Managerial decision-making idiosyncrasies continue to be pressing issues for academia and practice. Building on implicit attitude and evolutionary psychology theory, we hypothesize that decision makers implicitly prefer high-end over low-end innovation projects and that these implicitly held attitudes affect investment decisions. We also argue that firms introduce more high-end than low-end products despite no clear, objective advantage for high-end products. Two experiments and secondary data from consumer packaged goods provide substantial evidence for these hypotheses and thus the existence of a high-end innovation bias. This research extends the existing literature showing that implicit attitudes not only cause discrimination against pe...
This paper investigates situations where a sizeable sub-set of consumers prefer an inferior (dominat...
Recent field evidence suggests a positive link between overconfidence and innovative activities. In t...
Recent field evidence suggests a positive link between overconfidence and innovative activities. In ...
As innovation processes are characterized by high levels of uncertainty, key individuals’ higher-lev...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022We utilize the concept of implicit theories, or indivi...
Potential innovators need to overcome many challenges. One such challenge is confirmation bias in de...
This study explored the nature of discontinuity in innovations by examining whether consumers\u27 co...
The ability of consumers to anticipate the value they will draw from new product generations that ex...
1 When faced with the decision to adopt a product or service innovation consumers often need to fore...
It is a central aim of Product Innovation Management to find the factors that influence consumers’ d...
During the last decade, rapid and radical technological developments have spurred the rate of emerge...
Inappropriate conjectures of how customers will see new products can result in poor sales when strat...
Can marketers accurately predict consumer preferences for new products? Accurate prediction of these...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2008.The same level of product feature enhancement can ha...
In an incentivized experiment we identify a powerful and ubiquitous bias: individuals regard their o...
This paper investigates situations where a sizeable sub-set of consumers prefer an inferior (dominat...
Recent field evidence suggests a positive link between overconfidence and innovative activities. In t...
Recent field evidence suggests a positive link between overconfidence and innovative activities. In ...
As innovation processes are characterized by high levels of uncertainty, key individuals’ higher-lev...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022We utilize the concept of implicit theories, or indivi...
Potential innovators need to overcome many challenges. One such challenge is confirmation bias in de...
This study explored the nature of discontinuity in innovations by examining whether consumers\u27 co...
The ability of consumers to anticipate the value they will draw from new product generations that ex...
1 When faced with the decision to adopt a product or service innovation consumers often need to fore...
It is a central aim of Product Innovation Management to find the factors that influence consumers’ d...
During the last decade, rapid and radical technological developments have spurred the rate of emerge...
Inappropriate conjectures of how customers will see new products can result in poor sales when strat...
Can marketers accurately predict consumer preferences for new products? Accurate prediction of these...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2008.The same level of product feature enhancement can ha...
In an incentivized experiment we identify a powerful and ubiquitous bias: individuals regard their o...
This paper investigates situations where a sizeable sub-set of consumers prefer an inferior (dominat...
Recent field evidence suggests a positive link between overconfidence and innovative activities. In t...
Recent field evidence suggests a positive link between overconfidence and innovative activities. In ...