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Article
Does Deceptive Marketing Pay? The Evolution of Consumer Sentiment Surrounding a Pseudo-Product-Harm Crisis
Journal of Business Ethics, Forthcoming (2016)
  • Reo Song, California State University, Long Beach
  • Ho Kim, University of Missouri-St. Louis
  • Gene Moo Lee, University of British Columbia
  • Sungha Jang
Abstract
Slandering of a firm’s products by competing firms poses significant threats to the victim firm. The resulting damage can be as large as the one from a product-harm crisis. Unlike a true product-harm crisis, the disparagement is based on a false claim, thus we call it a pseudo-product-harm crisis. Using a pseudo-product-harm crisis event that involves two competing firms, this research examines how consumer sentiments evolve surrounding the crisis. Our analyses show that while both firms suffer, the damage is severer to the offending firm (which causes the crisis) than to the victim firm (which suffers from the false claim) in terms of advertising effectiveness and negative news publicity. Our study indicates that apart from the ethical concern, false claims about competing firms are not an effective business strategy to increase firm performance.
Keywords
  • product-harm crisis,
  • deceptive marketing,
  • unethical business practice,
  • slandering,
  • advertising,
  • word of mouth,
  • social media,
  • text mining
Disciplines
Publication Date
September, 2016
DOI
10.2139/SSRN.2835819
Citation Information
Reo Song, Ho Kim, Gene Moo Lee and Sungha Jang. "Does Deceptive Marketing Pay? The Evolution of Consumer Sentiment Surrounding a Pseudo-Product-Harm Crisis" Journal of Business Ethics, Forthcoming (2016)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/ho-kim/13/