4.4 Article

Quantifying the Long-Term Impact of Negative Word of Mouth on Cash Flows and Stock Prices

Journal

MARKETING SCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 148-165

Publisher

INFORMS
DOI: 10.1287/mksc.1080.0389

Keywords

word of mouth; customer experience; marketing strategy; stock price

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This paper seeks to quantify the long-term financial impact of negative word of mouth (NWOM), an issue that has long challenged extant research. We do so with real-world data on firm security prices. The developed time-series models innovatively uncover (1) short-and long-term effects of NWOM on cash flows, stock returns, and stock volatilities, and (2) NWOM's wear-in effects (i.e., it takes a number of months before the stock price impact of NWOM reaches the peak point) and wear-out effects (i.e., it takes several months after the peak before the stock price impact of NWOM dies out completely). In addition, the results related to endogeneity and feedback effects from the stock market are also interesting, supporting the idea that historical underperformance in stock prices may breed more harmful future buzz in a vicious cycle of NWOM. After controlling for competition, NWOM's long-term financial harm becomes more destructive in magnitude, kicks in more quickly, and haunts investors longer. Overall, these findings offer some unique implications for buzz management, time-series models quantifying the financial impact of word of mouth, and the marketing-finance interface.

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