Publications

Download

Metrics Gone Wrong: What Managers Can Learn from the 2016 US Presidential Election

Download
Suggested Citation

Kübler, R. & Pauwels, K. (2021). Metrics Gone Wrong: What Managers Can Learn from the 2016 US Presidential Election. NIM Marketing Intelligence Review 13(1), 30-35. https://doi.org/10.2478/nimmir-2021-0005

Year

2021

Authors
Raoul Kübler,
Koen Pauwels
Publication title
Metrics Gone Wrong: What Managers Can Learn from the 2016 US Presidential Election
Publication
NIM Marketing Intelligence Review
Download

Metrics Gone Wrong: What Managers Can Learn from the 2016 US Presidential Election

Raoul Kübler and Koen Pauwels 

In the 2016 presidential election, the vast majority of available polls showed a comfortable lead for Hillary Clinton throughout the whole race, but in the end, she lost. Campaign managers could have known better, if they had had a closer look at other data sources and variables that – like polls – show voter engagement and preferences. In the political arena, donations, media coverage, social media followership, engagement and sentiment may similarly indicate how well a candidate is doing, and most of these variables are available for free.  
 

Validating the bigger picture with alternative data sources is not limited to politics. The latest marketing research shows that online-consumer-behavior metrics can enrich, and sometimes replace, traditional funnel metrics. Trusting a single ‘silver bullet’ metric does not just lead to surprises, it can also mislead managerial decision-making. Econometric models can help disentangle a complex web of dynamic interactions and show immediate and lagged effects of marketing or political events. 

Authors

  • Raoul Kübler, Professor of Marketing, Marketing Center Münster, Deutschland, raoul.kuebler@uni-muenster.de
  • Koen Pauwels, Distinguished Professor of Marketing, Northeastern University Boston, MA, USA
Share Publication

Other articles of the MIR issue “The Dark Sides of Digital Marketing”

Here you can find more exciting articles of this issue.

To the entire issue

[Translate to English:]

Illuminating the Dark: Exploring the Unintended Consequences of Digital Marketing

Our relationship to technology is deeply paradoxical. On the one hand, we buy and constantly use more devices and apps, leaving our traces …

Read more
[Translate to English:]

Marketing Automation: Marketing Utopia or Marketing Dystopia?

Automated and personalized interactions may increase the relevance of marketing offers, but they also have less-positive economic and …

Read more
[Translate to English:]

Algorithm-Based Advertising: Unintended Effects and the Tricky Business of Mitigating Adverse Outcomes

Some algorithms may have similar discriminatory tendencies to humans. The presented study investigates gender bias in social media …

Read more
[Translate to English:]

Ghosts in the Dark: How to Prepare for Times of Hyper-Privacy

Even the dark web has its bright sides because it can be used as an unregulated testbed for technologies that will eventually appear on …

Read more

Instead of People Using Technology, Technology is Using People

The progress of artificial intelligence and new technologies triggers hot debates about the future of human life. While fans of the …

Read more
[Translate to English:]

The Illusion of Free Choice in the Age of Augmented Decisions

In our augmented world, many decision situations are designed by smart technologies. Artificial intelligence helps reduce information …

Read more
[Translate to English:]

Young, but not Naive: Leaders of Tomorrow Expect Limits to Digital Freedom to Preserve Freedom

In a recent survey, about 900 “Leaders of Tomorrow” from more than 90 countries all over the world shared their opinions about “the impact …

Read more
Scroll to top