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PhD in Marketing

PhD in Marketing

The doctoral program in Marketing draws on a variety of underlying disciplines to research important marketing management problems centered on the immediate and future needs and wants of customers.
Students in the marketing program work closely with faculty in the Marketing Unit and engage in a broad spectrum of disciplinary bases.

Curriculum & Coursework

Our programs are full-time degree programs which officially begin in August. Students are expected to complete their program in five years. Typically, the first two years are spent on coursework, at the end of which students take a field exam, and then another three years on dissertation research and writing.

The Marketing program draws on economic, behavioral, psychological and administrative theory to focus on marketing problems faced by the firm and its management. Through a combination of discipline- and field-based methods, the curriculum enables students to master concepts and research skills directly relevant to business problems. Candidates must come to understand the point of view of practicing managers and be able to bring theory and careful research to bear in illuminating important business problems.

The program requires a minimum of 13 semester-long doctoral courses. Students in the Marketing program are required to complete a year-long discipline sequence typically in microeconomics, psychology, or sociology. They also complete courses in the areas of business management theory, research methods, academic field seminars, and two MBA elective curriculum courses. In addition to NU courses, students may take courses at other Northampton Schools and MIT.

Research & Dissertation

Students in Marketing begin research in their first year typically by working with a faculty member. By their third and fourth years, most students are launched on a solid research and publication stream. The dissertation may take the form of three publishable papers or one longer dissertation.

Recent examples of doctoral thesis research include: The effects of brand extensions on the value of parent brands; Multi-method examination of the consumption of “knockoffs” of high status brands, and the counter-intuitive positive outcomes for consumer-brand relationships; Competitive analysis of pricing and quality decisions in industries with strictly complimentary products; The psychological effects of pricing, and how these affect consumers and firms; and “Choice amnesia,” the motivated forgetting of difficult decisions.

Phd in Marketing Requirements

PhD in Marketing

Good Academic Standing

To remain in good academic standing, doctoral students are expected to maintain a B grade point average.

 

Teaching Requirement

Students are required to complete a teaching engagement of one full academic term that includes at least 8 hours, or 3 class sessions, of front-of-class teaching experience and at least 16 hours of teaching preparation time.

 

Special Field Exam

Students must teach or assist with teaching in a formally offered course for one full academic term. This engagement should include, at least, 8 hours of front-of-class teaching and 16 hours of teaching preparation time. The requirement may be fulfilled by completing a teaching fellow or instructor assignment at a Northampton University.

 

Dissertation Proposal

By the end of their third year, all students are required to obtain approval of their dissertation proposal by their Dissertation Chair.

 

Oral Examination

Students are required to complete a dissertation proposal oral examination. In evaluating the student’s performance at the orals, the Dissertation Committee will take into account the quality of the student’s oral presentation, the quality of the student’s responses to questions from the Dissertation Committee, and the written material prepared prior to the oral date.

 

Dissertation

Students are required to write a dissertation, which typically takes the form of three publishable papers, to the satisfaction of their Dissertation Committee. The dissertation defense is oral and open to the public.

Phd in Marketing Coursework

PhD in Marketing

Coursework

A minimum of 13 semester courses at doctoral level are required. Each semester students will consult with the Marketing faculty coordinators to receive approval of their course selections.

Foundational Courses (2 courses)

STUDENTS IN THE MARKETING PROGRAM CHOOSE ONE OF THE FOLLOWING SEQUENCES

Microeconomics

  • Microeconomic Theory I 
  • Microeconomic Theory 

Psychology

  • Social Behavior in Organizations: Research Seminar 
  • Advanced Social Psychology 

Sociology

  • Sociological Theory: Seminar 
  • Organizational Analysis: Seminar 
Research Methods Courses (4 courses)

Students must take four research methods courses, including at least one course in research design.

Research methods courses that meet this requirement include, but are not limited to:

CONSUMER BEHAVIOR

Research Methods Courses

  • Intermediate Statistical Analysis in Psychology 
  • Multivariate Analysis in Psychology 
  • Intermediate Quantitative Research Methods 
  • Advanced Quantitative Research Methods 
  • Analysis of Longitudinal Data 

Research Design Courses

  • Design of Field Research Methods 
  • Experimental Methods 
  • Field Experiments 

QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS

Research Methods Courses

  • Introduction to Econometrics 
  • Introduction to Applied Econometrics 
  • Econometric Methods 
  • Advanced Applied Econometrics 
  • Advanced Quantitative Methods II 
  • Probability Theory 
  • Statistical Inference 
  • Bayesian Data Analysis 
  • Incomplete Multivariate Data 

Quantitative Research Design Courses

  • Advanced Quantitative Research Methodology 
  • Program Evaluation: Estimating Program Effectiveness with Empirical Analysis 
  • Statistical Methods for Evaluating Causal Effects 
Additional Doctoral Courses (7 courses)

Marketing students are required to take five additional doctoral courses.

Consumer Behavior-track students are required to complete:

  • Consumer Behavior 
  • Marketing Models 
  • Micro Topics in Organizational Behavior 
  • Behavioral Approaches to Decision Making and Negotiation 
  • Two breadth courses
  • One elective doctoral course

Quantitative-track students are required to complete:

  • Consumer Behavior 
  • Marketing Models 
  • Two breadth courses
  • Three elective doctoral courses
MBA Courses (2 courses)

 

All students without an MBA degree are required to complete two case-based NU MBA courses.

 

 

Seminars

Students are strongly encouraged to attend and participate in seminars throughout their program.

Phd in Marketing Areas of Study

PhD in Marketing

Areas of Study

 

Accounting and Management

Accounting scholars at Northampton University study how information affects capital allocation across firms, resource allocation within firms, and the behavior of key stakeholders such as shareholders, regulators, customers, and suppliers. Students in the program also study the process by which such information is produced and disclosed and the quality of that information. Academic work in accounting mainly utilizes statistical/econometric methods and theoretical economic modeling in examining these questions. It often draws from and extends frameworks developed in information economics and financial economics. Students who study accounting systems within firms often combine these statistical techniques with field research methods, which include conducting field interviews, collecting field data from companies, and designing and running field experiments.

 

Management

Please note we will not be accepting applications for the Management area of study for the 2020-2021 academic year in order to complete a review of the program. Management is a dynamic field that overlaps with many other business areas and so we strongly encourage applicants interested in Management to also explore Strategy, Technology and Operations Management, and the PhD in Organizational Behavior to see if those fields would be an appropriate fit for their research interests.

Management scholars study organizational structures and human behavior in organizations to identify factors that affect a variety of outcomes ranging from business performance to employee satisfaction. Academic work in management informs management practices related to monetary and non-monetary incentives, the use of specific interventions to improve team performance, and structures to allow flatter organizational hierarchies to function effectively. Management researchers adopt a range of methods at individual, group, and organizational levels of analysis. Methods vary, as appropriate, to fit the nature of the problems they study. In relatively new domains of inquiry, researchers often follow a sociological grounded-theory approach, collecting qualitative data through interviews and observation to deepen understanding of phenomena and suggest new theory. Researchers analyze data systematically through coding processes characterized by organizing and sorting qualitative data to identify themes, illuminate processes, and suggest relationships between variables. Other researchers use quantitative data—either original data collected in the field by the researcher or archival data sets that are publically available or provided to the researcher by an organization. Such work employs statistical/econometric methods to test hypotheses proposed by researchers in advance. Additionally, some design and implement field experiments.

 

Marketing

Marketing scholars explore the societal and managerial processes by which goods, services, and information are exchanged in a market to satisfy the needs and wants of individuals and organizations. Researchers study how firms, including not-for-profit entities, can facilitate these exchanges by discovering ways to better understand consumer behavior and by determining the kinds of activities that can be used to best educate potential customers about the availability and value of offerings relevant to them. In addition, marketing as a field is concerned with how different forms of communication, such as social media platforms, enable meaningful interactions between firms and consumers and between consumers and consumers. Academic work provides rich insights on how organizations can more effectively serve customers (for example, the collection and use of data to guide R&D investments) and has generated sophisticated approaches to gauge the impact of various efforts (for example, the effect of pricing schemes or salesforce incentive plans on demand generation). The findings and frameworks produced also serve public policy makers and advocacy groups who seek to monitor the actions of corporations in order to protect the rights of consumers.

Academic researchers in marketing use a host of methods to shed light on phenomena of interest. Empirical studies employ the most recent econometric and statistical techniques to examine the link between firm actions and consumer response to these actions. Increasingly, big data are analyzed using techniques such as machine learning and computational linguistics, with the objective of uncovering patterns in customer behavior and providing predictive insights. Experimental work in marketing, both lab and field-based, aims to understand the psychological and social motivations behind individuals’ response to various stimuli. Theoretical modeling borrows from microeconomics and game theory to offer normative guidelines for a firm’s marketing strategies.

Students in the marketing program select either the consumer behavior track or the quantitative marketing track.

 

Strategy

Researchers in strategy seek to understand the mechanisms through which firms create value and sustain superior performance over time. In addressing these general concerns, strategy scholars address more specific challenges faced by firms including deciding which customers the firm will serve, which capabilities need to be developed to support those positioning choices, the dynamics of competition within markets, and the appropriate scope of the firm in terms of products or geographies. Many strategy scholars also focus on challenges faced by nonprofit and governmental organizations, which share common mechanisms with their for-profit counterparts but typically in the context of different objective functions and constraints.

Given the range of problems addressed by researchers in the strategy field, strategy scholarship uses a variety of quantitative and qualitative methods ranging from econometric analysis of large-sample data sets to field and laboratory experiments to ethnographic studies of a single organization. Students in the NU Strategy doctoral program develop a disciplinary base in microeconomics with complementary training in econometrics. Typically, these students extend the base to another discipline (e.g., sociology) or business field (e.g., entrepreneurship), which is important for gaining further traction on their chosen problem or deepen their understanding of microeconomics by pursuing one or more economics field sequences such as industrial organization, contract theory, or development economics.

 

Technology and Operations Management

The doctoral program in Technology and Operations Management prepares students to examine how and why firms create and deploy innovative products and services, as well as how the diffusion of technological novelty generates economic growth and transforms society.  They also study how and why organizations—both for-profit business and not-for-profit enterprise—translate organizational goals into productive action by harnessing people, processes, and capabilities. Frontier research questions in these areas encompass a wide and diverse set of topics, and arise in some of the most important sectors of the economy, including health care, information and communication technology, energy, and the environment. Students in this program conduct research that addresses managerially-relevant problems, integrating discipline-based theory with rigorous research methods. Students in the technology and operations management program select either the innovation track or the entrepreneurship track.

 

Admissions Requirements

Successful candidates for admission have strong records of academic performance in rigorous programs and exemplary GRE general test or GMAT scores, especially in the quantitative area. Applicants with bachelors degrees in the social sciences, engineering, sciences, as well as, business are encouraged to apply.

Adequate command of spoken and written English is required for admission. Non-native English speakers must take the TOEFL or IELTS, unless they have obtained the equivalent of a US bachelor degree from an institution at which English is the language of instruction. The committee prefers scores of at least 100 on the Internet-based test (IBT) of the TOEFL or scores of at least 7.5 on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS).

 

Financial Aid

All PhD in Marketng students receive a fellowship which includes tuition, health insurance fees, and a generous stipend for up to five years.  Students must be making satisfactory progress in order to maintain eligibility for financial aid.

PhD in Business Economics

PhD in business Economics

From corporate finance, industrial organization, and international business, to markets, competition, and government regulation, NU doctoral students in Business Economics delve into some of the most pressing and relevant topics in the field of economics through the practical lens of business.
Jointly administered by NU and the Department of Economics in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, the program combines theoretical analysis with in-depth, interdisciplinary research rooted in real-world applications.

Curriculum & Coursework

As a Business Economics PhD student, you will take courses alongside your peers in the Department of Economics, studying microeconomic theory, macroeconomic theory, probability and statistics, econometrics, and other specialized topics. In addition, your doctoral coursework and two MBA courses at NU deepen your theoretical knowledge and harness it toward practical applications. Your coursework culminates in a written exam administered jointly by the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS) and NU at the end of your second year on two special fields of study. In addition to coursework and research, doctoral students are required to complete one academic term of teaching.

Research Dissertation

NU doctoral students are insatiably curious, and they use the tools and knowledge developed in the classroom to ask—and answer—pressing questions about the field of economics. After passing your field exams, you will work closely with faculty mentors to identify a line of inquiry that will guide your original research. In the course of your research, you will present, analyze, and evaluate unique data and reach relevant, independent conclusions that advance your field