Results 261 to 270 of about 1,307,060 (307)

Bad Reputation [PDF]

open access: possibleThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2003
Summary: We construct a model where the reputational concern of the long-run player to look good in the current period results in the loss of all surplus. This is in contrast to the bulk of the literature on reputations where such considerations mitigate myopic incentive problems.
Ely, Jeffrey C., Välimäki, Juuso
openaire   +5 more sources

Reputation for Quality [PDF]

open access: possibleEconometrica, 2013
This paper studies the moral hazard problem of a firm that produces experience goods and controls quality through its investment choice. Investment is incentivized by consumers' learning about product quality, which feeds into the firm's reputation and future revenue.
Moritz Meyer-ter-Vehn, Simon Board
openaire   +1 more source
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The Moral Reputation Correlates of Competence Reputation

The Journal of Social Psychology, 1963
(1963). The Moral Reputation Correlates of Competence Reputation. The Journal of Social Psychology: Vol. 59, No. 2, pp. 283-288.
openaire   +3 more sources

Reputation markets

Proceedings of the 3rd international workshop on Economics of networked systems, 2008
A reputation system should incentivize users to obtain and reveal estimates of content quality. It should also aggregate these estimates to establish content reputation in a way that counters strategic manipulation. Mechanisms have been proposed in recent literature that offer financial incentives to induce these desirable outcomes.
Xiang Yan, Benjamin Van Roy
openaire   +1 more source

Reputation and Influence

2022
International public administrations (IPAs) are collective bodies within international organizations (IOs) made up of international civil servants that support the intergovernmental bodies and member states. Over the last decade, research on these bodies has “gained substantial momentum”.
Andrea Liese, Mirko Heinzel
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Innovation and Reputation

Journal of Political Economy, 1988
This paper analyzes a monopolist that markets successive generations of new and improving nondurable products. Prices, research intensity, and product innovations are derived as sequential equilibrium outcomes to a dynamic game with incomplete information. Asymmetric information is an important feature of the model. The monopolist is fully aware of the
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Reputation and Competition [PDF]

open access: possibleAmerican Economic Review, 2002
This paper shows how competition generates reputation-building behavior in repeated interactions when the product quality observed by consumers is a noisy signal of firms' effort level. There are two types of firms and “good” firms try to distinguish themselves from “bad” firms.
openaire   +2 more sources

Corporate reputation: Reputational mythraking

Journal of Business Strategy, 2004
Through good time and bad, few companies have been so prominently and constantly in the public eye as AT&T. As the company’s executive vice president of public relations, Dick Martin was not simply a fly on the wall in the company’s most senior counsels, but a full participant in their deliberations.
openaire   +1 more source

Reputation Transfer

Business & Information Systems Engineering, 2019
Peer-to-peer platforms for selling, renting, and servicing have become a popular alternative to conventional e-commerce channels (Sundararajan 2016). With billions in venture capital and significant market evaluations, the most prominent players in this platform economy have even entered the league of long-established industry incumbents in their ...
Teubner, Timm   +2 more
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Bargaining and Reputation

Econometrica, 2000
Summary: The paper develops a reputation based theory of bargaining. The idea is to investigate and highlight the influence of bargaining `postures' on bargaining outcomes. A complete information bargaining model à la Rubinstein is amended to accommodate `irrational types' who are obstinate, and indeed for tractability assumed to be completely ...
Abreu, Dilip, Gul, Faruk
openaire   +1 more source

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