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Using User- and Marketer-Generated Content for Box Office Revenue Prediction: Differences Between Microblogging and Third-Party Platforms

Tingting Song1; Jinghua Huang2; Yong Tan3; Yifan Yu2

1 Antai College of Economics and Management, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200030, China · 2 Research Center for Contemporary Management, School of Economics and Management, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China; · 3 Michael G. Foster School of Business, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195

Information Systems Research 2019

How to improve the predictive accuracy of box office revenue with social media data is a big challenge and is particularly important for movie distributors and cinema operators. In this research, we find that microblogging UGC (MUGC) is a significant predictor of box office revenue and has stronger predictive power than UGC on Douban! Movies (DUGC) based on our examination of 60 movies released in China in 2012. To increase the attendance rate of movies, cinema operators can consider previous valence and volume of MUGC before scheduling the current film screenings because these messages can quickly predict the future box office revenue of a movie. Besides, we find that the volume of enterprise microblogs (i.e., MGC) can predict both box office revenue and MUGC, indicating that movie distributors should optimize their online media strategy by shifting more resources to utilizing enterprise microblogging. Although rebroadcasting volume from microblogging platforms does not predict box office revenue directly, it can indirectly predict it via MGC. Accordingly, compared with third-party platforms, rebroadcasting as one of the key distinct functions of microblogging platforms also shows its usefulness in box office revenue prediction. Overall, metrics from microblogging platforms are more effective in predicting box office revenue than those from third-party platforms.

DOI
10.1287/isre.2018.0797
Volume
30 (1)
Pages
191-203
Language
en
Export
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Sources
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