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

Collaborating with a university on a new product? Let your customers know!

News from the Journal of Marketing

2023-07-26
(Press-News.org) Researchers from WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, University of Bonn, and FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg published a new Journal of Marketing article that examines how consumers respond to new products co-developed with universities and the unique marketing opportunities for these products.

Firms often collaborate with universities to access novel scientific knowledge and technological expertise with an aim to develop superior new products. For example, Italian start-up Angles90 co-developed the first dynamic training grips with the faculty of Strength Training Ergonomics at the Technical University of Munich and sold its patented innovation in more than 30 countries. In the U.S., autonomous driving technology firm Argo AI recently announced its investment of $15 million to create the Carnegie Mellon University Argo AI Center for Autonomous Vehicle Research, which will focus on advancing the field of self-driving technology. Well-established firms such as Adidas also engage in university–industry collaborations.

This research investigates whether consumers react differently to the same product upon learning it has been co-developed with a university as well as what these perceptions depend on and how strong are the effects. The study, forthcoming in the Journal of Marketing, is titled “University Knowledge Inside: How and When University-Industry Collaborations Make New Products More Attractive to Consumers” and is authored by Lukas Maier, Martin Schreier, Christian V. Baccarella, and Kai-Ingo Voigt.

The Value of Scientific Legitimacy The research yields three major findings:

Consumers perceive a given product as more attractive when it is portrayed as developed in collaboration with a university. Collaborating with a university infuses the underlying firm with a stronger sense of scientific legitimacy, thereby making the resulting product more attractive to consumers. “These firms are viewed as being able to understand and effectively work ‘with the latest scientific ideas in the field’ and capable of developing cutting-edge technological innovations,” the research team claims. The positive university effect is more pronounced when the scientific legitimacy conferred is more important to the: (a) product in focus (high-tech vs. low-tech), (b) underlying company (startups vs. established firms), (c) project in focus (technology vs. aesthetic design), and (d) target customer (high vs. low belief in science). However, companies rarely advertise their products as co-developed with a university. In one study, the researchers asked 22 managers in an Executive MBA program to develop a short product advertisement based on background information about a company and its latest product, including the notion that the product was co-developed with a university. Only 4 out of 22 managers used the university co-development information when marketing the focal product. Another study involved 42 Master of Science in Marketing students. Again, only a small number of participants (14.6%) decided to include the fact that the focal product was developed in collaboration with a university in their advertisement copy.

Lessons for Chief Marketing Officers “Once a firm has decided to co-develop a new product with a university, we highlight how and when actively marketing university-co-developed products as such may yield incremental benefits,” the researchers say. The study offers the following lessons for Chief Marketing Officers:

Firms that engage in open innovation practices with universities might not maximize the economic value of the products if they fail to broadly communicate the collaboration to their prospective customers. Using labels such as “co-developed with a university” or “university knowledge inside” can incrementally increase the product’s market performance. One of the studies shows that participants were willing to pay, on average, 65% more for the same product when it was portrayed as co-developed with a university. The boundary conditions identified help managers anticipate when actively marketing university-industry collaborations will be more (or less) effective. Marketing products as co-developed with a university can be particularly promising for new firms, when the underlying product is high-tech, or when the target customer scores high on belief in science. Since belief in science is markedly related with one’s political orientation, the positive university effect emerges strongly for liberals, but not for conservatives. Thus, marketing university co-developed products might be particularly promising when targeting the product to liberals. For example, Meta allows advertisers to target consumers according to their political orientation, categorizing them as “liberal,” “moderate,” or “conservative.” Apart from political orientation, future research could look at other consumer characteristics with an aim to effectively target university-co-developed products. For example, scholars can test whether religiosity and nationality are moderators of the positive university effect. In the Netherlands, for instance, people tend to trust science and its institutions more than media, government, and courts of law. In contrast, there are other countries such as Guatemala with a very low belief in science and it will be interesting to see how consumers there respond to products co-developed with universities.

Full article and author contact information available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/00222429231185313

About the Journal of Marketing 

The Journal of Marketing develops and disseminates knowledge about real-world marketing questions useful to scholars, educators, managers, policy makers, consumers, and other societal stakeholders around the world. Published by the American Marketing Association since its founding in 1936, JM has played a significant role in shaping the content and boundaries of the marketing discipline. Shrihari (Hari) Sridhar (Joe Foster ’56 Chair in Business Leadership, Professor of Marketing at Mays Business School, Texas A&M University) serves as the current Editor in Chief.
https://www.ama.org/jm

About the American Marketing Association (AMA) 

As the largest chapter-based marketing association in the world, the AMA is trusted by marketing and sales professionals to help them discover what is coming next in the industry. The AMA has a community of local chapters in more than 70 cities and 350 college campuses throughout North America. The AMA is home to award-winning content, PCM® professional certification, premiere academic journals, and industry-leading training events and conferences.
https://www.ama.org

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Viral TikTok health videos tend to cover three topics, rely on influencers

Viral TikTok health videos tend to cover three topics, rely on influencers
2023-07-26
PULLMAN, Wash. –Sexual health, diet and exercise are the three topics that steal the show when it comes to popular health-related videos on TikTok. Unfortunately, there’s little else in terms of engaging health-related content on the video sharing platform, a Washington State University study found.  The social media platform’s mostly young audience also seems to prefer health-related videos featuring popular influencers’ role model appeals, such as their diet or exercise routine, rather than expert medical advice, ...

Octapharma's prothrombin complex concentrate, Balfaxar®, receives FDA approval for warfarin reversal in urgent surgery & invasive procedures

2023-07-26
PARAMUS, N.J., July 26, 2023 – Octapharma USA today announced that Balfaxar® (prothrombin complex concentrate, human-lans; marketed in Europe and Canada as octaplex®) has received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for the urgent reversal of acquired coagulation factor deficiency induced by vitamin K antagonist (VKA, e.g., warfarin) therapy in adult patients with need for urgent surgery or invasive procedures. Balfaxar® helps restore blood coagulation by replenishing the levels of clotting factors that are deficient due to warfarin therapy. Balfaxar® ...

MD Anderson and Nexo Therapeutics announce strategic research collaboration to advance new therapies against intractable targets

2023-07-26
HOUSTON, GOLDEN, Colo. and WATERTOWN, Mass. ― The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and Nexo Therapeutics today announced a multi-year strategic collaboration that aligns the innovative technology and capabilities of each organization at the earliest stages of drug discovery and development to rapidly advance impactful new cancer therapies against previously undruggable targets. The agreement brings together Nexo’s unique drug discovery platform, which combines innovative covalent chemistry and chemical biology, with the translational research and drug development expertise ...

Western science catches up with First Nations’ medicinal use of ant honey

Western science catches up with First Nations’ medicinal use of ant honey
2023-07-26
Scientists have discovered the honey produced by Australian ants possesses unique anti-microbial activity against bacteria and fungi that could make the liquid useful medicinally. The research, published today in PeerJ, was led by Andrew Dong and Dr Kenya Fernandes from the University of Sydney’s Carter Lab, which is led by Professor Dee Carter from the School of Life and Environmental Sciences and Sydney Institute for Infectious Diseases. The team studied the Australian honeypot ant, Camponotus inflatus, which is found throughout desert areas mainly in Western Australia and the Northern Territory. Among ...

Children’s Hospital Colorado launches state’s first pediatric precision medicine institute

Children’s Hospital Colorado launches state’s first pediatric precision medicine institute
2023-07-26
Aurora, Colo. (July 26, 2023) – Children’s Hospital Colorado (Children’s Colorado) today announced the launch of the Precision Medicine Institute, which will allow experts to more efficiently integrate precision medicine into care provided to patients throughout the hospital. The Precision Medicine Institute uses innovative technology to integrate big data, including genomic data, into each individual patient's care plan to determine the best treatment for each patient. Precision medicine, also known as personalized medicine or genomic medicine, uses the most up-to-date technology ...

Asian adults in U.S. less likely to survive cardiac arrest despite bystander CPR equal to white adults

2023-07-26
Research Highlights: Despite similar rates of bystander CPR after an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, Asian adults in the U.S. were 8% less likely to survive to hospital discharge and 15% less likely to have favorable neurological outcomes compared to white adults, according to an analysis of nearly 279,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests. The study is believed to be the first research comparing bystander CPR and survival rates between Asian and white adults in the U.S. after cardiac arrest. Embargoed until 4 a.m. CT/5 a.m. ET Wednesday, July 26, 2023 DALLAS, July 26, 2023 — Despite similar rates of bystander CPR after an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, Asian ...

Arctic terns may navigate climate dangers

2023-07-26
Arctic terns – which fly on the longest migrations of any animal on Earth – may be able to navigate the dangers posed by climate change, new research suggests. The birds live in near-perpetual daylight, breeding in the north of our planet and flying to Antarctica for the Southern Hemisphere summer, covering enough distance in their lifetime to travel to the moon three times. The new study, led by the University of Exeter and the Met Office, examined the likely impacts of climate change on arctic terns outside of ...

Bromide ions cause ripples in semiclathrate hydrates

Bromide ions cause ripples in semiclathrate hydrates
2023-07-26
Osaka, Japan – The way that water molecules behave in proton conducting materials is very important for understanding—and making the most of—their properties. This means being able to look at very rapid snapshots to catch changes in the water motion. Researchers from Osaka University have taken a close look at semiclathrate hydrate crystals using quasi-elastic neutron scattering (QENS). Their findings are published in Applied Physics Letters. Semiclathrate hydrates have water molecule frameworks that house other molecules or ions as ‘guests’ in their structures. The overall properties of the framework can therefore be controlled and tailored to particular ...

Intervalence charge transfer of Cr³⁺-Cr³⁺ aggregation for NIR-Ⅱ luminescence

Intervalence charge transfer of Cr³⁺-Cr³⁺ aggregation for NIR-Ⅱ luminescence
2023-07-26
The near-infrared (NIR) spectrum contains characteristic vibrational absorption bands of numerous organic functional groups. NIR phosphor-converted light-emitting diodes (pc-LEDs) have gathered increasing interests in fields including non-destructive testing and night vision. In 2016, Osram reported the first NIR pc-LED, SFH4735, while with low output power (16 mW @ 350 mA) and limited wavelengths. Furthermore, luminescent contrast agents operating within the second biological imaging window (1000-1800 nm) exhibit lower tissue absorption and scattering coefficients in contrast to the traditional first window (750-950 nm), thereby ...

International trial shows that interferon could help reduce the spread of COVID-19

International trial shows that interferon could help reduce the spread of COVID-19
2023-07-26
Results of an innovative clinical trial led by Perth researchers have shown that the drug interferon could help reduce the spread of COVID-19 from a positive person to their household contacts, with the study helping to inform treatment options for a future pandemic. The trial - CONCORD-19 - tracked 1,172 participants in 341 households in Santiago, Chile where there was a positive COVID-19 case between December 2020 and June 2021. Researchers tested the effectiveness of treating the infected people and their uninfected household contacts with interferon, with the aim of evaluating whether this drug reduces the severity of the disease and the spread of COVID-19 within ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Wavelength-independent and photoinitiator-free laser 3D nanolithography

Duke-NUS alumnus and mentor develop new precision tool to better predict outcomes for patients with liver cancer

New breakthrough helps free up space for robots to ‘think’, say scientists

Environmental law reform needed to protect endangered marine species

UC Irvine-led team engineers new enzyme to produce synthetic genetic material

New study unveils unique combination of DNA techniques to authenticate ginseng supplements and combat adulteration

Argonne receives funding for artificial intelligence in scientific research

Significant worldwide disparities in availability and timeliness of new cancer drugs

4+ hour emergency care wait linked to heightened risks of death and longer hospital stay for hip fracture patients

Policy change may be helping to drive rise in treatment-resistant vaginal thrush

Heat stress may still affect babies once born, first evidence suggests

Stressed bees lack the buzz in life

UC Irvine researchers discover atomic-level mechanism in polycrystalline materials

USC’s Rong Lu and Caltech’s Michael B. Elowitz win the NIH Director’s Transformative Research Award for their new approach to study blood and immune cell production in bone marrow

Microwave-induced synthesis of bioactive nitrogen heterocycles

Research to use machine learning to ’reverse-engineer’ new composite materials

New research calls for transparency in Medicare Advantage operations

Applied Biological Laboratories, maker of Biovanta, to present at American Society of Microbiology’s Clinical Virology Symposium 2024

How academia drives sustainability: Discover the impact of science on the SDGs

NOAA awards grant to enhance decision-ready climate projections for diverse stakeholders

Why using a brand nickname in marketing is not a good idea

Asymmetric placebo effect in response to spicy food

Echoes in the brain: Why today’s workout could fuel next week’s bright idea

Salk Institute’s Nicola Allen receives 2024 NIH Director’s Pioneer Award

The secret strength of our cell guards

DataSeer and AAAS partner to boost reporting standards

Mizzou researchers awarded $8 million in grants to discover new bullying prevention strategies

Holographic 3D printing has the potential to revolutionize multiple industries, say Concordia researchers

Cerebral blood flow and arterial transit in older adults

How diabetes risk genes make cells less resilient to stress

[Press-News.org] Collaborating with a university on a new product? Let your customers know!
News from the Journal of Marketing