 3,279 undergraduates and 2,277 graduate students; selectivity -- 12 applicants for each place in the freshman class; resources -- an undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio of 5-to-1; sixth largest endowment per student among American private research universities; residential college system, which builds communities that are both close-knit and diverse; and collaborative culture, which crosses disciplines, integrates teaching and research, and intermingles undergraduate and graduate work.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Beetroot juice could help people live more active lives

2010-12-18
New research into the health benefits of beetroot juice suggests it's not only athletes who can benefit from its performance enhancing properties – its physiological effects could help the elderly or people with heart or lung-conditions enjoy more active lives. Beetroot juice has been one of the biggest stories in sports science over the past year after researchers at the University of Exeter found it enables people to exercise for up to 16% longer. The startling results have led to a host of athletes – from Premiership footballers to professional cyclists – looking into ...

Ben-Gurion U. researchers: High resistance rates among acute otitis media pathogens in children

2010-12-18
BEER-SHEVA, ISRAEL, December 17, 2010 – As middle ear infections increase during the winter months, researchers from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) suggest that in many cases the most appropriate treatment is "watchful waiting" instead of using antibiotics immediately. The review, published in the scientific journal Expert Review of Anti-Infective Therapy, does not suggest use of watchful waiting in all cases when the infection, also known as Acute Otitis Media (AOM), is suspected by a pediatrician, but notes that a large majority of cases can be treated this ...

550 million years ago rise in oxygen drove evolution of animal life

2010-12-18
Researchers funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) at the University of Oxford have uncovered a clue that may help to explain why the earliest evidence of complex multicellular animal life appears around 550 million years ago, when atmospheric oxygen levels on the planet rose sharply from 3% to their modern day level of 21%. The team, led by Professor Chris Schofield, has found that humans share a method of sensing oxygen with the world's simplest known living animal - Trichoplax adhaerens - suggesting the method has been around since ...

The high price of sleep disorders

2010-12-18
Danish sleep researchers at the University of Copenhagen and the Danish Institute for Health Services Research have examined the socio-economic consequences of the sleep disorder hypersomnia in one of the largest studies of its kind. The sleep disorder has far-reaching consequences for both the individual and society as a whole. Hypersomnia is characterised by excessive tiredness during the day. Patients who suffer from the disorder are extremely sleepy and need to take a nap several times a day. This can occur both at work, during a meal, in the middle of a conversation ...

Electric current moves magnetic vortices

Electric current moves magnetic vortices
2010-12-18
VIDEO: In this animated illustration, an electron (black ball) flies across a lattice of magnetic vortices. The forces transferred in the process allow the magnetic structures to be controlled with relatively... Click here for more information. One of the requirements to keep trends in computer technology on track – to be ever faster, smaller, and more energy-efficient – is faster writing and processing of data. In the Dec. 17 issue of the journal Science, physicists ...

Samples of vital human tumor tissue irradiated with ions for the first time

2010-12-18
Cancer treatment with ion beams developed at GSI is characterized by an excellent cure rate and only minor side effects. The therapy has been routinely in use for a little over one year. The effectiveness of the ion beams not only depends on the tumor type, but also on the genetic disposition and the personal circumstances of the individual patient. For the first time, scientists at GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung have irradiated samples of vital human tumor tissue in the scope of their systematical and fundamental research. Their long-term goal is to enhance ...

How plants counteract against the shade of larger neighbors

2010-12-18
Plants that "lose the battle" during competitiveness for light because they are shaded by larger neighbours, counteract. They adapt by rapid shoot elongation and stretch their leaves towards the sun. The molecular basis of this so-called shade avoidance syndrome had been unclarified to date. Research scientists from the Utrecht University in the Netherlands and the Ruhr University in Bochum have now been able to unravel a regulation pathway. A specific transport protein (PIN3) enables the accumulation of the plant hormone auxin, which plays an important role during this ...

Typically Italian, isn't it?

Typically Italian, isnt it?
2010-12-18
"I have ready!" With this sentence the FC Bayern Munich coach Giovanni Trapattoni finished a furious rant about his team's performance in 1998. And "Mr Angelo" in a coffee advert points out to his neighbour with a mischievous smile: "I don't have a car at all". In both cases the Italians are unmistakeably recognizable and so the exuberant temperament of the first and the charming way of the second are seemingly "typically Italian". The accent someone talks in plays a crucial role in the way we judge this person, psychologists of the Friedrich Schiller University Jena ...

How do you cut a nanotube? Lots of compression

How do you cut a nanotube? Lots of compression
2010-12-18
VIDEO: Compression causes nanotubes to buckle and twist and eventually to lose atoms from their lattice-like structure. Click here for more information. PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — A pipefitter knows how to make an exact cut on a metal rod. But it's far harder to imagine getting a precise cut on a carbon nanotube, with a diameter 1/50,000th the thickness of a human hair. In a paper published this month in the British journal Proceedings of the Royal Society ...

K-State research looks at pathogenic attacks on host plants

2010-12-18
MANHATTAN, KAN. -- Two Kansas State University researchers focusing on rice genetics are providing a better understanding of how pathogens take over a plant's nutrients. Their research provides insight into ways of reducing crop losses or developing new avenues for medicinal research. Frank White, professor of plant pathology, and Ginny Antony, postdoctoral fellow in plant pathology, are co-authors, in partnership with researchers at three other institutions, of an article in a recent issue of the journal Nature. The article, "Sugar transporters for intercellular exchange ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

AI model can reveal the structures of crystalline materials

MD Anderson Research Highlights for September 19, 2024

The role of artificial intelligence in advancing intratumoral immunotherapy

Political ideology is associated with differences in brain structure, but less than previously thought

Genetic tracing at the Huanan Seafood market further supports COVID animal origins

Breastfeeding is crucial to shaping infant’s microbes and promoting lung health

Scientists at the CNIC discover an unexpected involvement of sodium transport in mitochondrial energy generation

Origami paper sensors could help early detection of infectious diseases in new simple, low-cost test

Safety of the seasonal influenza vaccine in 2 successive pregnancies

Preconception and early-pregnancy BMI in women and men, time to pregnancy, and risk of miscarriage

Samples from Huanan Seafood Market provide further evidence of COVID-19 animal origins

City of Hope vaccine experts report positive results on Phase 1 trial of personalized vaccine for lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma

Global assessment: How to make climate adaptation a success

The African Engineering and Technology Network signs eighth university partner

Researchers awarded $1.14M to use artificial intelligence to determine best rectal cancer treatment strategy

A new ventilator-on-a-chip model to study lung damage

Enrollment of undocumented students at California universities dropped from 2016 to 2023

Gaining insights into the chemical basis of aversive learning

Revolutionary visible-light-antenna ligand enhances samarium-catalyzed reactions

Stopping plants from passing viruses to their progeny

​​​​​​​NIH awards $2.8M to Rice, Baylor College of Medicine for research on acute respiratory distress syndrome

The University of Limpopo chooses Figshare to support its research excellence strategy

A new forecasting model based on gene activity predicts when Japan’s cherry buds awake from dormancy

New organic thermoelectric device that can harvest energy at room temperature

Activity in brain system that controls eye movements highlights importance of spatial thinking

New research reenvisions Earth’s mantle as a relatively uniform reservoir

Global warming leads to drier and hotter Amazon: reducing uncertainty in future rainforest carbon loss

Low-carbon ammonia offers green alternative for agriculture and hydrogen transport

New mechanism uncovered for the reduction of emu wings

Zeroing in on the genes that snakes use to produce venom

[Press-News.org] Study: Customers who participate in eBay's 'community' become better buyers and sellers
E-mail marketing of community sites effective in luring customers