Andrew T. Stephen

Andrew Stephen is the Associate Dean of Research, L’Oréal Professor of Marketing and Director of the Oxford Future of Marketing Initiative at Saïd Business School, University of Oxford. He is known for his work at the intersection of marketing and technology.[1][2][3][4]

Andrew T. Stephen
Born
Brisbane, Australia
NationalityAustralian
Academic background
EducationColumbia University
University of Queensland
ThesisMarketing networks 2.0 (2009)
Doctoral advisorDonald Lehmann
Olivier Toubia
Academic work
DisciplineMarketing
InstitutionsUniversity of Oxford
University of Pittsburgh
INSEAD

Selected research publications

  • Zhang, Yuchi, Michael Trusov, Andrew T. Stephen, and Zainab Jamal (2017), “Online Shopping and Social Media: Friends or Foes?” Journal of Marketing, 81 (6), 24-41.
  • Lamberton, Cait and Andrew T. Stephen (2016), “A Thematic Exploration of Digital, Social Media, and Mobile Marketing Research’s Evolution from 2000 to 2015 and an Agenda for Future Research,” Journal of Marketing, 80 (6), 146-172.
  • Stephen, Andrew T., Peter P. Zubcsek, and Jacob Goldenberg (2016), “Lower Connectivity Is Better: The Effects of Network Structure On Customer Innovativeness In Interdependent Ideation Tasks,” Journal of Marketing Research, 53 (2), 263-279.
  • Bart, Yakov, Andrew T. Stephen, and Miklos Sarvary (2014), “Which Products Are Best Suited To Mobile Advertising? A Field Study Of Mobile Display Advertising Effects On Consumer Attitudes And Intentions,” Journal of Marketing Research, 51 (3), 270-285.
  • Toubia, Olivier and Andrew T. Stephen (2013), “Intrinsic Versus Image-Related Motivations in Social Media: Why Do People Contribute Content to Twitter?” Marketing Science, 32 (3), 365-367.
  • Stephen, Andrew T., and Jeff Galak (2012), "The effects of traditional and social earned media on sales: A study of a microlending marketplace," Journal of Marketing Research, 49(5), 624-639.
  • Stephen, Andrew T., and Olivier Toubia (2010), "Deriving value from social commerce networks," Journal of Marketing Research, 47(2), 215-228.

Awards

gollark: For my purposes, I care about both of those things.
gollark: Well, I'd like lzip but zstandard.
gollark: (or possibly brotli)
gollark: Hmm, LZIP uses LZMA. How uncool. Everyone knows that zstd is superior.
gollark: Wow, TAR is a very awful format.

References

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