Kelting, Ph.D. Program Alum Publish Collaborative Research Project
Associate professor Katie Kelting and four alumni of the Chaifetz School鈥檚 Ph.D. in International Business and Marketing program鈥擟lark Johnson (May 鈥20), Brittney Bauer (鈥19), Nicolas Jankuhn (鈥21) and Woojong Sim (鈥21)鈥攈ave collaborated on new research about the impact that mailing address has on consumer perceptions and evaluations of a business. The article was first published in the May 2021 issue of the Journal of Business Research.
The research compares the different mailing address options that are now available to businesses and uses signaling theory to explain the findings. Kelting describes how multiple signals exist in the marketplace and how they can influence consumers鈥 judgments and evaluations.
鈥淪ignals communicate information to us, but not all signals are the same. That鈥檚 what makes this research interesting,鈥 said Kelting. 鈥淔inding that consumers judge and evaluate a business more favorably when its mailing address simply includes a street name versus a P.O. Box is notable.鈥
Building a Research Team
Johnson originally approached Bauer about the research idea while working on their doctoral degrees at the Chaifetz School after seeing a marketing promotion about a new, professional mail service from UPS and Regus. Bauer said the ads claimed to 鈥済ive your small business an edge with a real street address.鈥 Basically, the idea was that you could be given a P.O. Box, but instead of the address being listed as 鈥淧.O. Box XXXX,鈥 it would be listed as a street address with a suite number.
鈥淲e are both fascinated by research projects that examine new phenomena in the marketplace, so this topic had immediate interest and appeal,鈥 Bauer said.
Bauer and Johnson, who were in the same PhD cohort at 91女神, approached Kelting about the project because it aligned with her own research. They also brought Sim and Jankuhn into the project as an opportunity to help the newer PhD students gain research experience.
鈥淥ur hope was that this project could be a mentoring and learning experience for everyone, in addition to being a prime research opportunity,鈥 Bauer said. 鈥淏y having collaborators at three different stages of their careers, we were able to develop and grow as researchers through this process.鈥
They developed their research to include five experiments and found evidence that consumers favored a small business with a street and suite address more than a traditional P.O. Box or generic street address.
Research Facilities Help Produce Meaningful Scholarship
The researchers credited the Chaifetz School of Business鈥 Behavioral Lab as essential in completing the project. The facility provided the space to conduct a range of experiments, testing participants鈥 perceptions of different addresses and informing the practical findings of the research.
鈥淭alk about signaling,鈥 Kelting said. 鈥淎 behavioral research lab in the building is a great signal to outsiders and those in academia that we have a high quality business school and this is a resource that not everybody has.鈥
Bauer even said that the Chaifetz School鈥檚 Behavioral Lab inspired her to work with the dean of the College of Business at Loyola University New Orleans, where Bauer is now an assistant professor, to build a COB Behavioral Lab there, as well.
鈥淭he lab was a fantastic resource and a significant asset for our project,鈥 Bauer said.
Business Billikens for Others
When Kelting reflected on the collaborative work done with these PhD students, it reminded her of what it means to be a Billiken.
鈥淚 think it just fits with the mission of 91女神,鈥 Kelting said. 鈥淭hese two students were thinking about others and seeing a bigger picture. It wasn鈥檛 just about them having successes, this project and its success was good for all of us.鈥
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