IS

Im, Il

Topic Weight Topic Terms
0.256 advertising search online sponsored keywords sales revenue advertisers ads keyword organic advertisements selection click targeting
0.136 search information display engine results engines displays retrieval effectiveness relevant process ranking depth searching economics
0.127 online consumers consumer product purchase shopping e-commerce products commerce website electronic results study behavior experience
0.120 characteristics experience systems study prior effective complexity deal reveals influenced companies type analyze having basis

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Jun, Jongkun 1 Jeong, Seok-Oh 1 Oh, Wonseok 1
001 unique sponsored search keywords 1 Using a database of 11 1 we investigate the relationship between the characteristics of keywords oriented around deal-seeking and brand-seeking and consumer search behaviors and buying propensities. On the basis of the 1

Articles (1)

Deal-Seeking Versus Brand-Seeking: Search Behaviors and Purchase Propensities in Sponsored Search Platforms (MIS Quarterly, 2016)
Authors: Abstract:
    Using a database of 11,001 unique sponsored search keywords, we investigate the relationship between the characteristics of keywords oriented around deal-seeking and brand-seeking and consumer search behaviors and buying propensities. On the basis of the search depth versus search breadth framework, we hypothesize that deal-seeking keywords elicit a search of greater breadth, whereas brand-seeking keywords induce a search of greater depth. We also explore the moderating effect of product type (search or experience goods) on the relationship between keyword characteristics and consumer search behaviors and how high-demand seasons (e.g., scheduled sales) influence consumers' search and purchase behaviors. In addition, we estimate the effectiveness of keywords on the basis of their sales-per-cost performance. The findings indicate that search queries containing deal-seeking keywords are associated with higher click-through rates and conversion rates than are search queries without such keywords. We also find that the positive effect of deal-seeking keywords on click-through rates is more pronounced for experience goods than for search goods. However, we identify a negative interaction between experience goods and brand-seeking keywords. A comparison of deal-seeking and brand-seeking keywords in terms of cost effectiveness reveals that deal-seeking keywords generate approximately three times the sales of those produced by brand-seeking keywords.