articleJournal of Marketing ResearchSep 7, 2011Closed access

What Drives Immediate and Ongoing Word of Mouth?

Campbell Collaboration · William P. Wharton Trust

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Word of mouth (WOM) affects diffusion and sales, but why are certain products talked about more than others, both right after consumers first experience them and in the months that follow? This article examines psychological drivers of immediate and ongoing WOM. The authors analyze a unique data set of everyday conversations for more than 300 products and conduct both a large field experiment across various cities and a controlled laboratory experiment with real conversations. The results indicate that more interesting products get more immediate WOM but, contrary to intuition, do not receive more ongoing WOM over multiple months or overall. In contrast, products that are cued more by the environment or are…

Citation impact

655
total citations
FWCI
111.83
Percentile
100%
References
36
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Word of mouth
  • Advertising
  • Intuition
  • Psychology
  • Marketing
  • Set (abstract data type)
  • Business
  • Social psychology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Sustainable cities and communities
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